Research: How Companies Build Websites in 2026
Quick Answer on WordPress
WordPress market share isn’t collapsing, but growth has stalled. As of March 2026, WordPress holds 42.6% of all websites — the first meaningful decline after years of growth, though still marginal (share has fluctuated between 42.6% and 43.5% since 2022) .
Current CMS Market Structure (March 2026)
| Platform | Market Share | Trend |
| WordPress | 42.6% | Stabilization/slight decline |
| Shopify | 5.1% | Growing (from 0.1% in 2014) |
| Wix | 4.2% | Growing |
| Squarespace | 2.5% | Growing |
| Joomla | ~2% | Declining |
| Drupal | ~2% | Declining |
| No CMS | 28.6% | Declining (was 68.2% in 2013) |
Source: W3Techs
Key Trends in 2026
1. No-code / Low-code Dominance
Low-code/no-code market projected to reach $187 billion by 2030
82% of business users report higher ROI from no-code tools vs traditional development
Gartner predicted 75% of new applications would be built on low-code platforms by 2026
2. Leading Platforms in 2026
For Designers & Creative Agencies: – Webflow — the no-code gold standard with clean code and enterprise capabilities – Framer — grew 400% in site publications during 2024-2025, positioned as “Figma for production”
For Business & E-commerce: – Shopify — 26% of e-commerce CMS market – Wix Studio — capturing the agency segment, 40% of new users have no design experience
For Startups & SaaS: – Bubble — full web applications without code – Dorik — fast static sites with excellent performance (90+ Core Web Vitals)
3. Headless CMS — Rapid Growth
Headless CMS market grew from $973.8M (2025) to$1.19B (2026)
Forecast: $9.16B by 2036 (CAGR 22.6%)
Key drivers: AI integration, omnichannel content delivery, IoT
4. AI is Now a Baseline Requirement
73% of web designers use AI for layout generation
AI integration is built into most modern platforms
What’s Happening with WordPress?
Why Market Share Has Stabilized:
Market saturation — WordPress has already captured most of the available market
No-code competition — designers are moving to Webflow/Framer for complex visual sites
Maintenance complexity — requires updates, plugins, speed optimization
Simplified alternatives — modern builders deliver results “out of the box” without hosting setup, security, or SEO configuration
Where WordPress Remains Strong:
Content sites and blogs
Projects with unique business logic (requires developers)
Projects where full code control is essential
Budget projects (free core)
Platform Selection Recommendations for 2026
| Scenario | Recommendation |
| SaaS/Startup Landing Page | Framer or Webflow |
| E-commerce Store | Shopify |
| Corporate Site with Blog | Webflow or WordPress + Elementor |
| Internal Tools | Bubble, Retool, Softr |
| High-Performance Static | Dorik, Astro, Next.js + headless CMS |
| Omnichannel (web + app + IoT) | Headless CMS (Storyblok, Contentful, Strapi) |
WordPress isn’t dying, but the era of its uncontested growth is over. The market is fragmenting: – No-codeis capturing designers and marketers – Headless CMS is taking enterprise and omnichannel projects –Shopify dominates e-commerce – WordPress remains the universal tool for content sites but is losing ground in segments where speed-to-market and visual complexity matter
For a new project in 2026, the choice depends on priorities: speed of launch (no-code), full control (WordPress/custom), or scalability (headless).
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