
In 2026, WordPress design is shifting toward AI-assisted building, more dynamic, app-like sites, and a renewed focus on ownership.
Based on conversations with WordPress experts, a few clear shifts are already shaping how sites are built: from websites behaving more like apps to AI speeding up site creation.
To understand the WordPress design trends shaping 2026, we spoke with Allan Cole from the WordPress.com Special Projects design team, Pablo Moratinos, a WordPress.com brand ambassador, and other WordPress design experts.
Building a website feature used to mean opening a blank code file. Now it starts with a sentence.
AI tools generate working components, plugins, and themes — dramatically cutting setup time. Describe what you need, get a functional starting point fast, and iterate from there.
For example, Telex generates native WordPress blocks from prompts. Describe the block, refine it, download it as a plugin, and install it on your site.
As Cole puts it, “It’s great for merging design thinking with content.”
You can also go further with full plugin and theme builds.
For instance, Claude Code paired with WordPress Studio lets you generate a plugin from a prompt in plain language — no deep technical knowledge required.

When the cost and complexity of building drops, more people can participate — and that’s where the most unexpected work comes from. The builders who combine these new tools with genuine taste and judgment are the ones who will stand out.
Most websites still work the old way: Click a link, wait for the whole page to reload. The WordPress Interactivity API changes that.
It’s a native framework that lets blocks update and communicate dynamically. So only the relevant content refreshes, not the entire page, and browsing feels instant.
The result is, as Allan Cole states, “It allows WordPress to really feel like an app in a way that I don’t think was expected before.”
For example, you can build interactive elements like tabs, accordions, or task lists that update instantly without reloading the page. This collection of demos shows what’s possible in practice.

This shift shows up in a few practical ways:
For businesses, this means lower bounce rates, better checkout experiences, and app-like UX without the expense of custom development.
Before Gutenberg, agencies depended on third-party page builders to get flexible layouts without writing code. They worked, but they added complexity, dependencies, and maintenance overhead.
That’s changed. As Cole puts it:
What’s new now is that it’s mature and that you can be much more confident building with the block editor than you were in the past.
For WordPress design agencies, the practical gains are real:

What used to require custom code now lives in the editor. As Cole says, project timelines will keep getting a lot shorter.
Traditionally, designers created layouts individually and developers manually recreated styles in code. This process often led to inconsistencies and became harder to maintain as sites grew.
Modern WordPress design solves this by letting teams define colors, typography, spacing, and layout rules once, then reuse them everywhere.
In practice, this means setting up your design system in Figma, then exporting those decisions directly into a block theme’s theme.json file. When you open the editor, everything is already there.

As Cole puts it:
All the colors, the fonts, the sizing and spacing units — all those little subtle decisions you made in Figma are right there in the editor.
AI hasn’t replaced the need for good design. It’s removed the friction that used to stop people from trying.
The gap between having an idea and having something real to react to has collapsed.
For example, WordPress.com’s AI website builder generates a full working site from a single prompt. And the AI Assistant, built into the editor, helps with content and keeps your site’s voice consistent.

At the same time, WordPress.com’s Claude connector lets you ask questions about your site, dig into analytics, and get answers without leaving your workflow.

But what’s changed isn’t just how sites get built — it’s how clients show up. They now arrive with AI-generated references, stronger opinions, and ideas already half-formed.
The conversation has shifted from “here’s a brief” to “here’s what I’ve built — now help me take it further.”
As Ajit Bohra, Founder and CEO of LUBUS, a full-service web agency based in India and a WordPress.com user, puts it:
AI is great at helping people get a kickstart and validate their idea — they try it, realize this is something I have in my mind, and now I need a human to take this forward. When the client comes to us, they already have something built. We now have a base idea of what we’re working with.
The best results still come from humans who know what they want — AI just makes it faster to get there.
The explosion of AI-generated content online has made it harder to establish trust and credibility. As social platforms become less reliable for reach and discovery, businesses are rediscovering the importance of owning their websites, audiences, and data.
As Pablo Moratinos says,
You can’t build your house on rented land.
This shift shows up in a few ways:
In other words, websites are more than a marketing channel: They are the central hub for brand authority and audience relationships.
For designers and agencies, this defines what a successful website looks like. Sites need to be built with ownership in mind from the start: newsletter signups that convert, content that drives organic traffic, and experiences that bring people back.
The biggest opportunity now isn’t chasing every new trend. It’s adopting the workflows and tools that make sites faster, easier to design, and built to last.
A few practical places to start:
The agencies and designers who will stand out aren’t the ones using every new tool. They’re the ones who know which tools make their work sharper, and which decisions only a human can make.
Original Post https://wordpress.com/blog/2026/03/30/wordpress-design-trends/






