Pricing Statistics For 67 Premium Plugins

Pricing statistics for premium WordPress plugins

On this page I would like to show you several interesting statistics I have collected for 67 of the most popular commercial WordPress plugins, including details on common pricing models and average prices charged by those products.

All the data is coming directly from my plugin comparison articles. As of today I have created feature + price comparisons for 10 different categories of WordPress products, from eCommerce plugins to SEO plugins. In all of them I have worked closely with the plugin developers and built a way for them to easily check and correct their listing data.

Please note that the below stats are not static: Both the statistics and comparisons get updated regularly in order to stay up to date. If you spot any mistakes be sure to let me know so I can fix it!

User Reviews for Commercial Plugins
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1. Common Plugin Pricing Models

For each plugin listed in my comparisons I track how the developers choose to sell their product. Before getting to the results here is a short summary of the four popular pricing models you will find in the graphics below:

  • Premium – Commercial plugins that are sold at a fixed price and do not have a free version available. Generally you own the plugin after purchase but with most vendors you will need to renew your license after 1 year if you want to continue receiving support.
  • Freemium with Pro Version – A basic version of the plugin can be downloaded for free. A pro version is sold and adds additional features.
  • Freemium with Addons – A basic version of the plugin can be downloaded for free. Depending on your needs you can purchase and add individual addons, each of which adds a specific new feature to the plugin.
  • Subscription / SaaS – You pay for the plugin (or the service to use it) through a recurring subscription. Usually you can not continue to use the plugin/service if you stop to pay.

Now, let’s finally get to the meat of this article: Colorful charts. The following one shows the distribution of pricing models among all 67 tracked plugins:

How about some more pie? The next charts show you the distribution of pricing models for each of the 10 plugin categories separately:

eCommerce Plugins

Membership Plugins

Form Plugins

Manager Plugins

Backup Plugins

Gallery Plugins

Affiliate Plugins

Slider Plugins

Optin Plugins

SEO Plugins

My Takeaways

As you can see the categories show very different levels of color: In some of them one or two kinds of pricing models clearly dominate. That could indicate that new players often followed the example set by the leaders or established products in their niche and imitated their pricing structure.

But the opposite example does definitely exist as well: In a few niches new WordPress products have successfully used a different pricing model to differentiate themselves from the established competition. One example is Ninja Forms, which was the first to use the pay per addon model in the form plugin space. MarketPress on the other hand is advertising the fact that they do not charge per addon like most of their competing eCommerce plugins do. And InfiniteWP saw an opportunity when many people were complaining about the high subscription-based pricing of ManageWP and entered the market with an alternative that charges flat addon fees.

For some niches there are also simply logical reasons that lead to a dominant pricing model: eCommerce plugins for example depend on many niche features (like local payment providers or shipping tracking) being available. That makes the addon model, where independent developers can create and sell their own niche solutions, an attractive choice.

2. Average Plugin Prices

The following graphics are trying to answer the question: What does a premium WordPress plugin cost on average? I have tracked the minimum and maximum average prices, both for the use on a single site as well as for use on 10 sites. Since many products have complicated pricing structures and might charge for different things I have used those simple pricing points that can be easily compared between all the different products. Here are more details on what exactly each value means:

  • Minimum Price (1 Site) – Means the lowest price a plugin is available for if you want to use it on a single site. For freemium plugins this is the free version. For premium-only plugins it is the basic version or cheapest package they sell.
  • Maximum Price (1 Site) – The price you need to pay if you want to use the plugin on a single site with all features. Usually this will be the most expensive package listed on the developers site that includes all functionality. For plugins selling individual addons it factors in the price of all the addons tracked in my comparison.
  • Minimum and Maximum Price for 10 Sites – This tracks how the price changes if you want to use the plugin on 10 sites instead of on a single blog. Plugin developers charge very differently for use on multiple sites: Some require a license for each site, others offer a discount or even allow use on many sites at no additional cost.

Please note all prices are calculated as “cost per year“. For SaaS and subscription-based products that charge on a monthly basis prices are calculated “per year” to make them comparable with the other plugins. For example a backup service that starts at $10 per month for 1 site would have a minimum price of $120. You can see the exact prices used for all products in the table at the bottom of the page.

With all those explanations out of the way here is a chart that shows the average minimum and maximum prices of all 67 compared premium plugins:

Just like before here is again the breakdown of average plugin prices for each of the 10 different categories:

My Takeaways

From my observation WordPress plugins have very homogenous prices, even when looking across several categories. For typical premium plugins you will very regularly see price points starting at around $49 for a basic version which is then going up to $149 or $199 for a version that comes with all the bells and whistles. A prime example where you can see this is the “Membership” category above: Most plugins in this niche have similar pricing model and price points.

One big exception are plugins charging per addon, which drive up the average prices displayed in the graphics above by a lot. That is most visible in the eCommerce category: Since the maximum price figures in the cost of all tracked addons plugins like WooCommerce and Easy Digital Downloads reach numbers of several thousand dollars. Important to note of course that this is mostly a theoretical (yet interesting) figure because no one will actually need to buy all those addons.

Plugins sold on CodeCanyon drive down the average minimum price: With a cost of around $20 they are usually cheaper than their commercial competitors not sold on the CodeCanyon marketplace. This changes when looking at cost for use on 10 sites however: Since with CodeCanyon you need to pay for each site you want to use the plugin on they quickly get more expensive than the competition, which often offers discounts for multi-site users.

3. Individual Plugin Data

Below follows a complete list of all the plugins that are part of the statistics above as well as their respective data that was used to calculate the averages.

You do not really need to read this unless you are curious which plugins are represented in the data above or you want to double check the values I used. No matter if you decide to stop here or not, feel free to jump to the comments and let me know your opinion or any other feedback!

Name Pricing Model Min Price (1 Site) Max Price (1 Site) Max Price (10 Sites)
Membership Plugins – view my Membership plugin comparison
WishList Member Premium 97.00$ 97.00$ 297.00$
s2Member Freemium 0.00$ 69.00$ 129.00$
Magic Members Premium 97.00$ 97.00$ 207.00$
MemberPress Premium 99.00$ 199.00$ 199.00$
Memberwing Premium 89.95$ 89.95$ 129.95$
Paid Memberships Pro Freemium 0.00$ 97.00$ 97.00$
WP-Member Premium 47.00$ 147.00$ 147.00$
Restrict Content Pro Premium 42.00$ 155.00$ 155.00$
Digital Access Pass Premium 167.00$ 167.00$ 297.00$
eCommerce Plugins – view my eCommerce plugin comparison
WooCommerce Freemium + Addons 0.00$ 3410.00$ 8368.00$
WP eCommerce Freemium + Addons 0.00$ 627.00$ 1108.00$
iThemes Exchange Freemium + Addons 0.00$ 582.00$ 1062.00$
Jigoshop Freemium + Addons 0.00$ 1067.00$ 3177.00$
MarketPress Subscription 0.00$ 228.00$ 228.00$
Easy Digital Downloads Freemium + Addons 0.00$ 1463.00$ 3291.00$
Shopp Freemium + Addons 0.00$ 674.00$ 1009.00$
Cart66 Cloud Subscription 360.00$ 360.00$ 3600.00$
Management Plugins – view my Management plugin comparison
CMS Commander Subscription 0.00$ 80.00$ 120.00$
ManageWP Subscription 0.00$ 239.99$ 419.98$
InfiniteWP Freemium + Addons 0.00$ 759.50$ 759.50$
WP Remote Freemium 0.00$ 0.00$ 0.00$
iControlWP Subscription 11.40$ 54.00$ 540.00$
MainWP Freemium + Addons 0.00$ 319.90$ 319.90$
iThemes Sync Subscription 0.00$ 1560.00$ 1560.00$
Form Plugins – view my Form plugin comparison
Gravity Forms Premium 39.00$ 199.00$ 199.00$
Formidable Pro Freemium 0.00$ 47.00$ 117.00$
Ninja Forms Freemium + Addons 0.00$ 355.00$ 750.00$
Quform Premium 28.00$ 28.00$ 280.00$
FormCraft Premium 33.00$ 33.00$ 330.00$
ARForms Premium 33.00$ 33.00$ 330.00$
Form Maker Freemium 0.00$ 30.00$ 60.00$
Visual Form Builder Freemium 0.00$ 69.00$ 249.00$
Backup Plugins – view my Backup plugin comparison
BackWPup Freemium 0.00$ 75.00$ 190.00$
blogVault Subscription 108.00$ 108.00$ 1188.00$
VaultPress Subscription 60.00$ 348.00$ 3480.00$
Backup Buddy Premium 80.00$ 80.00$ 100.00$
BackUpWordPress Freemium + Addons 0.00$ 120.00$ 1200.00$
UpdraftPlus Freemium + Addons 0.00$ 102.50$ 1025.00$
Gallery Plugins – view my Gallery plugin comparison
NextGen Gallery Freemium 0.00$ 39.00$ 39.00$
Envira Gallery Premium 19.00$ 49.00$ 99.00$
AD Gallery Premium 17.00$ 17.00$ 170.00$
Premium Gallery Manager Premium 22.00$ 22.00$ 220.00$
SharePrints Premium 39.00$ 39.00$ 129.00$
MaxGalleria Freemium + Addons 0.00$ 114.00$ 594.00$
FooGallery Freemium + Addons 0.00$ 19.00$ 69.00$
Affiliate Plugins – view my Affiliate plugin comparison
AffiliateWP Premium 49.00$ 199.00$ 199.00$
Affiliate Royale Premium 85.00$ 85.00$ 165.00$
WP Affiliate Manager Freemium 0.00$ 39.00$ 97.00$
Magic Affiliate Premium 89.00$ 89.00$ 189.00$
Affiliates Pro Freemium 0.00$ 99.00$ 199.00$
Slider Plugins – view my Slider plugin comparison
Soliloquy Premium 19.00$ 99.00$ 99.00$
SlideDeck Premium 49.00$ 99.00$ 119.00$
Slider Revolution Premium 18.00$ 18.00$ 180.00$
LayerSlider Premium 17.00$ 17.00$ 170.00$
RoyalSlider Premium 22.00$ 22.00$ 220.00$
Slider PRO Premium 28.00$ 28.00$ 280.00$
Optin Plugins – view my Optin plugin comparison
Bloom Subscription 89$ 89$ 89$
OptinMonster Premium 49.00$ 199.00$ 199.00$
Pippity Premium 49.00$ 49.00$ 164.00$
Optin Revolution Freemium 0.00$ 77.00$ 97.00$
Ninja Popups Premium 20.00$ 20.00$ 200.00$
PopupPress Premium 17.00$ 17.00$ 170.00$
SEO Plugins – view my SEO plugin comparison
WordPress SEO by Yoast Freemium + Addons 0.00$ 247.00$ 907.00$
All in One SEO Pack Freemium 0.00$ 39.00$ 0.00$
SEOPressor Premium 97.00$ 97.00$ 97.00$
Premium SEO Pack Premium 39.00$ 39.00$ 390.00$
WP Full SEO Premium 297.00$ 297.00$ 297.00$
SEO Plugin by Squirrly Subscription 0.00$ 240.00$ 912.00$

About Thomas Höfter

I am a WordPress plugin developer from Germany. Some might know me from my WP Robot plugin or one of my free plugins but most don't know me at all. To change that you can write me a message or find me on Google+.

8 Comments


  1. Thanks for sharing! Plugins business models is a very interesting subject, comparisons always give us better understanding about the entire eco-system and where the industry is going.


  2. Wow! as in WOW!!! Fabulous write up containing data that is GOLD is you’re involved in plug-in development. Great job!


  3. Great write up. I did want to point out one correction for Ninja Forms. Now that we offer a membership the cap prove for absolutely everything on unlimited sites if currently $499.


  4. Thanks a lot Thomas. Gives me a lot to think about in regard to plugin pricing. Will change a few things and see how that goes


  5. Thanks for the great analysis Thomas! Many of the Freemius/Premium plugins are also subscription based behind the scenes. You won’t be able to continue getting support/updates unless you continue paying. I would say the main difference is the auto-renewal.


    1. That’s actually incorrect. Subscription means that once you stop paying for something, you are no longer allowed to use it. Think ISP or cable TV.

      The Freemium/Premium lets you “buy” something, with the added benefit of having support and updates if you want to keep paying.

      Now, theoretically it means that you don’t have to pay after the first year expires, since you “only” lose support and further updates. But if you’re running plugins like InfiniteWP or Custom Contact Forms, you cannot afford to have it outdated since it leaves you open to malicious attacks, just as it happened several times in the past several months:
      http://blog.sucuri.net/2014/12/security-advisory-high-severity-infinitewp-client-wordpress-plugin.html
      http://blog.sucuri.net/2014/08/database-takeover-in-custom-contact-forms.html

      With the proof of concept publicly available, you’re practically begging to be hacked if you’re not keeping your plugins up-to-date.


      1. You are right @Nemanja. Thanks for the correction. But as you mentioned, it’s very risky to keep plugins not up to date, so even though you can practically continue using the plugin – it’s really not recommended.


  6. Wow… thanks for this great write up mate.. You explained each and everything so briefly.. It will help me a lot surely.. keep up the good work and share more such informative content with all of us.. cheers

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