Author: wpnishat

  • WordPress 7.0 Drops Old PHP, Plugin Sales Struggles & WordPress Security (Foundations to Hardening) | WP More – Issue 34

    WordPress 7.0 Drops Old PHP, Plugin Sales Struggles & WordPress Security (Foundations to Hardening) | WP More – Issue 34

    PHP 7.2/7.3 support ends in April, plugin sales down 80%, security deep-dive, and Make WordPress team updates.


    Hello WordPressers!

    Welcome to this week’s WPMore roundup — WPMore newsletter issue 34, where you get curated news about WordPress and the WordPress community all in one place.

    We’re covering some major moves in the WordPress ecosystem: a long-awaited PHP version bump, the sobering reality of plugin sales in 2025, and practical security insights you can use today. Plus, updates from the Plugins and Test teams on how AI is reshaping workflows. Let’s dive in.

    Thanks for reading WPMore!! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.


    In this Issue:

    • WordPress 7.0 Waves Goodbye to PHP 7.2 and 7.3
    • Plugin Sales Took a Hit in 2025, Here’s What the Data Shows
    • The Plugins Team Doubled Its Workload And Leveled Up With AI
    • The Test Team Is Rebuilding With Training and Clearer Expectations
    • A Deep Dive Into WordPress Security: From Foundations to Hardening

    WordPress 7.0 Waves Goodbye to PHP 7.2 and 7.3

    WordPress 7.0, scheduled for April 2026, will drop support for PHP 7.2 and 7.3. The new minimum supported version will be PHP 7.4.0, while the recommended version remains PHP 8.3. Usage of PHP 7.2 and 7.3 has fallen below 4% of monitored WordPress installs, well under the project’s 5% threshold for retirement.

    This shift aims to keep WordPress maintainable for the long haul. Over time, raising the minimum PHP version benefits the plugin and theme ecosystem, improves tooling and libraries (including AI integrations), and strengthens the project’s developer relations. WordPress core is already fully compatible with PHP 8.0–8.3 and beta compatible with PHP 8.4 and 8.5.

    Sites still running PHP 7.2 or 7.3 will stay on the WordPress 6.9 branch once 7.0 launches. Security fixes will be backported to WordPress 4.7 when possible, even though only one branch officially receives updates. The Gutenberg plugin will also bump its minimum PHP version to 7.4.

    • Key takeaway: If you’re still on PHP 7.2 or 7.3, now’s the time to upgrade. Contact your host if you need help.
    • What’s next: No set schedule for future PHP bumps, usage and the 5% threshold will guide decisions going forward.

    Read from the Official Make WordPress Blog here.

    This move keeps WordPress modern and sustainable, but it also means plugin developers and site owners need to stay current.


    Plugin Sales Took a Hit in 2025, Here’s What the Data Shows

    Plugin sales were tough in 2025. Katie Keith at Barn2 saw new plugin sales drop 17.8%, with revenue up only 0.65% thanks to renewals. A poll of plugin companies revealed that 80% experienced flat or declining sales compared to 2024. A follow-up survey dug deeper, and the patterns were striking.

    Replaceability mattered most. Plugins that are hard to replace saw two-thirds reporting growth, regardless of how “essential” they were. Partially replaceable plugins struggled, with many down 15–29% or worse. Easy-to-replace plugins were hit hardest; competition, AI-generated alternatives, and theme features are pulling customers away.

    Organic search took a beating. Companies relying heavily on SEO saw the biggest declines. AI tools are changing how people discover plugins, and fewer clicks are converting into sales. Freemium and marketplace listings showed mixed results, but partnerships and affiliates held steadier; being embedded in someone else’s workflow provided a buffer.

    What founders can do in 2026:

    • Make your plugin irreplaceable, own a clear outcome and solve a problem no one else does quite as well.
    • Reduce dependence on SEO by diversifying into YouTube, partnerships, email, and direct outreach.
    • Be explicit about why paying is worth it; support alone isn’t enough; emphasize reliability, updates, and peace of mind.
    • Market consistently, not occasionally. Growth stories came from deliberate visibility, not passive discovery.

    Read the full report on WP Product Talk Here.

    The WordPress plugin market is shifting fast, and adapting now will separate the winners from the rest.


    The Plugins Team Doubled Its Workload And Leveled Up With AI

    The WordPress Plugins Team reviewed 12,713 plugins in 2025, a 40.6% increase over 2024. Weekly submissions surged from 150 to over 330, and the team kept the queue under one week despite the volume. How? By heavily upgrading their tools with AI-assisted checks and automation.

    The Internal Scanner now tackles repetitive tasks like verifying plugin names, checking branding compliance, and confirming ownership, adding over 80 new features and 100 improvements in 2025. The Plugin Check Plugin (PCP) evolved into a security-focused tool, with five major releases adding nonce verification, forbidden function checks, localhost detection, and enhanced PHP 8.1+ compatibility. In October, PCP started running automatic security scans on every plugin update, reports are internal for now, but authors will soon receive feedback to improve their plugins proactively.

    Despite the progress, challenges remain. Nearly 39% of reviewed plugins received no reply from authors, a drop from 2024 but still a drain on volunteer time. Approvals rose to 69.5% (up from 63.4% in 2024), and the average number of issues per plugin declined, showing submissions are better prepared. AI is lowering barriers to entry without compromising quality, the approval bar hasn’t dropped, but more people are building plugins than ever before.

    • Key takeaway: The team is scaling through smarter tools, not just more people. Plugin authors should use PCP in their workflows to catch issues early.
    • What’s ahead: Scaling the team and processes in 2026 to handle record-breaking submissions while maintaining standards.

    The Plugins Team is proving that AI can amplify human effort without sacrificing quality.

    Read from the Official Make WordPress Blog here.


    The Test Team Is Rebuilding With Training and Clearer Expectations

    The WordPress Test Team is restructuring in 2026 to address resource bottlenecks and clarify what it means to be a team member. Historically, joining was either easy (as a yearly representative, often without real contribution) or extremely hard (through exceptional effort like triaging hundreds of tickets). Moving forward, earning “emeritus” status will require sustained, consistent contribution over time, not short-term or symbolic involvement.

    The new approach lowers the barrier to join “the hard way” while phasing out representatives as the sole entry path. Representatives were meant to support the team for a year, but the role often attracted badge-seekers rather than committed contributors. The new system emphasizes duty over accomplishment, and non-emeritus members who don’t meet consistent expectations will be removed.

    To support this shift, the Test Team is launching a four-week Training Program starting in January 2026. It covers handbook development, collaboration, testing fundamentals, and meeting management. Participants need to invest at least 20 hours (two-hour live sessions plus three hours of weekly practice). Graduating doesn’t guarantee a team spot, but it provides clear guidance on how to get there. The program is capped at five participants, selected by technical skill level if demand exceeds capacity.

    • Key takeaway: The Test Team is prioritizing active, long-term contributors over short-term participation.
    • Sign up: Live sessions start January 8 or 15, held around 3–4 PM GMT on Tuesdays and Thursdays.

    This restructuring aims to build a more sustainable, engaged team that can handle WordPress testing at scale.

    Read from the Official Make WordPress Blog here.


    A Deep Dive Into WordPress Security: From Foundations to Hardening

    Tài Hoàng published a comprehensive handbook on WordPress security, covering everything from the platform’s layered security model to actionable hardening techniques. The guide emphasizes that WordPress itself isn’t insecure, 96% of vulnerabilities in 2025 were found in plugins and themes, not core. The real problem is mismanagement: outdated plugins, weak server configs, poor passwords, and neglected maintenance.

    The security model visualizes WordPress as four layers: server/infrastructure (foundation), WordPress core (application), plugins/themes (extension), and edge/network (CDN/WAF like Cloudflare). Each layer reinforces the others, but a failure in one—like a vulnerable plugin—weakens the whole system.

    Best practices include choosing a reliable VPS host, reducing your attack surface by keeping your plugin stack lean, controlling access with proper file permissions and 2FA, disabling unnecessary features (XML-RPC, file editor, WP-Cron), and building a long-term security culture with regular audits and documentation. The handbook also covers practical steps like hiding PHP and Nginx versions, blocking direct IP access to bypass Cloudflare, securing wp-config.php, changing the default login URL, limiting login attempts, and using Nginx rules to block malicious requests.

    Key tools mentioned:

    • Admin and Site Enhancements (ASE) plugin for login URL changes and login attempt limits
    • Two-Factor plugin for 2FA
    • UpdraftPlus for backups following the 3-2-1 rule (three copies, two media types, one offsite)
    • Key takeaway: Security isn’t a plugin you install, it’s a discipline. Harden every layer, from server to edge, and maintain it consistently.

    Read the Full Guide here.

    This guide is a must-read for anyone serious about keeping their WordPress sites secure in 2026 and beyond.


    WordPress Must Read

    From installation to integration: Making plugins “agent-ready” (joost.blog)

    When a WordPress Site Needs a Rehab Instead of a Full Redesign (speckyboy.com)

    Automattic AI, 2025 (j.cv)

    Share


    On other WordPress News

    WordPress 7.0 Call for Volunteers (make.wordpress.org)

    Plugin teams’ eviews are not AI generated (reddit.com)

    Introducing new Themes Team representatives for the 2026 (make.wordpress.org)

    WordPress Vulnerability Report — December 31, 2025 (solidwp.com)

    WP Engine Acquires Big Bite (wp-content.co)

    Seahawk Media Partners with Patchstack to Strengthen WordPress Security (patchstack.com)


    From WordPress Community

    Support Inclusion in Tech (SiNC) Opens Applications for 2026 WordPress Contributor Funding Program (wp-content.co)

    Matt 4.2 (ma.tt)

    My 2025 recap (by the Numbers) (pootlepress.com)

    On Being Vegetarian (sunitarai.com.np)

    2025 year in review & transparency report (barn2.com)

    2025: My Year in Review (elliotsowersby.com)

    Wombat Plugins 2025 Year in Review (studiowombat.com)


    Conclusion

    That’s a wrap for this edition of WPMore. Whether you’re upgrading PHP, rethinking your plugin strategy, or tightening security, there’s no shortage of work ahead, but the tools and knowledge are there to help you succeed.

    Have thoughts on any of these stories? Hit reply and let me know. And if you found this useful, share it with a fellow WordPress user who could benefit. See you next time!

    Nishat, WPMore

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    Join Our Community → Sub-Reddit | X Community

  • WordPress in 2026: Releases, Tools & Traffic Trends | WP More – Issue 33

    WordPress in 2026: Releases, Tools & Traffic Trends | WP More – Issue 33

    Major updates planned, contributor dashboard arriving, and why bot traffic matters for your site.


    Hello WordPressers!

    Welcome to this year’s final WPMore newsletter, issue 33, where you get curated news about WordPress and the WordPress community all in one place. I hope your holidays are going great and that your New Year’s plans are still intact.

    WordPress is gearing up for a busy 2026. The project has announced three major releases timed with flagship WordCamps, launched a pilot dashboard to track contributor engagement, and shipped Gutenberg 22.3 with a dedicated Fonts page. Meanwhile, new data reveals how bot traffic and security practices are reshaping website performance across the globe. Here’s what you need to know.

    Thanks for reading WPMore!! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.


    WordPress In this Issue:

    • WordPress 7.0, 7.1, and 7.2: Your 2026 Release Roadmap
    • A New Dashboard to Track Contributor Journeys
    • Gutenberg 22.3 Brings a Dedicated Fonts Page and Better Image Editing
    • Bots Now Drive Up to 70% of Web Traffic (and Why That Matters)
    • The WordPress Stories That Shaped 2025

    WordPress 7.0, 7.1, and 7.2: Your 2026 Release Roadmap

    WordPress is returning to a three-releases-per-year cadence in 2026, with each major version launching during a flagship WordCamp event. WordPress 7.0 is scheduled for April 9th during WordCamp Asia, 7.1 lands August 19th at WordCamp US, and 7.2 wraps up the year around December 8–10th during State of the Word.

    The four-month spacing gives contributors enough time to build quality features while encouraging iterative shipping over chasing perfection. It also creates unique teaching opportunities; newer contributors can watch or even help with live releases at WordCamps, learning the process firsthand.

    A few practical notes: you don’t need to attend in person to be involved, all coordination happens in Slack, and the 7.0 Release Squad call for volunteers goes out the week of January 4th. The dates may shift slightly based on community feedback, but the overall rhythm is set.

    This schedule also leaves room for minor releases between major ones, giving teams breathing space to deliver improvements with confidence.

    Read the official Make WordPress blogpost here.


    A New Dashboard to Track Contributor Journeys

    WordPress is piloting a Contributor Dashboard to map how people join, participate, and grow across Make teams. The dashboard uses a five-stage ladder – Connect, Contribute, Engage, Perform, Lead- to describe participation patterns without ranking contributors or suggesting that some work matters more than others.

    The goal is simple: help teams understand engagement, spot where support is needed, and improve the contributor experience over time. Right now, contribution activity is scattered across many tools, and non-code work often lacks visibility. This pilot aims to change that.

    The dashboard will launch at the end of February 2026 with a limited multi-team pilot. It uses a custom plugin to map existing activity from WordPress.org systems to ladder stages, so it won’t require new infrastructure or place new demands on contributors. It also respects privacy—no personal or sensitive information gets displayed.

    If you’re interested in helping test or refine the dashboard, you can comment on the project thread or join the conversation in the #five-for-the-future Slack channel.

    This work builds on years of community requests for better contributor recognition and visibility.

    Read the official Make WordPress blogpost here.


    Gutenberg 22.3 Brings a Dedicated Fonts Page and Better Image Editing

    The latest Gutenberg release, 22.3, introduces a dedicated Fonts page under the Appearance menu for block themes. Until now, managing fonts meant digging through several panels inside Global Styles. The new page centralizes typography management, letting you browse, install, and preview fonts in one place. Support for classic themes is coming next.

    The image cropper also got a rebuild. It works the same way, but now aspect ratios and zoom levels stay put when you rotate images – a small fix that clears up a long-standing frustration. This update also sets the stage for more image-editing improvements down the road.

    Other highlights include email notifications for Notes (so collaborators get alerts when someone leaves feedback), alignment support for the Breadcrumbs block, and a responsive Grid block that adapts layouts across screen sizes. The editor also now shows clearer error messages when you lose connection.

    • Fonts page simplifies typography management for block themes
    • Image cropper improvements fix rotation issues
    • Grid block now responds to different screen sizes automatically

    These changes make everyday editing smoother without forcing you to rethink your workflow.

    Read the official Make WordPress blogpost here.


    Bots Now Drive Up to 70% of Web Traffic (and Why That Matters)

    WP Engine’s 2025 Website Traffic Trends Report reveals that automated, non-human traffic now accounts for nearly one in three web requests globally. AI-driven bots consume up to 70% of the most resource-heavy operations like hosting and performance, turning traffic management into a financial priority. Unverified bot traffic is growing 76% worldwide, yet only 38% of sites use dedicated bot-mitigation tools.

    Security practices now directly affect speed and cost. Sites that fully adopt HTTPS and proactive bot mitigation load 1–5 seconds faster in Largest Contentful Paint (LCP) than those using HTTP. Larger organizations show near-universal use of two-factor authentication and HTTPS, while smaller teams lag by about 25%.

    Geography and mobile also matter more than ever. North America and Europe still post the strongest performance, while high-growth regions like Asia and Latin America are slowing down because traffic is rising faster than optimization efforts. About 50% of the top 10 million sites still don’t use a CDN, even though doing so improves LCP by roughly 20%. Mobile performance consistently trails desktop despite mobile being the dominant traffic source.

    • Bot traffic now represents nearly 1 in 3 web requests
    • HTTPS adoption improves LCP by 1–5 seconds
    • 50% of top sites still lack a CDN, missing 20% performance gains

    If your site feels slower or you’re seeing unusual traffic patterns, these trends might explain why.

    Read the full report on WP Engine here.


    The WordPress Stories That Shaped 2025

    The Repository wrapped up the year by revisiting the most-read WordPress stories of 2025. The list reflects a year marked by conflict, but also by grassroots efforts to move the project forward. The top story was the abrupt shutdown of the WordPress Sustainability Team in January, which sparked backlash over how volunteer work was dismissed. Other highly read stories included the launch of the FAIR project to decentralize WordPress.org services, a class action lawsuit against Automattic over the WP Engine dispute, and Automattic’s layoffs affecting 16% of its workforce.

    But 2025 wasn’t only about friction. Quieter developments like WordPress Campus Connect, WordPress Credits, and the launch of the WordPress AI Team showed contributors continuing to build, organize, and experiment despite the tension. One bright spot was Ollie’s Menu Designer being flagged for potential inclusion in WordPress core, with Automattic developers offering to help guide the work forward.

    As 2026 begins, most people have moved on from the conflicts to focus on their work, teams, and businesses. Long-time contributors say they’re glad tensions have eased so they can contribute again, while new contributors are already getting involved through initiatives like Credits.

    The year was messy, but it also showed that people keep showing up to build, even when things get hard.

    Read the full report on The Repository here.

    Don’t forget to subscribe & support them, they do some amazing, hard-hitting WordPress journalism.


    On other WordPress News

    WooCommerce 10.4.3: Dot Release (developer.woocommerce.com)

    WordPress 6.9 Release Retrospective (make.wordpress.org)

    WordPress 7.0 – What to Expect in 2026 (Current Situation and Possibilities) (fluentforms.com)

    WooWeekly #579: Traffic Down, Community Up (wcwkly.com)

    Introducing CSS Grid Lanes (webkit.org)

    WordPress Vulnerability Report — December 24, 2025 (solidwp.com)

    Bringing Back Women-Centric WordPress Events for International Women’s Day (make.wordpress.org)

    WP Plugin Info Card 6.2.0 Released with WordPress.org Profile Badges and Screenshots Block Improvements (dlxplugins.com)

    Plugin Check (PCP) got new update (wordpress.org)


    From WordPress Community

    SiteOrigin Page Builder is proof that steady progress can still win (X.com)

    WordCamp Nepal 2026 is 24 days to go! The ticket is still available! (nepal.wordcamp.org)

    Freemius 2025 Year in Review (freemius.com)

    Lessons Learned, Course Building Edition (remkusdevries.com)

    InfluenceWP December Journal (influencewp.com)

    Etch Review: My Web Dev Journey from Angelfire, to WordPress to Etch. (youtube.com)


    Conclusion

    That’s the latest from WordPress as we head into 2026.

    Whether you’re planning for new releases, tracking contributor growth, or just trying to keep your site fast and secure, there’s a lot to keep an eye on.

    Got thoughts on any of these updates? Hit reply, we’d love to hear from you. And if you found this useful, share it with someone who’d appreciate it.

    — Nishat, WPMore

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    Join Our Community → Sub-Reddit | X Community

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