Next.js vs WordPress for a growing business
WordPress powers a huge share of the web. Next.js powers a growing share of modern product companies. Here's how to choose for your stage of growth.
WordPress — when it fits
WordPress is a strong choice when:
- You need a content-heavy marketing site with a familiar CMS
- Your team will update blog posts and pages regularly without a developer
- Budget is tighter and standard plugins cover your needs
- You're not building custom apps, portals, or complex integrations
WordPress can absolutely power professional business sites. The ceiling appears when you need bespoke functionality that fights the platform.
Next.js — when it fits
Next.js (React-based) makes sense when:
- You're building a SaaS marketing site with custom pricing, auth, or product flows
- Performance and Core Web Vitals matter for SEO and conversion
- You need API integrations, customer portals, or e-commerce beyond off-the-shelf plugins
- You have — or will have — a developer involved long-term
Huginn uses Next.js for Pro-tier builds where the site is effectively a product surface, not just a brochure.
The comparison in plain terms
- Ease of content edits — WordPress wins for non-technical editors
- Speed and performance — Next.js wins out of the box
- Custom functionality — Next.js wins at scale
- Initial cost — WordPress is often cheaper to launch
- Long-term flexibility — Next.js avoids plugin dependency and platform lock-in
What about Webflow, Squarespace, Shopify?
Managed platforms are valid for MVPs and simple stores. The trade-off is the same: lower upfront cost, less control when you outgrow the platform. Many businesses start there and rebuild custom when the template ceiling hits.
Our recommendation
Match the platform to the job. Service business with 8 pages and a blog? WordPress or a static site with a lightweight CMS is fine. SaaS with tiered pricing, Stripe, and a trial flow? Invest in a proper custom build. Don't choose Next.js because it's trendy — choose it because your roadmap needs it.
