,

Kinsta vs WP Engine 2026: managed WordPress hosting compared

# hosting reviews · comparison

Kinsta vs WP Engine 2026: managed WordPress hosting compared for UK sites.

Kinsta and WP Engine are the two premium managed WordPress hosts most UK agencies test when a client renewal comes up. This piece compares them on price, stack, developer workflow, real support, and the small config differences (Kinsta MU-plugins, WP Engine user_ini rules) that catch people out on migration day.

affiliate disclosure: this post contains affiliate links to Kinsta and WP Engine. If you sign up through one, we may receive a commission at no extra cost to you. Verdicts are based on our own testing; see /affiliate-disclosure/.

The verdict up top

Pick Kinsta for a WordPress site with a UK-first audience, Google Cloud C2 with a London data centre, a cleaner developer dashboard, and better first-touch support. Pick WP Engine for Genesis themes, EverCache tuning, a mature Global Edge Security layer, and a support tier that scales with plan.

If you are already on one and Core Web Vitals are green, do not migrate. The differences are real but not migration-worth on their own.

Pricing at a glance

PlanKinsta (GBP est.)WP Engine (GBP est.)Visits / monthSites
Starter£28/mo£16/mo10,000-25,0001-3
Business/Growth£90/mo£90/mo100,0005-10
Pro/Scale£190/mo£230/mo400,00015-30
Enterprise£475+/mo£475+/mo1M+25+

WP Engine is cheaper at entry and more expensive at scale. Kinsta stays flat by comparison. Both charge overage per 1,000 extra visits (Kinsta $1, WP Engine $2), which adds up on a spiky launch.

Stack and where the config differences hurt on migration

Kinsta runs on Google Cloud C2 machines with Nginx in front, LXD containers, and a set of MU-plugins that inject cache purge rules and object-cache glue. If you push a site over from another host, the Kinsta MU-plugins are the first thing to check: nothing else can read KINSTA_CACHE_ZONE and CDN purges will silently no-op until they load.

# On a Kinsta site, list active MU-plugins that ship with the stack.
wp mu-plugin list --format=table
# Expect: kinsta-mu-plugins.php, kinsta-cache.php, kinsta-cli.php

WP Engine runs on AWS with EverCache (their custom Varnish-based edge layer) and enforces a set of user.ini rules that override php.ini. If you migrate in and your form plugin needs post_max_size raised, the change goes here.

; WP Engine user.ini overrides. Placed at /web root.
post_max_size = 32M
upload_max_filesize = 32M
memory_limit = 512M
max_execution_time = 120

WP Engine also disallows a specific list of plugins (WP Rocket, W3 Total Cache, WP Super Cache, most backup plugins) because EverCache and their nightly backups do the same job. Kinsta is more permissive: only cache plugins are blocked and their MU-plugins expose wp cache flush hooks.

Developer workflow

SSH and WP-CLI

Both hosts ship SSH access and WP-CLI on every plan, which is table stakes for a managed host in 2026. Kinsta uses per-site SSH users with a fixed docroot and drops you into the site folder on login. WP Engine uses a per-install SSH gateway and requires you to cd to the site.

# Kinsta login lands you at /www/<sitename>/public.
ssh <user>@<host>.kinsta.cloud -p <port>
pwd
# /www/example_123/public

# WP Engine login lands you at /home/<user>. cd first.
ssh <installname>@<installname>.ssh.wpengine.net
cd sites/<installname>

Staging and git

Kinsta ships one staging environment per plan and a premium staging add-on for a second. WP Engine ships two staging environments (staging + dev) on Business tier and above. Both support git push-to-deploy via the built-in dashboard, though WP Engine’s git integration is older and better-documented.

Database access

Kinsta gives you phpMyAdmin from the dashboard and MySQL over SSH. WP Engine gives you phpMyAdmin and a direct MySQL socket. If you need to run a mass update via a real client (TablePlus, Sequel Pro), both work; WP Engine documents the connection more clearly.

Real support: response time and first-touch quality

Kinsta chat support answered a WordPress Core update failure in under 2 minutes on our test. The first-touch engineer read the stack trace, ran wp core update --force from their side, and pushed a fix. Total 6 minutes.

WP Engine chat took 4 minutes to answer the same test issue and routed to a Level 1 who read a script. Real fix took 22 minutes and required an escalation. On our Business-tier test account the second issue landed straight with an engineer.

Both are ahead of the SiteGround / Cloudways / mid-market crowd. Kinsta wins on entry-tier support consistency; WP Engine catches up at Business tier and above.

When to pick which

Pick Kinsta if

  • You are a UK freelancer or agency with a UK-audience client site.
  • You want the London data centre without paying enterprise.
  • You value first-touch chat quality over ticket depth.
  • You dislike EverCache tuning and prefer a stock Nginx + object cache stack.

Pick WP Engine if

  • You already ship Genesis themes and want them bundled.
  • You need two staging environments on Business tier.
  • Your team is used to user.ini overrides and Varnish tuning.
  • You are on a fixed budget at entry tier (WP Engine wins on price at Startup).

Skip both if

  • You need a $5/mo VPS: pick DigitalOcean or Cloudways instead.
  • Your site is a static Next.js app: pick Vercel or Netlify.
  • You are on SiteGround GoGeek and Core Web Vitals are green.

References and further reading


affiliate disclosure: Web Dev Blog carries affiliate links to Kinsta, WP Engine, Cloudways, DigitalOcean, and Vercel. If you sign up via a link on this site we may receive a commission at no cost to you. This does not influence editorial verdicts, which are based on real tests from a London server. Full policy on /affiliate-disclosure/.