Daxdi now accepts payments with Bitcoin

Pressable Web Hosting Review | Daxdi

Pressable is just one of many WordPress-centric web hosting services designed to keep your site running smoothly and efficiently, and it's pretty darned good.

It should be; Pressable is owned by Automattic, the company behind WordPress.

In fact, Pressable only offers WordPress hosting, but its version of the service is more advanced than what you'll typically find with more general-purpose web hosts.

Pressable's managed WordPress plans supply your site with daily site backups, nightly malware scanning and removal, page caching, site staging, and WordPress-focused security.

This feature-rich, white glove treatment makes Pressable a WordPress host that you should check out, though the service is not without its shortcomings.

Pressable's Plans

In recent years, Pressable has expanded its WordPress offerings from three plans to nine.

The three plans—Basic Use, Moderate Use, and High Volume Use—each have three hosting options.

Basic Use starts at $25 per month, and includes 60,000 page views per month and the ability to build one WordPress-powered site.

Moderate Use starts at $135 per month, and offers 600,000 page views and the ability to build 30 WordPress sites.

High Volume Use has a heavy $750 per month price tag, but the plan lets your site handle 5 million page views.

You're also granted 100 WordPress installations.

If these plans don't meet your particular WordPress needs, you can call a Pressable sales representative to receive a custom build quote.

Pressable isn't cheap web hosting, but neither are most enterprise-class WordPress services.

Regardless of the plan that you select, your hosting installation comes with unlimited storage, staging environments, free site migrations, enterprise-class architecture, personalized onboarding, site caching, a free Content Delivery Network (CDN), WordPress training, and many other valuable features that you may not find with a web host that doesn't specialize in managed WordPress.

As you can tell from Pressable's pricing and feature set, it's aimed at businesses that are serious about their WordPress-powered sites.

In fact, the highest-end High Volume Use plan costs $1,500 per month, and comes with 150 WordPress installations and 10 million pageviews.

For comparison's sake,
Media Temple, another service with business-centric WordPress plans, has a top-level $60 per month offering that includes 10 installations, 20 staging sites, 200GB of storage, and 500,000 visitors.

WP Engine, the Editors' Choice for enterprise-class WordPress hosting, has a high-end, $290-per-month plan that includes 30GB of storage, 400,000 visitors per month, and 400GB of monthly data transfers.

Unlike Cloudways or WP Engine, Pressable doesn't give you the option to select Amazon Web Services or Google Cloud Platform as your website's foundation.

You must use Pressable's platform, which is powered by Cogeco Peer 1 servers.

If you don't need enterprise-class WordPress hosting, I suggest checking out A2, the category's Editors' Choice for businesses with less demanding WordPress hosting needs.

The Linux-based A2 offers four excellent WordPress hosting tiers, starting at $7.99 per month, offers unlimited storage and monthly data transfers across the board.

The plans top out with the $24.46 per month managed WordPress package that includes unlimited databases and websites.

The Pressable Experience

Pressable's managed hosting environment is specifically designed for WordPress installations, themes, and plug-ins.

As a result, you don't need to install WordPress as you would with other web hosts; the content management system comes preinstalled.

It was a nice change of pace to simply open my introductory email, view my log-in credentials, and then get started without any additional setup; it even includes a few useful preinstalled plug-ins.

Using Pressable is very much like using a regular self-hosted WordPress installation.

I found it incredibly easy to create posts, pages, and galleries in testing.

As Pressable focuses on WordPress, the company doesn't offer the traditional shared, VPS, or dedicated hosting plans you'll find with many other web hosts.

Instead, Pressable devotes its resources to automating many WordPress functions, including daily site backups and plug-in updates.

It also features caching technology to make pages quickly load.

The staging feature is an incredibly useful tool, too.

It takes a snapshot of your website so you can tinker with pages without affecting the real site.

Pressable makes it easy for you to share credentials with designers, developers, and others, so that you can collaborate on the site's back end.

Like WP Engine, Pressable doesn't sell domains (your URL is in the format of name.mystagingwebsite.com) or come with email accounts; you need to sign up with a third-party company like NameCheap or Godaddy, respectively for those features.

if you need help with this part of the process, you should read my story on how to register a domain name for your website.

E-commerce and Security

If you plan to sell products, you'll be happy to learn that Pressable offers the Woocommerce e-commerce platform.

Woocommerce starts at $45 per month, and includes 10 WordPress installations, 200,000 pageviews, and the Jilt email marketing tool.

Pressable uses a combination of nightly malware scans and removals, and Intrusion Detection System integrity checks to keep your site secure from attackers.

This is a typical feature among managed WordPress hosting services.

In addition, each Pressable plan comes with a free Secure Socket Layer (SSL) certificate that helps safeguard data transfers between your site and customers.

Considering that some web hosts make you pay for SSL, the certificate's free inclusion is an appreciated touch.

Excellent Uptime

Website uptime is a vital element of the web hosting experience.

If your site goes down, clients or customers will be unable to find you or access your products or services.

For this testing, I use a website monitoring tool to track my site's uptime over a 14-day period.

Every 15 minutes, the tool pings my website and sends me an alert if it is unable to contact the site for at least one minute.

The data revealed that Pressable is incredibly stable.

In fact, of the web hosting services I've reviewed, it's only one of a handful that went down zero times.

You can count on Pressable to be a rock-solid foundation for your website.

Customer Service

I contacted Pressable's customer support several times during testing—early morning and early evening—to get a sense of its support team's effectiveness.

Pressable offers telephone and web chat communication options, which I like.

Thankfully, Pressable's team quickly answered my questions about the plans' email and domain name situation.

Both questions, and a few miscellaneous others, were answered within a few minutes.

Phone and web support (8 a.m.

to 6 p.m.

CST) are limited to sales and billing questions; if you have a problem, you must file a ticket.

That said, there is a support squad to answer your ticket requests 24/7.

You can also schedule a 30 minute video conference demo to try Pressable before you plop down money on hosting.

I like that you can select the month, day, and hour (in half hour increments).

Pressable lacks the traditional 30-day, money-back guarantee that many web hosts offer.

Instead, Pressable credits you for each hour of downtime.

Pressable also has a company blog where you'll find plenty of WordPress-related information.

A Very Good WordPress Host

Pressable gives you many useful features and tools to create the WordPress site that you desire.

Plus, it has the strong uptime and helpful customer service you'd expect from a managed WordPress offering.

In addition, Pressable has more flexibility than A2, the Editors' Choice for small business-focused WordPress hosting.

That said, email and domain names aren't included, and phone and chat support have limited hours.

Pressable also doesn't let you select your cloud platform as WP Engine, the Editors' Choice for enterprise-class WordPress hosting, does.

The latter web host is the service to choose for your big business WordPress needs.

For the basics of getting started online, read How to Build a Website and How to Get Started with WordPress.

Cons

  • Limited customer service support phone and web chat hours.

  • Doesn't offer email accounts.

  • Doesn't sell domains.

  • Doesn't let you select your cloud platform choice.

View More

The Bottom Line

Pressable makes it easy to set up a managed WordPress site, and includes useful features like offline staging and a free CDN, but you'll need to look elsewhere for email, domain names, and 24/7 phone and chat support.

Pressable is just one of many WordPress-centric web hosting services designed to keep your site running smoothly and efficiently, and it's pretty darned good.

It should be; Pressable is owned by Automattic, the company behind WordPress.

In fact, Pressable only offers WordPress hosting, but its version of the service is more advanced than what you'll typically find with more general-purpose web hosts.

Pressable's managed WordPress plans supply your site with daily site backups, nightly malware scanning and removal, page caching, site staging, and WordPress-focused security.

This feature-rich, white glove treatment makes Pressable a WordPress host that you should check out, though the service is not without its shortcomings.

Pressable's Plans

In recent years, Pressable has expanded its WordPress offerings from three plans to nine.

The three plans—Basic Use, Moderate Use, and High Volume Use—each have three hosting options.

Basic Use starts at $25 per month, and includes 60,000 page views per month and the ability to build one WordPress-powered site.

Moderate Use starts at $135 per month, and offers 600,000 page views and the ability to build 30 WordPress sites.

High Volume Use has a heavy $750 per month price tag, but the plan lets your site handle 5 million page views.

You're also granted 100 WordPress installations.

If these plans don't meet your particular WordPress needs, you can call a Pressable sales representative to receive a custom build quote.

Pressable isn't cheap web hosting, but neither are most enterprise-class WordPress services.

Regardless of the plan that you select, your hosting installation comes with unlimited storage, staging environments, free site migrations, enterprise-class architecture, personalized onboarding, site caching, a free Content Delivery Network (CDN), WordPress training, and many other valuable features that you may not find with a web host that doesn't specialize in managed WordPress.

As you can tell from Pressable's pricing and feature set, it's aimed at businesses that are serious about their WordPress-powered sites.

In fact, the highest-end High Volume Use plan costs $1,500 per month, and comes with 150 WordPress installations and 10 million pageviews.

For comparison's sake,
Media Temple, another service with business-centric WordPress plans, has a top-level $60 per month offering that includes 10 installations, 20 staging sites, 200GB of storage, and 500,000 visitors.

WP Engine, the Editors' Choice for enterprise-class WordPress hosting, has a high-end, $290-per-month plan that includes 30GB of storage, 400,000 visitors per month, and 400GB of monthly data transfers.

Unlike Cloudways or WP Engine, Pressable doesn't give you the option to select Amazon Web Services or Google Cloud Platform as your website's foundation.

You must use Pressable's platform, which is powered by Cogeco Peer 1 servers.

If you don't need enterprise-class WordPress hosting, I suggest checking out A2, the category's Editors' Choice for businesses with less demanding WordPress hosting needs.

The Linux-based A2 offers four excellent WordPress hosting tiers, starting at $7.99 per month, offers unlimited storage and monthly data transfers across the board.

The plans top out with the $24.46 per month managed WordPress package that includes unlimited databases and websites.

The Pressable Experience

Pressable's managed hosting environment is specifically designed for WordPress installations, themes, and plug-ins.

As a result, you don't need to install WordPress as you would with other web hosts; the content management system comes preinstalled.

It was a nice change of pace to simply open my introductory email, view my log-in credentials, and then get started without any additional setup; it even includes a few useful preinstalled plug-ins.

Using Pressable is very much like using a regular self-hosted WordPress installation.

I found it incredibly easy to create posts, pages, and galleries in testing.

As Pressable focuses on WordPress, the company doesn't offer the traditional shared, VPS, or dedicated hosting plans you'll find with many other web hosts.

Instead, Pressable devotes its resources to automating many WordPress functions, including daily site backups and plug-in updates.

It also features caching technology to make pages quickly load.

The staging feature is an incredibly useful tool, too.

It takes a snapshot of your website so you can tinker with pages without affecting the real site.

Pressable makes it easy for you to share credentials with designers, developers, and others, so that you can collaborate on the site's back end.

Like WP Engine, Pressable doesn't sell domains (your URL is in the format of name.mystagingwebsite.com) or come with email accounts; you need to sign up with a third-party company like NameCheap or Godaddy, respectively for those features.

if you need help with this part of the process, you should read my story on how to register a domain name for your website.

E-commerce and Security

If you plan to sell products, you'll be happy to learn that Pressable offers the Woocommerce e-commerce platform.

Woocommerce starts at $45 per month, and includes 10 WordPress installations, 200,000 pageviews, and the Jilt email marketing tool.

Pressable uses a combination of nightly malware scans and removals, and Intrusion Detection System integrity checks to keep your site secure from attackers.

This is a typical feature among managed WordPress hosting services.

In addition, each Pressable plan comes with a free Secure Socket Layer (SSL) certificate that helps safeguard data transfers between your site and customers.

Considering that some web hosts make you pay for SSL, the certificate's free inclusion is an appreciated touch.

Excellent Uptime

Website uptime is a vital element of the web hosting experience.

If your site goes down, clients or customers will be unable to find you or access your products or services.

For this testing, I use a website monitoring tool to track my site's uptime over a 14-day period.

Every 15 minutes, the tool pings my website and sends me an alert if it is unable to contact the site for at least one minute.

The data revealed that Pressable is incredibly stable.

In fact, of the web hosting services I've reviewed, it's only one of a handful that went down zero times.

You can count on Pressable to be a rock-solid foundation for your website.

Customer Service

I contacted Pressable's customer support several times during testing—early morning and early evening—to get a sense of its support team's effectiveness.

Pressable offers telephone and web chat communication options, which I like.

Thankfully, Pressable's team quickly answered my questions about the plans' email and domain name situation.

Both questions, and a few miscellaneous others, were answered within a few minutes.

Phone and web support (8 a.m.

to 6 p.m.

CST) are limited to sales and billing questions; if you have a problem, you must file a ticket.

That said, there is a support squad to answer your ticket requests 24/7.

You can also schedule a 30 minute video conference demo to try Pressable before you plop down money on hosting.

I like that you can select the month, day, and hour (in half hour increments).

Pressable lacks the traditional 30-day, money-back guarantee that many web hosts offer.

Instead, Pressable credits you for each hour of downtime.

Pressable also has a company blog where you'll find plenty of WordPress-related information.

A Very Good WordPress Host

Pressable gives you many useful features and tools to create the WordPress site that you desire.

Plus, it has the strong uptime and helpful customer service you'd expect from a managed WordPress offering.

In addition, Pressable has more flexibility than A2, the Editors' Choice for small business-focused WordPress hosting.

That said, email and domain names aren't included, and phone and chat support have limited hours.

Pressable also doesn't let you select your cloud platform as WP Engine, the Editors' Choice for enterprise-class WordPress hosting, does.

The latter web host is the service to choose for your big business WordPress needs.

For the basics of getting started online, read How to Build a Website and How to Get Started with WordPress.

Cons

  • Limited customer service support phone and web chat hours.

  • Doesn't offer email accounts.

  • Doesn't sell domains.

  • Doesn't let you select your cloud platform choice.

View More

The Bottom Line

Pressable makes it easy to set up a managed WordPress site, and includes useful features like offline staging and a free CDN, but you'll need to look elsewhere for email, domain names, and 24/7 phone and chat support.

PakaPuka

pakapuka.com Cookies

At pakapuka.com we use cookies (technical and profile cookies, both our own and third-party) to provide you with a better online experience and to send you personalized online commercial messages according to your preferences. If you select continue or access any content on our website without customizing your choices, you agree to the use of cookies.

For more information about our cookie policy and how to reject cookies

access here.

Preferences

Continue