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What Is the Difference Between Posts vs. Pages in WordPress?

Editorial Note: We earn a commission from partner links on WPBeginner. Commissions do not affect our editors' opinions or evaluations. Learn more about Editorial Process.

Do you want to learn about the difference between posts and pages?

By default, WordPress comes with two different content types: posts and pages. Although they look similar in the WordPress dashboard, they serve different purposes for your website. 

In this article, we will explain the difference between posts vs. pages in WordPress.

What is the difference between posts vs. pages in WordPress?

Here is what we will discuss in our article:

What Are Posts in WordPress?

Posts are used to create blog content, articles, and other content listed on your blog page. They are shown in reverse chronological order so that the newest content (your latest posts) is shown at the top of the list.

If you are using WordPress as a blog, then you’ll likely end up using posts for the majority of your website content.

You can add and edit your WordPress posts by clicking the ‘Posts’ menu option in your dashboard. Here is what the WordPress post editor looks like.

WordPress post editor

Since posts are listed with the most recent posts at the top, your posts are meant to be timely. Your older posts are archived based on month and year.

As the posts get older, your visitors must dig deeper to find them. You have the option to organize your posts based on categories and tags, which are WordPress’s taxonomy system.

WordPress post categories and tags

If you have a lot of content, then you can add a search form to make it easy for your visitors to find the content they are looking for. For more details, see our guide on how to create a custom WordPress search form.

You can easily share your new WordPress blog entries with your readers to help you get more traffic. For example, you can create an email newsletter, send automatic RSS feed emails, send push notification messages, and more.

For more details, see our guide on how to share your blog posts with readers.

The timely nature of blog posts also makes them great for sharing on social media. You can use social media plugins to allow your users to share your posts across popular social media networks.

Blog posts also encourage conversations. They have a built-in comment feature that allows users to comment on a particular topic. By default, comments, pingbacks, and trackbacks are enabled.

Enable blog post comments

After the main article content, there’s the comments section. Usually, WordPress will disable comments on your pages. 

You can go to Settings » Discussion to turn off comments on older posts if you like.

WordPress posts also display post metadata. This information is listed after the blog post title on individual posts and your blog page. 

An example of post metadata, on the WPBeginner website

It usually shows the publication date, author name, categories, tags, and more. You can completely customize your post meta information. For more details, see our guide on how to display blog post metadata in WordPress themes.

Now that you know what WordPress posts are, let’s take a look at pages and how they are different.

What Are Pages in WordPress?

Pages are static “one-off” type of content like your About page, privacy policy, contact page, and more. While the WordPress database stores the published date of the page, pages are timeless entities.

For example, your About page doesn’t have an expiration date. Sure, you can go back and update it, but chances are you will not have About page 2012, About page 2013, and so on.

We have all kinds of static pages on WPBeginner, like our homepage, start here page, About page, contact page, archive page, and custom pages like our free business tools page.

Business tools page example

You can add and edit pages in your WordPress admin panel by clicking on the ‘Pages’ menu option. 

Here’s what the page editor screen looks like.

WordPress page editor screen

Pages aren’t meant to be social, so they usually don’t have social sharing buttons. For example, you probably don’t want visitors to share your privacy policy page on Twitter.

Pages also don’t include comments. You don’t want users to comment on your contact form or terms of service page. There is an option to enable comments. However, it’s disabled by default for your WordPress pages.

Page editor screen comments section

Unlike posts, pages are hierarchical by nature. For example, you can have subpages or child pages within a page. 

You can easily turn a page into a subpage by choosing a parent page from the ‘Page Attributes’ section when editing a page.

Page editor set parent page

Plus, you can create completely custom WordPress pages with the help of a drag-and-drop WordPress page builder plugin.

This lets you use different page layouts than the default option provided by WordPress.

For more details, see our guide on how to create a custom page in WordPress.

WordPress Pages vs. Posts (Key Differences)

A post is meant for content that you regularly publish, like blog posts and news articles. Meanwhile, a page is intended for static content that is not updated as frequently, like a homepage, an About page, a contact page, and so on.

Here are other key differences between posts vs. pages in WordPress:

  • Posts are timely, and pages are timeless.
  • Posts are meant to be shared on social media, and pages are not.
  • You can use categories and tags to organize posts, while pages are hierarchical and organized as child and parent pages.
  • Posts have an author and published date, while pages do not.

The differences we listed above may have exceptions. You can use WordPress plugins to extend the functionality of both content types.

Despite these differences, there are some similarities between pages and posts in WordPress.

First, they are both used for publishing content. You can add text, images, videos, forms, and more to both posts and pages. There is support for featured images on both pages and posts.

You can build a WordPress website without ever using posts or the blogging features of WordPress. You can also make a small business website with pages and a separate blog section for your news, announcements, and other articles.

Posts vs. Pages: Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Following are some of the most frequently asked questions we’ve heard from our users about posts vs. pages and how to properly use them in WordPress.

How many posts and/or pages can I have in WordPress?

You can have as many posts and/or pages as you want. There is no limit on the number of posts or pages that can be created.

Are there any SEO advantages to posts vs. pages?

Not entirely. In general, search engines like evergreen content that is organized and up-to-date. There are also tools like AIOSEO to help you optimize both blog posts and pages so that they can both rank on search engine results pages.

All in all, we recommend focusing your efforts on making your website user-friendly and valuable for your target audience. To learn more, see our ultimate WordPress SEO guide for beginners.

Is adding pages similar to adding posts in WordPress?

Yes. The menu to add pages and posts in WordPress may be separate, but the process of creating a new post and page is similar.

For pages, you can go to Pages » Add New in the WordPress admin area. Meanwhile, you can create a new post by going to Posts » Add New. Either way, you will then be directed to the Gutenberg editor to start adding your content blocks.

Which pages should I create on my website or blog?

It depends on what kind of blog or WordPress site you are making. However, you may want to see our list of important pages for all websites.

Can I switch posts to pages and vice versa?

Many beginners accidentally add content to posts when they want to create pages. Similarly, some new bloggers may end up saving blog posts as pages.

If you are just starting, you can easily fix that using the Post Type Switcher plugin. For more details, see our guide on how to switch post types in WordPress.

Are there other content types in WordPress besides posts and pages?

Yes, there are. These other default content types include attachments, revisions, and navigation menus. However, they aren’t used the same as posts and pages.

WordPress also allows you to create your own custom post types. This feature is used by plugins to create additional content types in WordPress.

For example, if you run an online store using WooCommerce, then you’ll see a ‘Products’ post type in your WordPress admin area.

For more details, see our step-by-step guide on how to create custom post types in WordPress.

We hope this article helped you learn the difference between pages and posts in WordPress and how to use them. You may also want to see our WordPress tutorials on how to optimize your blog posts for SEO like a pro and the best WordPress hosting.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

Disclosure: Our content is reader-supported. This means if you click on some of our links, then we may earn a commission. See how WPBeginner is funded, why it matters, and how you can support us. Here's our editorial process.

Editorial Staff

Editorial Staff at WPBeginner is a team of WordPress experts led by Syed Balkhi with over 16 years of experience in WordPress, Web Hosting, eCommerce, SEO, and Marketing. Started in 2009, WPBeginner is now the largest free WordPress resource site in the industry and is often referred to as the Wikipedia for WordPress.

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Reader Interactions

144 CommentsLeave a Reply

  1. Syed Balkhi says

    Hey WPBeginner readers,
    Did you know you can win exciting prizes by commenting on WPBeginner?
    Every month, our top blog commenters will win HUGE rewards, including premium WordPress plugin licenses and cash prizes.
    You can get more details about the contest from here.
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  2. Mark Cross says

    As a beginner this little tutorial was helpful. I was getting into a default blog when trying to create a website. I hope to get to the point of moving in-between the website, dashboard, preview, publish and other tools that word press offers. So time to start learning.

  3. Rita says

    Can I have pages that display different posts on one blog?
    I mean to have one page with News (updated daily) and one page Articles (updated weekly). Is it possible to do it on WordPress.
    Should I create a custom post type?

  4. Monjur says

    Thanks for an awesome article … all of my confusion about post Vs page has been removed by this one article.

  5. Shraddha Shakya says

    hello !
    I am new to wordpress and recently I have started ablog for celebrity gossips. I have written all the contents in pages and then linked it with the post in homepage.I dont want post to be shown in homepage .So I posted a post and then linked them with pages .But the problem is my pages arenot showing up in google.Only posts are shown .
    So , is it that pages arenot shown in google??
    My page is half a month old , so that maybe a reason for google to not show up but then a post which was just 1 day old showed up .So it worried me .
    So inorder to show up in google , which one is better , pages or post ?

    • Pankaj Choudhary says

      please check your front page code and wp reading setting choice a static page in reading setting of wordpress.

    • Roy Randolph says

      A Comment is the discussion thread that you can (if you wish) have for a page or a post. In other words you are commenting on a Blog “Post” for an example. Basically the same thing you are doing now, you are commenting by asking a question. Hope that helps.

  6. Ray Foucher says

    I’m new to WP, have just started a WP site and have a top menu link “Articles” which will link to a page listing all my articles (static content) with short descriptions of each and links to an individual page for each article.

    The person hosting my site insists posts are the way to go rather than pages. I am used to using HTML for other sites and have no problem with building the links. I like the idea of being able to have my own descriptions and order for the articles list and fail to see the advantages of posts for this. Any insights?

    If I used posts I belief I could assign them to an articles category to keep them together but could I then arrange them in my preferred order and write or change my own descriptions?

  7. janz says

    I have started to write on Pages. How do I link one page to the next in chronological order on each Page published? For example, in posts, there is a link to the previous and the next post. I cannot find this in Pages. Can you help please?

  8. neil henderson says

    hi, i am developing a holiday site and using wordpress. i am having property style pages and then also looking at having category pages (hotels, cottages, campsites). i have been considering the following format:
    property pages as custom post types
    category pages with ability to insert category lists (so can format a little more)

    i was just wondering as seo is absolutely critical for this project to work would i be better to do the property pages as “pages” and if so is it possible to add any kind of taxonomy to a page so that i can pull them through to a category page?
    thanks
    neil

  9. akhil raj shrivastava says

    hi all
    Any one please attention in my index,php i have a menu, a banner , after that slogan , slogan some content regarding site and three content regarding read more, and a footer option , problem is this . any how read content is not published, or not shown in index.php my i created read more in post option.
    any one understand this
    where i m wrong,

  10. Rados says

    Please be so kind to help me invert the order of appearance of new sections in a page – I want new sections to appear on top, not on the bottom of the page. Many thanks in advance!

  11. Ian Player says

    Thanks for a very interesting article. It would be *really* helpful too to hear the reasons as to why you chose to write this article as a Post rather than a Page. Thanks!

    • Mikey says

      What a great point! This is very much timeless or “evergreen” content.
      I suppose the main reason for publishing it as a Post is that the author wants us to share it! As I have just done on Twitter.

      • John Morris says

        If I read the article correctly you wanted to receive comments and posts enable that more easily than pages. Also this content may change as new releases alter functionality. Just a thought

  12. Pat says

    This is a useful and very clear post. But it doesn’t address the one issue about posts and pages that is really confusing me, as a WP newbie. If I wish to add products to a WP site, should they be added as Pages or Posts? In my case, the Products in question are books by various authors. If I list them as Posts then website visitors can use Categories to filter them by Author. However I cannot see how to add Author photo and biographical info to the same result page. And if I list then as Pages (so that I can have a section with Author photo and biographical note, etc, I cannot see how to generate and filter (through Categories) the results so that X Author’s page will show only X author’s books. I have even tried a number of dedicated book and ecommerce themes, but none of them seems to provide for what I thought would be a basic ingredient. Am I missing something? Thanks in any case for the good work!

    • SHRADDHANSHU SHEKHAR says

      Write a post> see SETTING in bottom, press IMMEDIATELY and decide on which date & time you want to show your post is published. then publish. latest post is shown on top.

  13. Patricia says

    Awesome! Short and to the point. I spent all night going through the blog support site with no answers… only to have this clearly explained in a less than 2 minute video!

  14. Hugh Boyde says

    This article is very useful. I have a question though. I have been experimenting with putting Categories in the Menu as described, in order to have certain posts appear on a single display if you click on a certain menu item. This seems to work EXCEPT that the posts then appear without titles, dates or anywhere for a reader to leave a comment. Is there a way to get these details to display please?

  15. Suraj says

    Hey its a great article . I just wanted to know one thing that if the sites like, use a page or post to give in contents i am really confused because there are separate plugins that allow a user to post like feature on a page.

  16. Geri says

    Im a total noob at WP.. Can i ask how do I add categories in the posts? For eg. Baking and Homestuffswedo

    I understand that posts are categorize in different timings so I hope I am able to categorize them in different themes.

  17. Keith Gardner says

    I don’t understand why on earth you would not want to have a template for a post, just as you would for a page. I have a website built mostly from pages, and we are now trying to enable blogging, and it refuses to play nicely because of there being no way to specify template for posts. The site is based on Twenty Eleven. Some pages (using “default template”) are full-width, some (using “sidebar template”) are three-column. In the three column mode, there’s a “Main Sidebar” on the left and “Extra Sidebar” on the right.

    I’ve created a “posts page” for my blog, and this too looks fine. But when I click to view one of the posts, I go to a full-width format, and the content from the Main Sidebar is laid directly on top of the content from the post. It’s not in a column to the left of the blog content, it’s sitting right on top of it. At the end of the post, there’s the Extra Sidebar content shoved way down to the bottom.

    I have pulled what little hair I have left out over this, and I am no further along than I was days ago. Anyone able to provide me with links to ideas, solutions, workarounds, similar situations? Anything?

    And also, back to my original question, if this is a “feature” rather than an “oversight,” why on earth would people want it this way? I’m missing something on this.

    Thanks.

  18. WPBeginner Staff says

    Perhaps what you need is categories not pages.

    Lets say you have a news site and you want posts to appear on Local News, Sports, Opinion pages. You can do that by creating categories local news, sports, opinion. When writing a post simply select the category you want to file that post into.

    You can also add categories to appear in your site’s navigation menu. Simply go to Appearance > Menus and add categories to your navigation menu. Now if someone clicks on Sports they will go to the page where all your sports related posts will appear.

    • Lauren says

      This is on track with my question. I have it so my posts go in the correct category pages, but once in there the entire post shows up. Is there a way to display only a preview or grid after selecting a category page? For news articles I see how this layout makes sense. I am posting recipes and would like my readers to be able to view a grid of all my posts and then selecting individually. When I tried using the Post Grid plug-in, it made all of my posts, regardless of category, show up.

  19. MarionD says

    How on earth does one “post” on a PARTICULAR PAGE? Add new post makes it go to your website’s lala land. There must be a way to add a post to only the page you want it visible on. What am I missing? I’m getting really frustrated with WordPress. It seems not at all intuitive or user friendly.

  20. erika says

    thanks the explanation is clear. however i believe wordpress is complicated and not logical. i would like to use it as a travel blog, so i would have a page for each country and of course i would like to be able to see my post under the country however the post does not show under the given country page??? can you explain?

    • Chandu says

      Erica,I have the same doubt while Iam building a travel website,can you please email me with details how many pages and posts you added in your site which one is more seo friendly.

      Please share the hierarchy on pages > posts

    • Capain Pat says

      Dear Syed you have totally lost me. As per my post above I have created a whole site with “posts” instead of “pages”. Your reply is not clear.

  21. Capain Pat says

    Thanks for this article. I have built a few word press web sites but am a tad confused. I chose “posts” way back over “pages”. Not sure why. But I notice that Google shows the date of the post in snippet preview. This worries me as my posts are timeless and not specific to any particular time. I would prefer not to see the date of the article – I am concerned that in five years time people may not read my article in preference to a “page” that shows no date. I’d appreciate any suggestions on changing this and the benefits or dangers in doing so. Thanks. Pat

  22. Joyce says

    I’m new to WP and to your site; great info. I now have a much greater understanding about the difference between the two subject elements (i.e. Posts, Pages). Still, though, my issue seems to fall in between all the great information I have read here (and a couple other sites), that being, what’s best way to handle my old articles (real, full-length articles) from my Microsoft FrontPage site. There is not that many, so manual work doesn’t bother me. I want them to remain readily available for readers. It seems that creating a new “Post” for each article wasn’t correct, as, seemingly, that would be presenting them as “fresh or new” and even giving them some new date. I stopped what I began, due to uncertainty. – I set my Genesis Lifestyle Pro Theme to have a STATIC Page and “Posts” goes to a BLOG. I created a NEW PAGE – not post – (e.g. “12 Old Articles Bucket”) to hold the 12 links for the individual articles. As for the 12 ARTICLES, I CREATED a NEW PAGE (not a post) for each, and then, copied/pasted plain text to each. I opened “12 Old Articles Bucket” and linked to each article. I added “12 Old Articles Bucket” to the PRIMARY NAVIGATION menu.

    Technically, is it wrong to place the text directly onto the PAGES (12) as I’ve done? For one thing, there seemed to be no way of adding categories or tags by doing it this way. I’ve read about articles vs. posts, migrating from one system to another, etc., but this issue seems to fall through the cracks. I’m hoping to “POST” all “new” articles of this category as a Blog. Sorry about the length. Thanks.

  23. David Scoggin says

    thanks for the article. I’m still not clear on this: When you create a new Page you get a new menu that opens that page. Is it the same with Posts? When you create a new Post do you get a new menu that opens that Post?
    Or are Posts on Pages?
    When you want a Blog “page” you want a Post, not a page, right? Is every new Blog entry a new Post or are they all contained within one Post?
    Thanks

  24. Sam says

    I agree with Stacy, this was an excellent and very clear post on the subject. Given the search phrase I used, this article turned up as result #2, but it was far superior to WordPress’ own official response that happened to be the #1 result.

    Thank you, now I understand!

  25. Steven Barnes says

    Fantastic post! I am directing my blogging students here to settle the debate about what exactly IS the difference between a post and a page.

  26. Stacy says

    Thank you for such super clear information! I’ve been working online for 4 years, been on dozens of lists for ‘beginners’ and still never had posts vs. pages explained so clearly as you’ve done here. I wish I had known that at the beginning, I would have saved days worth of time! Thanks again.

  27. Andres says

    Thanks,

    Well I assume that if you have just 20 posts in a category they will never go away unless you write new posts that push them further down in the category. i was just wondering what happen when people write too many posts in a single category? Will WP automatically file them somewhere or just leave them there indefinetely?.

    I don´t know what happens to older posts as times goes by and new entries start displacing the old ones…

    • WPBeginner Support says

      your posts will remain filed under that category. Depending on your theme and wordpress settings your category page will show a limited number of posts on the category page with a link to older posts at the bottom of the page.

      Admin

  28. Andres Rueda says

    Hi,

    I have a question: Does wordpress automatically archive posts after a certain period of time?.

    I want to create a gallery of images and I want to write about every single image. I don´t know if I should use pages or posts. I would like to use posts because people can give their opinion and because I can place them in different categories, but i´m afraid that if I use posts they will dissapear eventually.

    I want to create a category, add a post with the main gallery of images and then write individual posts explaining every image of the gallery. I will do like this for every image gallery. At the end, every category should not have more than 20 posts or so.

    Would it be a mistake if I create this whole layout using posts instead of pages?. I want to use posts but as I´ve said, i´m afraid that after a while wordpress removed (or achived) them automatically. In which case I will lose all of my work :(.

    What do you recommend?. Should I use posts or pages?. Can you explain if wordpress automatically removes posts after a certain period of time?.

    Thanks

    • WPBeginner Support says

      Andres, By default WordPress displays your most recent posts on the front page of your website. You are right about using posts because with posts you can use categories.

      If you want some of your posts to remain on the front page then you can use the Sticky Posts feature in WordPress. Another possible solution is to file all the posts you want to stay on the front page in a “Featured Posts” category and then use conditional tags to display your featured posts on top. Some WordPress themes come with built in functionality for featured posts as well.

      Admin

  29. Mary Cahalane says

    Thank you for a clear and simple article. I appreciate it! I remain a little confused as to one aspect of posts vs pages – if posts are designed to land on one particular page, does that mean that if we have content that will change, we will need to create some sort of custom coding in order to have different posts land on different pages? Or do we create new pages each time and somehow dispose of the old ones?

    I’m working on a new website for our organization – an arts organization. So new information will constantly be created for new events. I’d want that info to display on the appropriate page (say, gallery or performance space). I can see how I could make many pages work that way pretty easily. But I’m unsure of a) how you move that out when its time is done and b) whether that’s the best practice, even if it’s the easiest.

    • WPBeginner Support says

      Mary, you can sort your content into categories like gallery, performance space, etc. When creating a post in WordPress you can choose or add categories. You can also add those categories into your site’s main navigation menu.

      Admin

  30. David says

    Thanks, this article is very useful and also the different points of view brought in by Jason with the answers given by Syed. I find myself in the middle, from beginner to something more but not yet an expert, so that is not always easy to understand how to create great landing pages with posts connections and so on. I think it’s correct to say to start with the knowledge written in this article as a beginner because the risk is to make a mess in the entire organization of the own site. Afterward, I suppose you need a good knowledge of the concepts you want to share with your blog and then well organize them between posts and pages, but it’s something I’ve just started to dig and it’s not always easy to understand. Also, it seems to me that it would better to change the template of a landing page to make it more attractive but I don’t know if it’s something very easy to do.

    • Editorial Staff says

      David thanks for dropping by and leaving a comment. Organizing between posts/pages is something you will do for the life of your blog. When the topic becomes too hot, or you notice that you have written a lot of articles on it, then you can create a landing page for that. Some will just use tags, others create a manual landing page for looks/feel.

      Changing the landing page template would require you to create a custom page template (need knowledge of HTML/CSS + WordPress theming).

      Admin

      • David says

        Thank you for your reply. Well, I have a doubt on how to do that. For example, I’ve written a long post on Instagram, more than 5000 words, and lots of related articles around that subject already. I regularly update that post and there are more that 600 comments now, and lots of internal links that points to other related posts. At this point I think it’s just too late and I suppose that that article became just a landing page. Also, If I would create a landing page for that subject now, wouldn’t I create a keywords conflicts between the main post and maybe the landing page?

        Now, I’m creating another long guide (around 6000 words) for another similar social network and I’m not really sure if I should create a post or a landing page for that, really no idea.

        So I’m thinking I probably should create one only landing page for all those kind of guides together and point to all the internal long articles, that point to all the minor articles.

        For the template, I’m now studying Objective-C and don’t have any time to fit in my mind another language. If it’s something easy I would do it otherwise I’d wait for later, thank you in any case.

  31. Trace says

    I seldom leave comments, but this one, I couldn’t resist. I am refering to the previous debate between Jason and Syed.

    I can give an honest comment and unbiased as I am by no means an aquaintance to either party, and as well, a “beginner.”

    After reading the difference between “post and page” I have to say that it helped me out tremendously in being able to get a basic foundation of what the two do (or what they’re functions are).

    So with that said, as a beginner, I can only vouch and say it was helpful to me.

    And after reading Jason’s comment, it obviously would be more sensible to someone who is more knowledgeable about WP or designing websites. In other words, it confuses a beginner like myself, so call me dumb, lol.

  32. Darshan Vapi says

    Thanks WPB. I got the point but still not satisfied with relation to SEO.
    Can you elaborate more on it pl?

  33. Astrid says

    Hi Guys,

    This post nailed it right on! Very clear and to the point. It is funny because as a former Developer who just migrated her static site to WP I had those questions of whether to post or add a page. I am well aware of site structure and how to organize it so that was a no brainer. However, where it really hit home was the section with “Posts vs. Pages (Key Differences)”.
    It almost makes me want to redo my main page (Find you condition) into posts or something. Yes, I add conditions periodically but honestly I keep my FB page pretty active and that doesn’t drive traffic where I want to.

    I decided that I’m going to post some of the content I’d otherwise post on FB on my blog starting now being I am not getting much traffic. Would you agree? I’d love to hear some suggestions as I am concerned as I see the importance of updated posts.

    Regards and thanks in advance

    • RW says

      Nice idea Astrid. I would recommend posting your newsworthy content on your blog and then link to it from your facebook page. This will get you incoming links/traffic from your facebook page.

      Thanks…

      • Astrid says

        RW ~ Thanks for your feedback :)

        Question please: What would be an effective way to do this? Via a widget or simply pasting the link on my FB page? If so, what widget would you recommend.

        Regards…

        • RW says

          Facebook used to allow blogsites (platforms like wordpress) to automatically post published content to a user’s facebook page. I believe they’ve changed the API and it might still be possible, but I like more control over what goes on my facebook page.

          There are some good plugins, that will take your posts, and automatically post them to your twitter feed which can be setup to post to facebook. I could be wrong about this, but this is what I’m aware of.

          It only takes 5 seconds to cut and paste in your blog url to facebook, and then you can edit the facebook intro as well, so I like the manual method for this. There are so many plugins that are worthwhile, I don’t feel this action needs one.

          Thanks.

        • Nando says

          If you have a twitter account, you can actually have your post sent to twitter and then from twitter, post to FB. That’s what I do. One plug-in to post to TWO sites.

  34. Jean says

    I read a lot of articles on WPBeginner and this one is aimed at beginner level. Many of the other articles are more intermediate (I would say) which is fine by me because that’s my level. But I think many “real” beginners would find this article useful.

    • Eric says

      Yeah this article is very helpful, I think this is one of the most popular questions people ask me when they start a new WordPress website.

      Well said.

  35. Navneet says

    Man this post is awesome ….. Can I know whether this blog’s newsletter is on Aweber or Mailchimp and do we need to pay for either of these services.

  36. Lisa Kalandjian says

    I work with a lot of businesses that are new to WordPress and this is definitely one area that creates a great deal of confusion among my clients. Personally I think you explained it very well :)

  37. Jason Witt says

    I have to say that I disagree with this entire article. Comparing Post and Pages is like comparing apples and dynamite.

    “Posts” are a tool for publishing and “Pages” are what you display “Posts” on. As you start to delve into WordPress you’ll begin to create custom post types for different parts of a site, and you’ll have to create pages to display these custom Posts. The index.php and single.php are pages just like the custom pages you can create with the page template, but they’re just pages with a more specific purpose.

    This article would only hold true if one was to “only” use WordPress as a blog, but let’s face it WordPress has evolved far beyond just a simple blog. It’s a CMS, and there are developers even starting to use it as a Application Platform.

    If I didn’t know better. I’d say this article was written by someone with little to no knowledge of the capabilities of WordPress. This is a really disappointing article coming from a site I’ve come to rely on for WordPress related tips and tutorials.

    • Editorial Staff says

      Hi Jason,

      This article is written in the beginners guide category for the very beginners. Surely, we understand that WordPress has evolved as a platform itself. However, an infant does not just start running. They have to learn to crawl, then walk, and then they can run. I suggest you look at some of the other articles in the category, and see how they are covering the very basics of WordPress. This category usually covers items that comes out of the box with WordPress (in most cases).

      Custom Post Types does not have a visual interface for a beginner to play around with. Even if it did, to utilize its maximum power, they would need to write code. It would be a great deal of ignorance on our part to assume that everyone is a developer. Developers make up a very small part of WordPress industry. Majority of the WordPress users are just average folks (using the platform) without touching any code.

      For you to say “Posts are tools for publishing ad Pages are what you display Posts on” is correct and incorrect. By the vary definition of “webpages” every thing on the web is a page. You can’t generalize things to that extent because then we would be arguing semantics. An archive page would be a page. Dashboard would be a page. Everything would be a page. That would not make any sense to a beginner because there is no way to differentiate. Now lets look at it from a WordPress perspective. Posts and pages are both custom content types, and I’d rather not restate the whole article here.

      As for displaying custom post types, yes you display those on Archive Pages. If you have to create a custom page template every time to display a custom post type (chances are you are doing it wrong). Sure there are times when you don’t want to have an archive display of CPT’s, and in which case you use a custom page template. However, it is not required to use a Page and a Page template to display custom post types.

      Hopefully, what I said in the comment makes sense. I have been running this site since 2009, and I have been using WordPress since 2006. I would not publish something if I didn’t think it was useful to the larger audience.

      Best Regards,
      Syed Balkhi
      Founder of WPBeginner

      Admin

      • Frederick says

        I think this guide is pretty good as a simple intro for beginners using WordPress out of the box. You’re generally right that CPTs are not something beginners are likely to build.

        However, despite the withdrawal of post formats UI from 3.6, I still disagree with this point:

        Pages have custom template feature vs. Posts do not.

        On the technical point, you’re right that “templates” are exposed for pages but not posts.

        Rather, instead, we have post formats with different frontend views like Gallery and Video and Quote. Those don’t require coding for a beginner to use, and work with default themes and many of the free ones on the Theme Directory.

        So, to summarize all the ways of customization:
        page templates: pages only
        post formats: posts only (right?)
        custom post types: they’re neither posts nor pages, in the sense of WordPress core!

        • Editorial Staff says

          Frederick,

          I should clarify that when I say pages have custom templates and posts do not. It means that you can customize each specific page with a different template if you decide to. A lot more themes offer that kind of functionality for pages (i.e showcase page template, full-page template, etc).

          Post formats are a broader way of categorization/grouping and styling. It is also a much newer feature thus it is not supported by many themes. Before post formats, devs used custom taxonomy to achieve this.

          You are correct, this article is meant to give an overview of posts vs. pages for beginners.

          Technically speaking, a developer can add template functionality to posts if they wanted to. Theme frameworks like Genesis do this via post-meta and call it Layouts. There are also plugins that allow you to create post template in a similar fashion as page templates. Here’s an example:

          http://wordpress.org/plugins/single-post-template/

          As a developer, you can pretty much extend both posts and pages the way you want to with meta fields. However the differences above are highlighted for beginners not developers thus it is important that we keep things simple and easy rather than over complicating it.

          -Syed

    • John Smith says

      Jason, With all due respect – I disagree. This article isn’t about page templates – I feel it was written to target users that are starting with WordPress and trying to work out whether to go to the posts or pages part of the admin dashboard to publish their content!

      I guess it’s obvious that not everyone who frequents this site is an expert – hence the name ‘wpbeginner’.

      Trolling by any chance?

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