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Web Hosting comparison · 2026
WP Engine (85) and DigitalOcean (88) are closely matched — this is one of the tightest Web Hosting comparisons in our database, with just 3 points separating them overall. WP Engine leads on Support (92 vs 72), while DigitalOcean has the edge on Scalability (96 vs 82). The two are closest on Uptime, where the gap is just 0 points. On pricing, DigitalOcean starts cheaper at $6/mo versus $20/mo. Use the radar chart and dimension table below to find which fits your specific priorities best.
WP Engine
Managed WordPress hosting for serious sites
85/100
DigitalOcean
Cloud infrastructure with a developer-first focus
88/100
Radar comparison
WP Engine
85
DigitalOcean
88
Performance
Load speed and TTFB from independent benchmarks
Uptime
Reliability measured over 12 months
Price / Value
Features and resources per dollar spent
Support
Response time and quality of customer support
Scalability
Ease of upgrading resources and plans
Security
SSL, backups, malware protection, firewalls
Ease of Use
Control panel and onboarding experience
Overall Score
Based on our independent scoring across 7 dimensions, DigitalOcean scores 88/100 overall versus WP Engine's 85/100 — a 3-point margin. DigitalOcean leads on Uptime in particular. That said, WP Engine may still be the right choice if the dimensions where it scores higher match your specific priorities — the radar chart above shows the full profile side by side.
DigitalOcean starts cheaper at $6/month versus WP Engine's $20/month. At higher usage tiers, the gap may narrow depending on each tool's scaling model. Check the official pricing pages for current plans — SaaS pricing changes frequently.
WP Engine scores higher on Support — 92/100 versus 72/100 for DigitalOcean. If support is your primary decision criterion, WP Engine is the stronger choice in this head-to-head.
Switching between web hosting tools is generally possible but involves migration effort: exporting your data or configuration from WP Engine, re-importing or reconfiguring in DigitalOcean, and updating any API integrations or environment variables in your codebase. The effort scales with how deeply embedded the tool is in your stack. Test DigitalOcean on a non-production project first before migrating.
WP Engine (85/100) is the better fit for teams who prioritise uptime — its strongest dimension — and who want a low-cost starting price. DigitalOcean (88/100) is the better fit for teams who prioritise uptime and want a low-cost starting price. If both dimensions matter equally, the overall score winner (DigitalOcean) is the safer default choice.
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