WordPress care plans for sites that need to stay online.
WordPress care plans from $97/month — your site stays hosted, updated, backed up, and watched by people who do this every day.
The mannequins gave up. The website didn't.
Your site is somebody's livelihood, not a side project — so we keep it up, watched, and recoverable.
A WordPress care plan is bigger than a plugin checklist.
A WordPress care plan is ongoing website support that keeps your site updated, backed up, monitored, secure, recoverable, and supported by humans when something breaks — for a fixed monthly fee, not a per-incident invoice.
Plain English: someone is watching your WordPress site so you don't have to. Updates go through staging, not crossed fingers. Backups run twice a day. Uptime monitoring runs around the clock. The person who picks up your task actually knows your stack.
Why it's worth paying for: 96% of WordPress security holes are in plugins, not WordPress itself — and roughly 22 new ones surface every day(Patchstack, 2025). The platform is fine. It's the dozen plugins quietly running your site that need someone watching them.
What a WordPress care plan actually includes.
Every care plan ships with the same protection floor. The higher tiers add tasks, SEO, and dedicated infrastructure — but the WordPress maintenance basics are never optional.
Managed hosting
Managed WordPress hosting, SSL, staging, and the server foundation tuned for the kind of WordPress site you actually run.
Safe updates
WordPress core, theme, and plugin updates handled with a staging pass and rollback path — not crossed fingers.
Twice-daily backups
Encrypted off-site backups on enterprise cloud (AWS/GCP) twice a day, with rollback support when a plugin, update, or accident causes trouble.
Security & malware
Hardening, twice-daily malware scanning against a 15M+ signature database, firewall, and malware cleanup. If Google flags the site as deceptive, we clean it and handle the reindex request to lift the warning.
Uptime monitoring
Uptime monitoring runs around the clock. On Support and above, repeated downtime alerts create a task so the issue can be investigated.
One thread for changes
Open a task for an edit, a plugin fix, a tracking question, or a form change. We turn it into the next update — handled by a real person, not a queue.
Build it clean. Keep it moving.
Most owners come to us with a site already running — and a tab full of reminders. Migration is quiet, the watch starts immediately, and the dashboard is where you reach a real person.
Migrate the site to our stack.
We move the WordPress site onto our managed hosting, set up backups, harden security, and document exactly how your site works — plugins, integrations, and risks — in a full onboarding audit before the watch starts. Usually a week, sometimes a day.
We protect, watch, and patch.
Updates run through staging, malware scans run twice a day, uptime monitoring runs around the clock, and backups happen twice a day. You see a quiet inbox.
Open a task when something needs a human.
Broken form, suspicious plugin, broken layout, locked-out admin, weird error — you open a task in the dashboard and a named person handles it, chatting it through with you. Most issues close inside 24 hours.
Three honest alternatives — and where a care plan fits.
Each option below keeps a WordPress site alive in some form. The question is which one actually keeps it open for business when something inevitably breaks.
What breaks when nobody is watching.
Four scenarios that play out across WordPress sites every week. Each one is the reason a WordPress care plan exists — not a feature pitch.
Plugin update bricks the homepage
A plugin auto-updates overnight and conflicts with your theme. The homepage 500-errors. No staging meant no preview. No backups means no fast rollback. By 9am customers are calling.
WooCommerce checkout silently fails
A payment gateway plugin updates its API. Orders look fine in the admin but Stripe never receives them. You only notice when the bank statement is empty at month-end.
Malware lives in your site for weeks
A vulnerable plugin gets exploited. The attacker injects spam links into your footer. Google flags the site, organic traffic falls off a cliff, and you find out when a customer asks why your domain shows a security warning. Nearly 40% of hacked sites were running outdated software when they got in (Sucuri, 2023) — exactly the gap we close.
You lose admin access at the worst time
A login plugin updates and locks out 2FA. Your developer is on holiday. You need to publish a press release in two hours. Nobody knows where the recovery codes are.
When a WordPress care plan is the right call (and when it isn't).
A care plan is not the answer to every WordPress problem. Here's when it earns its keep, when it's a trap, and when you're looking at a different job altogether.
You depend on the site
If your site drives leads, bookings, sales, or trust — and you cannot afford a quiet outage or a slow malware cleanup — a WordPress care plan pays for itself the first time something breaks.
You bought it to avoid learning anything
A care plan is not a substitute for knowing what your site does. If you ignore every update note, every recommendation, every heads-up — you are paying for insurance and never reading the policy.
The site itself is the problem
If WordPress is the wrong fit, the theme is dying, or every change requires a developer — a care plan keeps a broken system alive. You probably want a managed rebuild on /wordpress-website-redesign instead.
Operator photoGoing live is the easy part. Staying live is the job.
After the site goes live, changes, support, forms, content, and search help keep moving with one team. No mid-quarter scope drift, no “let's plan a v2,” no rebuild bills.
Boring in the best way.
“Nobody signs up because they're excited about a care plan. They sign up because their site went down at the worst possible moment and they had no one to call. We're the someone.” — Ryan, founder
Founder-led
Built for owners who want one calm place to ask for website help — not a SaaS dashboard.
Since 2016
Ten years of supporting real WordPress sites, stores, membership sites, agencies, and operators.
WP Engine Agency Partner
A public trust signal for managed WordPress experience — without pretending every site needs the same hosting setup.
21-day guarantee
Try Superpress with a simple safety net. If it isn't the right fit, cancel inside 21 days and we refund the month.
WordPress care plan questions.
If yours isn't here, send a short note — a real person reads them. We answer pricing, scope, and migration questions in plain English.
Other ways Superpress shows up.
Different shape of the same job. Pick the one that matches how you'd describe what you need.
Keep your WordPress site open for business.
Migrate your WordPress site, hand the maintenance to us, and stop being the person on call when something breaks at 1am. 21-day refund window on every plan — try care for three weeks on us.
