These are 47 of the best blogging platforms where you can start your site in 2020, publish amazing content and build your audience.
It’s easier than ever to start a site and create your online home. Even if you don’t want to spend time setting it all up, or if you don’t want to spend any money on it or even if you don’t have any technical skills. Let’s get started with the list of best blog sites.
WordPress.org
This is my recommended choice
Price: Free.
What is it: Open-source and self-hosted platform that is so customizable with thousands of free themes and plugins so that you can build anything you want without any tech know-how.
By far the largest and most popular blogging platform and CMS. Initially released in 2003 and currently hosts more than 35% of the total web, including my own site.
With WordPress, you’re in the safe hands. It puts you fully in control of the whole experience. You can trust that WordPress will be here in the long run and that you always will fully own all your content and data. See my full review of WordPress.
Best for: Recommended for everyone from those who want to start a personal blog or site to those who want to create an online business.
How to get started with WordPress
Blogger
Price: Free.
What is it: Commercial platform.
Blogger is one of the early blogging platforms later acquired by Google. Easy to start, easy to use with a decent selection of design themes.
Very few developments over the last few years point to the idea that Google may not be that interested in Blogger anymore. It could be on the way to join Google Reader and other products Google stops liking.
Blogger has seen a decline in usage and currently hosts fewer than 1% of all sites on the web. See a detailed review in my Blogger Vs WordPress comparison.
What does it mean to be a commercial blogging platform?
Commercial and proprietary platforms are all-inclusive and low maintenance so you don’t need to worry about a hosting server, software updates or security. They manage it all for you.
Here are the main drawbacks:
- When using a commercial platform you don’t own your blog, the company behind the platform owns it.
- Commercial platforms are generally more expensive and have inherent restrictive terms of use with regards to the design, what you can post content about, and if and how you can monetize.
- Commercial platforms change, adapt their positioning and disrupt their users. Some cease to exist. Some get taken over, get neglected and shut down.
- At the same time, they make it more difficult to export your content and move it to another platform.
Blogger is best for: Those who want something quick and easy to write on.
Blot
A simple platform with no user interface
Price: $20 per year.
What is it: Indie commercial platform. I love the idea of this. Very cool and simple blogging platform with no user interface. Just upload a file to your Dropbox folder and it automatically gets published as a blog post on your blog.
Blot’s simplicity can be a negative point for some. If you want to build something more advanced, you may need to look for a different solution.
Best for: For those who don’t want to deal with a blogging platform but still want to have a public home for their thoughts online. And for those who want to support indie developers. Blot is developed by a solo entrepreneur with a public roadmap.
Cargo
Price: $99 per year or $13 per month.
What is it: Commercial platform. Simple to use site builder with a selection of sixteen unique and visual design templates. It may not be the best option if you know what you want and have some specific needs.
Best for: For those who want a simple way to create a creative site with a unique design.
Craft CMS
Price: Free for personal sites. $299 plus $59/year for professional sites.
What is it: A fully-featured content management system that you install on your web server and that includes e-commerce support and plugins. Focused on creating sites from scratch rather than from templates.
Hosts 0.1% of all sites on the web. Not too user-friendly to beginners who don’t have much tech-experience and just want a place to share their passion with the world.
Best for: For those with technical know-how and that really know what they want to do with their site.
CodePen
Price: Feature restricted and ad-based free version. From $19/month for a premium version with no ads.
What is it: Commercial platform and a social community for front-end designers and developers to showcase their skills and find inspiration. Not for you if you’re just a writer without any skills or interest in design or development.
Best for: For designers and developers who want to be a part of a community of like-minded creatives.
Drupal
Price: Free.
What is it: Open-source content management system that you install on your web server. Focus on enterprise and not just a blogging platform. Hosts fewer than 2% of all the websites.
Best for: For larger corporations that are looking for an open-source self-hosted CMS alternative to WordPress.
Edublogs
Price: Feature restricted free version without a domain name, analytics, embeds and Google indexing. $7.95 per month or $39.95 per year for the premium version.
What is it: Commercial platform. Powered by the WordPress software but with a focus on educational institutions, teachers, and students.
Best for: For students and teachers to use at their institutions.
Emyspot
Price: Feature restricted free version with ads. Premium yearly subscription for $2/month.
What is it: Commercial platform. Hosted site builder where you can create a blog or an e-commerce store.
Best for: For those looking for a Google-free alternative to Blogger.
Ghost
A good blog alternative to WordPress
Price: Free to self-host. From $79 per month when billed annually for a managed hosted version.
What is it: Open-source, non-profit, transparent and independent blogging platform. They have a public development roadmap and even openly share their revenue. Very open about their pros and cons versus other popular platforms.
Ghost is more focused on publishers and is not for those wanting an e-commerce store, a business site or custom features and extensions.
Best for: For those looking for a simpler, self-hosted and open-source blogging platform alternative to WordPress.org.
Grav
Price: Free.
What is it: Open source content management system focused on performance.
Best for: Those comfortable with the command line interface looking for a speedy and versatile CMS.
Hashbase
Price: Free for 100MB of storage. Pro account at $7/month.
What is it: This one is a bit different from all the other platforms on my list. It provides storage for websites on the peer-to-peer web. Peer-to-peer web uses the Dat protocol rather than HTML and doesn’t use a server. Explore more with the Beaker Browser.
Best for: Those who want to explore the peer-to-peer web.
Hugo
Price: Free.
What is it: Free and open-source framework for building websites and blogs. It’s a static site generator with speed and flexibility. Features a passionate community, hundreds of templates and allows you to build anything you want.
Best for: Those familiar and comfortable with the command line interface and Markup.
Jekyll
Price: Free.
What is it: Open-source static site generator in Ruby. Great for coders but not for those unfamiliar with coding.
Best for: If you’re a developer and want a simple blogging platform.
Joomla
Price: Free.
What is it: Open-source and self-hosted complete content management system. Second-largest CMS in the world hosting less than 3% of the total web.
Best for: Like Drupal, it’s best for those that are looking for an open-source self-hosted full-fledged CMS alternative to WordPress.
Price: Free.
What is it: Commercial platform. LinkedIn wants you to post your articles on their platform. There are no advanced features at all but you do stand to get benefit from the network effect of more than 650 million users of LinkedIn.
Best for: Best to use as a content syndication platform and publish some of the content from your site there in order to expand your reach and traffic.
Listed
Privacy and cryptocurrency integration
Price: Free. Needs a premium subscription of $34.99/year if you want to connect your own domain name.
What is it: Open-source, minimal and no-interface blogging platform using the end-to-end encrypted privacy writing app Standard Notes to post your articles.
Features CSS styling. There’s an option to run a mailing list. Readers can subscribe to get new post notifications via email. Readers can tip or pay to read posts using cryptocurrency.
Best for: For those who want a simple site that allows cryptocurrency tipping and paywall without needing to use a blogging platform interface. And for those who want to support indie developers as this is an independent app.
LiveJournal
Price: Feature restricted and ad-based free version. $19.95 a year for the premium version.
What is it: Commercial platform. More of a social community where you can share your life stories using a blog journal and meet other people.
Best for: For those looking to socialize as part of a community rather than simply starting a blog.
Medium
Price: Free.
What is it: Commercial platform launched in 2012. A place to publish your writing. Using their Partner Program you can get paid based on how Medium’s paying members engage with your content.
It has a large network effect of millions of monthly visitors but at the same time a lot of noise with 20,000 new articles published per day.
It can drive views to your posts, especially if you submit your content to one of the popular Medium publications such as:
- freeCodeCamp with more than 600,000 subscribers. Here’s how to post there
- The Mission with more than 500,000 subscribers. Here are the submission guidelines
- The Startup with more than 500,000 subscribers. Here’s how to submit your story
- Better Humans with more than 300,000 subscribers. Here’s how to write for them
- Think Growth with almost 200,000 subscribers. Here’s how to contribute
Best for: Medium is best to use for content syndication in order to expand your reach and traffic.
MovableType
Price: 7-day free trial and $499 per year after that.
What is it: Commercial platform. One of the blogging pioneers hosting blogs since 2001. Less than 0.1% of the web is hosted on it these days.
Best for: For those who are curious to test one of the original blogging platforms.
Moonfruit
Price: 14-day free trial and $11.99 per month after that.
What is it: Commercial platform. A site builder that allows you to build a blog without any coding.
Best for: For those looking for a simple and easy solution to start a managed site.
Neocities
Price: Free.
What is it: Open source and community funded platform. There is no ads and no tracking. Basic accounts are free but you can upgrade to a $5/month supporter account and get extra features such as custom domain name.
Best for: For those who want to join a community of creative, Geocities-like sites.
Plume
Price: Free.
What is it: A federated and open source blogging application. It’s an interconnected but independent network. Supports collaborative writing where many people can contribute to the same content.
Best for: Those who want to explore the federated web.
Postach
Price: Free.
What is it: Evernote powered blogging platform with no interface. You write your posts in Evernote and with a click publish them on your blog too.
Best for: For people that don’t want a traditional blogging platform and just want to publish their writing from Evernote.
Posthaven
Small, self-sustaining blogging platform
Price: $5 per month.
What is it: From the founders of blogging platform Posterous which was acquired by Twitter and shut down. It’s a simple blogging platform with a pledge that they will last forever, are not looking for investors and have a self-sustaining business model.
Best for: For those who want a simple blogging place that they can trust will be here next year too.
Squarespace
A popular commercial site builder
Price: Free trial and after that $16 per month plus taxes for a personal version, $26 for business.
What is it: Commercial and hosted site builder founded in 2003 with annual revenue of about $300 million. It makes it easy to start a site from a variety of templates.
Venture funded with a $1.9 billion valuation. They have a large marketing budget so you might have heard about them on your favorite podcast. Hosts 1.5% of the web.
Best for: For those who want a simple turnkey solution. See full details in my WordPress or Squarespace guide.
Strikingly
Price: Feature restricted free version. $20 per month for a pro version.
What is it: Commercial site builder that allows you to start with no design or coding experience.
Best for: For those looking for a simple and easy solution to start a managed site.
Svbtle
Price: Free for the first 2 weeks and then $6 per month.
What is it: A simple blog site focused on the writing and reading experience and with a promise that it will remain online forever.
Best for: For those who want a safe, long-lasting and very simple place to publish their writing.
Telegraph
Price: Free.
What is it: A minimal publishing platform from the people behind the Telegram messenger app.
Best for: For those who love Telegram and just want a place to occasionally post some long-form content.
Tumblr
Price: Free.
What is it: Commercial platform. A social network with an inbuilt blogging feature. Has seen a decline in usage since acquired by Yahoo and now hosts 0.1% of the total web.
It was recently acquired by Automattic, the company behind WordPress.com, and it remains to be seen what they will do with it. See a full review in my Tumblr Vs WordPress comparison.
Best for: Tumblr may not be the best to use as your site’s home but you can use it for content syndication to expand your reach and traffic.
txt.fyi
Price: Free.
What is it: The simplest blog site there is. Write something in the large text field you see when visiting the site, click publish and your post is live online.
There’s no “tracking, ad-tech, webfonts, analytics, javascript, cookies, databases, user accounts, comments, friending, likes, follower counts“. All content is not indexed so search engines cannot find it.
Best for: Those who want the simplest possible way to write something and share it with their friends or network.
Typepad
Price: 14-day free trial and then $8.95 per month for the basic plan.
What is it: Commercial platform. Another one of the blogging pioneers, launched in 2003, and based on the Movable Type platform. Has seen a decline in development, popularity and use over recent years and currently hosts less than 0.1% of the total web.
Best for: For those who want to try Seth Godin’s original blogging platform. Seth himself moved his blog from Typepad (after many years there) to WordPress.
TYPO3
Price: Free.
What is it: Open-source and self-hosted content management system focused on the enterprise. Not really focused on bloggers. Hosts 0.5% of the total web.
Best for: For those in corporations looking to build more complex sites.
Ucoz
Price: Feature restricted and ad-based free version. Option to subscribe from $5.99 per month to remove ads and get a full set of features.
What is it: Commercial platform. Site builder that hosts 0.1% of the web.
Best for: For those who are looking for a simple site builder.
uKit
Price: 14-day free trial and then subscription from $4 per month.
What is it: Commercial platform. Site builder targeting businesses. Easy drag and drop, hundreds of templates and ability to sell your products online.
Best for: For businesses looking for a simple-to-use site builder.
Virb
Price: 14-day free trial and then $10 per month subscription.
What is it: Commercial platform. A simple site builder targeting creatives.
Best for: For those who are looking for a simple site builder.
Voog
Price: Starting from $8 per month.
What is it: Commercial platform. A front-end site builder targeting agencies, designers and developers who are creating sites or e-commerce stores for their clients.
Best for: For agencies, designers and developers looking for a simple place to host their clients.
Webflow
Price: Starting from $12 per month.
What is it: Commercial platform focused on designers founded in 2013. It’s a CMS that allows you to build a site from scratch while working in a visual site builder and without any need for coding.
Raised $72 million in funding valuing the company at $300 million in August 2019. Has more than 120 employees, more than 45,000 paying customers, more than $20 million in revenue and is profitable.
Best for: For those that want to build something different and unique starting from scratch.
Webnode
Price: Feature restricted and ad-based free version. From $11.95 per month for the ad-free version.
What is it: Commercial platform. A simple site builder that makes it easy to create a site using a template.
Best for: As another alternative for those who are looking for a simple site builder.
Webs
Price: From $5.95 per month.
What is it: Commercial platform. A site builder targeting small businesses. A subsidiary of Vistaprint. Hosts 0.1% of the web.
Best for: For small businesses looking for a quick and easy way to build their site.
WebStarts
Price: Feature restricted and ad-based free version. From $4.89 per month for the ad-free version.
What is it: Commercial platform. A simple site builder.
Best for: Another alternative for those who are looking for a simple site builder.
Webydo
Price: Starting from $90 per month.
What is it: Commercial platform. A site builder targeting designers and agencies.
Best for: For designers and agencies who want an easy hosted solution for their clients.
Weebly
Price: Feature restricted and ad-based free version. From $6 per month for ad-free.
What is it: A commercial platform with more than 600,000 paid subscribers. Was acquired by the payment company Square for $365 million.
It’s an advanced site builder featuring e-commerce and email marketing, and it’s targeting creative entrepreneurs. Hosts 0.4% of the total web.
Best for: For those who want a turnkey solution for their business.
Wix
Price: Feature restricted and ad-based free version. From $8.5 per month for the ad-free version.
What is it: Public listed commercial platform founded in 2006. More than 2000 employees and annual revenue of more than $700 million in 2019 but still isn’t profitable.
Features an advanced site builder with innovations such as the “Artificial Design Intelligence” that builds a website for you automatically. Hosts more than 1% of the total web. See my full Wix vs WordPress comparison.
Best for: For those who want a turnkey solution for their business.
WordPress.com
Price: Feature restricted and ad-based free version. From $4 per month for a basic ad-free version and from $25/month for better features such as premium themes, Google Analytics, and no branding.
What is it: The commercial and hosted version of the WordPress software run by the remote-first company Automattic. They raised $300 million in venture funding with a valuation of $3 billion in September 2019.
Automattic also contributes to the development of the open-source version. See a detailed review: WordPress.com vs WordPress.org.
Best for: Best for entrepreneurs who want an easy and managed WordPress solution without needing to deal with hosting, security and such.
Write.as
Built with strong privacy principles
Price: Free. $0.83 per month for the ability to add your own domain name.
What is it: Ad-free, distraction-free and independent blogging platform funded by its customers. It’s built around privacy with strong principles and your identity as a blogger is being kept confidential.
It doesn’t track you, doesn’t log your IP address, doesn’t know who you are and you can even publish using their Tor hidden service. A supporter of the open web.
Best for: Great ethical choice for those who believe in the open web, want to support an independent platform that has strong privacy principles.
Yola
Price: Free for a 3-page site. From $6.95 per month for the full version.
What is it: Commercial platform. A site builder targeting businesses.
Best for: For those who want a simple site builder solution for their business.