10 Years Later: Why I Still Blog on WordPress.com

1 day ago 3

In six months, I’ll officially hit the ten-year milestone as a part-time travel & lifestyle blogger, and honestly, that feels surreal to say out loud. When I started blogging in 2016, I had absolutely no idea what I was doing. I didn’t know anything about hosting providers, domains, plugins, CSS, or SEO. I just knew that I loved writing, sharing my experiences, and documenting my travels and thoughts online. Somewhere along the way, that little hobby became a real platform, a creative outlet, and even an income stream. And, since I’ve almost exclusively hosted my blog on WordPress.com, today let’s talk about that experience and why I’m still here.

This article may contain affiliate links, which means I may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you if you make a purchase through them. I only recommend products & services I genuinely use and believe will provide value to readers.
Girl does hair flip in Cusco city

That surprises some people because in blogging circles, there’s often pressure to move to self-hosted WordPress.org, or even DreamHost like I did for a few short weeks in 2021. I hear people talk about “full control,” endless plugins, and advanced customization. Yes, those things are real advantages of being self-hosted but, self-hosting comes with a learning curve. After nearly a decade of blogging, I’ve realized something important: the best platform is the one that lets you keep creating consistently without burning yourself out. For me, hosting on WordPress.com which starts at US$4 per month has done exactly that. Here’s why.


Before we get started, subscribe for new Adventures from Elle.

I Don’t Have to Worry About Security

This is probably the biggest reason I’ve stayed. I do not want to spend my evenings after work worrying about malware, security patches, broken plugins, spam attacks, or whether my website is suddenly vulnerable because something needs updating. With WordPress.com, most of that stress disappears. Security is handled for me. Updates happen automatically. I’m not constantly checking whether a plugin conflicts with another plugin or whether a random line of code has broken my entire website overnight. As someone balancing medicine, blogging, content creation, travel, and real life, that peace of mind matters more than people realize. I know myself well enough to admit that if maintaining my blog became too technically demanding, I probably would have quit years ago. Instead, I get to focus on what I actually enjoy: writing.

Downtime Basically Feels Impossible

Stability matters.

One thing I’ve genuinely appreciated over the years is reliability. My site is just… there and always works. As I mentioned earlier, I jumped on the self-hosting bandwagon for a few weeks some years ago and I literally cried when my blog’s migration went wrong and I was offline for almost a week as I tried figuring it out. Thankfully, that host had a 30-Day Satisfaction or Money Back Guarantee so I took my refund, returned to WordPress.com expeditiously and Adventures from Elle has never been down since.

Reliability becomes especially important once blogging stops being just a hobby. When people are clicking affiliate links, reading travel guides, or discovering your content through Google, your website being unavailable directly affects your income and credibility. Now that I’ve finally gotten blog monetization off the ground, website stability is especially important.

I Don’t Need to Know Coding

This is controversial in some blogging spaces, but I’m going to say it anyway: I like that I don’t need to learn coding to run my blog. Could I learn it? Probably. Do I want to? Not particularly. I already have a demanding career outside blogging, and I’d rather spend my limited free time traveling, writing and making content than troubleshooting code. WordPress.com made blogging accessible to me because it removed that barrier. All I had to do was pick a theme (am currently on my third theme in ten years!), customize it enough to reflect my personality, upload my posts, and move on with my life.

However, customization is limited. Sometimes I really do feel like I’m working within the confines of a theme– because, I am. I can tweak colours, layouts, fonts, widgets, menus, and branding, but there are moments when I’d want something highly specific and realize the platform isn’t designed for endless freedom unless I upgrade significantly. Then, there have been times where I see another blogger’s ultra-customized site and thought, “I wish I could do that.” I have gotten frustrated trying to make a theme cooperate with my vision before. But honestly? Those limits have occasionally been good for me too. Too many options can become overwhelming very quickly, and if I had to dedicate time to redesigning my website, when would I actually publish content? Plus, I doubt most readers care about my design details anyway; they’re there for the content. A beautifully coded website means very little if you stop posting. And yeah sure, I could pay a company to build my website, but I don’t have the budget for that so again, WordPress.com comes in clutch.

Not everyone wants to become a developer. Some of us just want to tell stories. If so, WordPress.com may just be your new home on the Internet.

The Community Aspect Still Matters

Bloggers I met online who became friends!

One thing people don’t talk about enough is the built-in community on WordPress.com especially in the earlier years of blogging. There was something genuinely special about it. People discovered each other through the Reader, tags, comments, follows, recommendations, and blogging challenges. There was this feeling that blogging itself was a social ecosystem. Most of my earliest readers came directly from the WordPress.com community. While it’s definitely quieter now than it was during the pandemic blogging boom, there’s still something comforting about knowing the community exists. The reality is that many people abandoned their blogs after the pandemic. Social media shifted again, short-form video content exploded, and blogging became less trendy than it once was. But the people who are still blogging? They genuinely love writing, and I appreciate that.

The Happiness Engineers Have Saved Me A Few Times

man writing a code on a computer and laptopHow I imagine Happiness Engineers look

If you’ve used WordPress.com long enough, eventually you’ll encounter the Happiness Engineers and they’ve been helpful over the years. Whenever I’ve had technical issues, formatting problems, or questions I couldn’t figure out myself, their support team has usually been able to guide me through it. I also appreciate that their answers are written in a way that non-technical people (like me!) can actually understand. Now, if I’m being honest, I do wish support on the Premium plan were faster. But, I also know that faster support options exist on the Business plan, so at least there’s room to scale one day if I need it.

Their Tutorials Teach You How to Blog

Another underrated feature is the amount of free educational content WordPress.com provides. Over the years, I’ve taken three tutorials from their platform, and one even came with a certificate! They have guides on writing blog posts with the Block Editor, improving SEO and growing traffic, to using categories effectively, formatting articles and creating an online store to sell products. When I first started blogging, I didn’t even know what SEO meant. Now I understand search intent, search engine and now AI optimization, keyword structure, readability, internal linking, and content strategy — and a lot of that learning began through beginner-friendly resources like theirs. I think people underestimate how important it is for a platform to educate users rather than assuming everyone arrives already knowing everything.

Wrap Up

Looking back, blogging itself feels almost unrecognizable compared to when I started. Back then, blogs felt more personal and slower. People wrote more long diary-style entries, reflections, and essays. Now, blogging is often deeply connected to SEO, affiliate marketing, Pinterest strategy, email funnels, social media, AI tools, and content optimization. None of that is inherently bad. In many ways, it’s made blogging more sustainable as a career but I’m grateful I started before everything became so performance-driven. WordPress.com helped preserve some of that original joy for me because the platform itself feels more creator-focused than overly technical. So, whether you’re looking to start your first website or you’re a seasoned blogger looking for a new website or host, WordPress.com may just be your new home on the Internet for anywhere from US$4 to $45 per month depending on your needs. Can you relate to these points? Sound off in the comments section below! At this rate, I’ll likely be on WordPress.com for another decade. 🙂

If you enjoyed this post, you may also like:


Find Elle on FacebookInstagram & lend your support to keep me on the road.

Read Entire Article