WordPress and HubSpot Content Hub have comparable total cost of ownership over 3 years for Australian companies, but the cost composition is fundamentally different. WordPress has lower licence costs and higher maintenance costs. HubSpot Content Hub has higher licence costs and near zero maintenance costs. Over 36 months, the gap between the two narrows significantly once you account for hosting, security, developer maintenance, and plugin licences on the WordPress side, and widens when you factor in the tools included in HubSpot Content Hub that WordPress requires separate paid plugins to replicate.
This guide covers:
WordPress software is essentially free, but a business-grade WordPress site in Australia costs A$5,000 to A$18,000 per year in total operational costs once hosting, plugins, security, and developer maintenance are included. HubSpot Content Hub Professional costs A$780 per month in Australia (A$9,360 per year on annual billing), with hosting, security, platform updates, and a full suite of content tools included in that figure.
The headline comparison:
| Cost component | WordPress (AUD/year) | HubSpot Content Hub Professional (AUD/year) |
| Software licence | A$0 | A$9,360 |
| Managed hosting | A$720 – A$3,600 | Included |
| SSL certificate | A$0 – A$300 | Included |
| Premium theme / templates | A$90 – A$400/year | Included |
| Essential plugins | A$580 – A$900 | Included |
| Security monitoring | A$150 – A$600 | Included |
| A/B testing tool | A$200 – A$600 | Included |
| Video / podcast tools | A$300 – A$1,200 | Included |
| Developer maintenance | A$0 – A$9,600 | A$0 |
| Total (no developer) | A$2,040 – A$7,600 | A$9,360 |
| Total (with developer/agency) | A$5,640 – A$17,200+ | A$9,360 |
The table reveals why most CMS comparisons mislead buyers: they quote the WordPress software price (zero) against the HubSpot licence price and stop there. The meaningful comparison is total operational cost, including every line item required to run a secure, functional, well-maintained B2B website, including tools like A/B testing and video hosting that HubSpot includes and WordPress does not.
Always confirm HubSpot's current Australian list price before committing. A full hub-by-hub breakdown is available in the HubSpot pricing Australia guide.
HubSpot Content Hub is HubSpot's managed CMS, formerly called HubSpot CMS Hub, designed to run marketing websites natively integrated with HubSpot CRM. It is a proprietary platform where hosting, security, and platform updates are managed by HubSpot, removing infrastructure overhead from the customer entirely.
Content Hub pricing in Australia for 2026 (monthly billing):
| Tier | AUD cost (monthly billing) | Core Seats included | Additional seats |
| Starter | A$16/month | 1 per seat | A$16/seat/month |
| Professional | A$780/month | 3 included | A$80/seat/month |
| Enterprise | A$2,330/month | 5 included | A$120/seat/month |
Content Hub Professional at A$780 per month is the practical entry point for B2B companies. Beyond the expected CMS features (blog, landing pages, SEO tools, drag-and-drop editor), the Professional tier includes tools that WordPress requires separate paid subscriptions to replicate:
One cost distinction matters for mid-market buyers: Content Hub is increasingly sold as part of HubSpot's Customer Platform bundle rather than as a standalone product. If you are already paying for Marketing Hub or Sales Hub Professional, Content Hub may be addable at a reduced incremental cost. The bundle economics change the comparison materially.
HubSpot charges a one-time onboarding fee for new Professional customers unless you engage a certified partner who replaces this with a structured implementation. See the HubSpot implementation cost guide for the full breakdown.
The true cost of WordPress for a website in Australia is A$2,000 to A$8,000 per year in operational costs before developer time, and A$5,600 to A$17,200 per year once developer or agency maintenance is included. The "free" software label is accurate but irrelevant to total cost. Every WordPress site requires paid hosting, and every business-grade deployment requires a stack of annual plugin subscriptions and ongoing maintenance.
Domain registration: A$15 to A$25 per year via an Australian registrar such as VentraIP or Crazy Domains.
Managed WordPress hosting: A$60 to A$300 per month (A$720 to A$3,600 per year) for a business-grade managed host. Budget shared hosting at A$5 to A$15 per month is unsuitable for B2B sites due to performance, security, and uptime limitations. Reputable managed hosts for Australian B2B include WP Engine (A$60 to A$150 per month), Kinsta (A$45 to A$120 per month), and Cloudways (A$30 to A$100 per month). Dedicated or high-traffic configurations run higher.
SSL certificate: A$0 to A$300 per year. Most managed WordPress hosts include Let's Encrypt SSL at no extra cost. Premium commercial certificates (OV or EV SSL) cost A$150 to A$300 per year from providers like DigiCert or Comodo.
Premium theme (annual subscription): Most B2B WordPress themes are now annual subscriptions, not one-off purchases. Common options:
One-off purchases from ThemeForest run A$70 to A$120, but typically do not include ongoing updates after the first year without a renewal fee.
Essential plugins (annual licences):
This does not include plugins for A/B testing, video hosting, membership gating, podcast management, or cookie consent — all of which are included in HubSpot Content Hub Professional.
Security monitoring: A$150 to A$600 per year. Sucuri Website Security plans start at ~A$300 per year. Cloudflare Pro runs ~A$360 per year. Many teams rely on Wordfence Premium (already in the plugin stack) and accept the security exposure, which underestimates true risk cost.
Developer maintenance: WordPress requires regular updates to core, themes, and plugins, compatibility testing after each update, and resolution of plugin conflicts. This is either a hidden internal cost or a direct agency cost. A basic WordPress maintenance retainer from an Australian web agency runs A$300 to A$800 per month (A$3,600 to A$9,600 per year). More complex sites or agencies with higher rates can run A$1,000 to A$1,500 per month. Teams managing WordPress in-house commonly undercount this cost because it is absorbed into a developer's salary rather than appearing as a line item.
Three-year WordPress TCO for an Australian company:
For a detailed comparison of CMS architecture types and what they mean for B2B teams, the guide to website CMS for B2B companies covers how traditional, headless, and hybrid platforms differ.
The true cost of HubSpot Content Hub Professional for an Australian B2B company is A$9,360 per year in licence fees (A$780 per month on annual billing), plus a one-time implementation cost of A$8,000 to A$25,000 for an agency-led setup. Unlike WordPress, there are no hosting fees, plugin licences, security monitoring costs, or developer maintenance costs once the platform is live.
Licence: A$780 per month for Content Hub Professional on annual billing (A$9,360 per year). Enterprise runs A$2,330 per month for complex multi-team deployments requiring multisites, content approvals, serverless functions, or advanced access controls.
Implementation: A$8,000 to A$25,000 as a one-time project with a certified HubSpot partner, covering CRM integration, custom templates, content migration, and training.
Ongoing maintenance: Zero. HubSpot manages hosting infrastructure, security patching, SSL certificates, platform updates, and CDN delivery. There is no plugin ecosystem to maintain and no server configuration to manage.
HubSpot AI credits: Content Hub Professional includes 3,000 HubSpot Credits per month for Breeze AI features (Content Agent, SEO recommendations, content remix, caption generation). Heavy AI usage may consume additional credits, though most mid-market companies operate within the included allowance.
Seat additions: Content Hub Professional includes 3 Core Seats. Additional seats cost A$80 per month each. Enterprise includes 5 Core Seats with additional seats at A$120 per month.
Three-year HubSpot Content Hub TCO for an Australian B2B company:
On headline numbers, WordPress appears cheaper. The comparison shifts substantially when developer or agency maintenance costs are included on the WordPress side, and when the cost of replicating HubSpot's included tools is factored in.
Over three years, HubSpot Content Hub is cheaper than WordPress when you include a developer or agency maintenance cost for WordPress. WordPress is cheaper when you have a capable internal developer who absorbs maintenance without a separate fee and do not need the content tools HubSpot includes.
| Scenario | WordPress 3-year TCO | HubSpot Content Hub 3-year TCO |
| No developer, agency maintenance | A$19,000 – A$49,000 | A$36,080 – A$53,080 |
| Internal developer (salary-adjusted, 10% of time) | A$45,000 – A$75,000+ | A$36,080 – A$53,080 |
| No maintenance, self-managed (high risk) | A$8,000 – A$20,000 | A$36,080 – A$53,080 |
The internal developer scenario is the most commonly underestimated. A mid-level developer in Australia earning A$90,000 per year who spends 10% of their time on WordPress maintenance represents A$9,000 per year in hidden platform cost. Over three years, that is A$27,000 in developer cost alone, before hosting, plugins, or security incidents.
The self-managed scenario (no maintenance) is a real option but carries material risk. WordPress sites without active maintenance accumulate security vulnerabilities, plugin conflicts, and performance degradation. A single security incident requiring professional remediation costs A$500 to A$5,000 and can take a site offline for days.
Most comparisons miss four costs that materially affect the 3-year number on both sides.
WordPress hidden costs:
HubSpot Content Hub hidden costs:
Choose HubSpot Content Hub if you are already on HubSpot CRM, do not have a dedicated WordPress developer, and need marketing and sales data to share a common platform. Choose WordPress if you have strong internal development capability, need deep custom functionality, or are operating under tight licence cost constraints and willing to manage the infrastructure overhead.
| Situation | Recommended platform |
| Already using HubSpot CRM or Marketing Hub | HubSpot Content Hub |
| No dedicated internal WordPress developer | HubSpot Content Hub |
| Team needs to publish without developer reliance | HubSpot Content Hub |
| Need real-time contact-level page view data in CRM | HubSpot Content Hub |
| Need A/B testing, video hosting, memberships, podcast without extra tools | HubSpot Content Hub |
| Strong internal dev team, complex custom requirements | WordPress |
| Tight licence cost constraint, capable developer available | WordPress |
| Multiple disconnected content channels (app, portal, website) | Headless CMS or Content Hub |
The most common mistake is choosing WordPress to save on licence costs while underestimating maintenance and the cost of replicating HubSpot's included content toolset. The second most common mistake is adopting HubSpot Content Hub without integrating it with HubSpot CRM, which removes its primary advantage for B2B companies.
For B2B companies already on HubSpot who want to understand what a Content Hub migration and ongoing management involves, ScaleStation's HubSpot Content Hub service covers the full implementation and support model.
HubSpot Content Hub Professional costs A$780 per month (A$9,360 per year) in Australia on annual billing, with hosting, security, A/B testing, video hosting, podcast, content remix, and cookie management all included. A business-grade WordPress site costs A$5,600 to A$17,200 per year once hosting, plugin subscriptions, security, and developer maintenance are counted, and more if you add the tools HubSpot includes by default.
Over three years, the total cost of ownership converges for most B2B companies with developers managing WordPress; for those without a dedicated developer, HubSpot Content Hub is often cheaper on a fully-loaded basis. The platform decision is better made on operational fit than headline licence cost: HubSpot Content Hub wins when your team is on HubSpot and needs to publish independently; WordPress wins when you have strong internal development capability and tight licence cost constraints.