You closed three new clients last month. Two of them want WordPress sites. Your one in-house developer is already booked for ten weeks. Hiring a second developer means $90,000+ in salary, weeks of recruiting, more management overhead — and a real risk that pipeline slows down in three months and you are stuck paying for capacity you do not need.

This is the problem white label WordPress agencies exist to solve. They give your agency a flexible, on-demand WordPress development team that delivers under your brand, takes the work off your plate, and scales up or down with your pipeline.

We are SiteMile, a WordPress agency with 15+ years of experience and 250+ projects delivered. We work with end-clients directly and also operate as a white label partner for other agencies — which means we have sat on both sides of this relationship and know exactly what makes one work and what makes one fail. This list reflects that view.

Quick comparison: top 11 white label WordPress agencies in 2026

Agency Best for Pricing model Starting price
SiteMile Full-stack WordPress + SEO under one roof Hourly + retainer $50/hr or custom retainer
E2M Solutions Subscription-based, AI-augmented delivery Hours per month $799/mo (15–20 hrs)
The White Label Agency Custom-coded WordPress at scale Dedicated developer $2,900/mo
White Label IQ Custom themes and complex builds Custom Custom
UnlimitedWP Unlimited support model for agencies Hours per month $749/mo
WPBeginner Pro Brand-name WordPress credibility Custom plans Custom
FigtoWP Figma → WordPress conversions Per page $200/page
Dynamic Dreamz High-volume, dedicated developers Dedicated/fixed Custom
GetDevDone Multi-platform dev partner Per project / retainer Custom
WP White Label Hourly, ad-hoc development Hourly $99/hr
Seahawk Big-brand WordPress optimization Custom Custom

How we ranked these white label WordPress agencies

White labeling is a partnership, not a vendor relationship. The wrong partner shows up as missed deadlines, embarrassed apologies to your clients, and slow erosion of your agency’s reputation. We weighted the picks below across five things that actually matter day-to-day:

  • WordPress depth, not generalist development — Does the team live inside WordPress or are you one of seven CMS platforms they juggle?
  • Communication and account management — A dedicated point of contact, real Slack integration, predictable response times. White labeling fails on communication more than on code.
  • Pricing model fit — Hourly, retainer, hours-per-month, per-project. Different models suit different agency stages.
  • Confidentiality and white label rigor — Strict NDAs, branded handoffs, no client poaching, no surprise emails to your client from “Bob at TheirAgency.”
  • Real agency volume — How many agencies have they actually served and for how long? Reputation in this category compounds.

The 11 best white label WordPress agencies in 2026

1. SiteMile — Best white label WordPress agency overall

  • Location: Remote, EU & US delivery
  • Years in business: 15+
  • Best for: Agencies that want WordPress design, development, WooCommerce, and SEO from one experienced partner
  • Pricing model: Hourly rates from $50/hr, dedicated developer retainers, or custom per-project quotes
  • Website: sitemile.com

SiteMile is a WordPress-only agency, and that is the most important thing to know about us as a white label partner. We are not a multi-CMS shop that happens to take WordPress overflow. We have spent 15+ years and 250+ projects building custom WordPress sites, plugins, themes, and WooCommerce stores — and we do nothing else. When you hand us a brief, we already know the answer to “can WordPress do this?” and we have probably built it before.

The unusual thing about partnering with SiteMile is the breadth of what your agency can resell under your brand. Most white label partners on this list focus on one slice: development only, or design conversion only, or SEO only. We cover the full WordPress stack — custom WordPress design in Figma, theme and plugin development, WooCommerce builds, SEO retainers, ongoing maintenance, mobile app development for cross-device builds, and consulting for replatforming or rescue projects. That means one partner relationship instead of five.

What sets SiteMile apart as a white label partner:

  • WordPress-only specialists — 100% of our work is on WordPress, WooCommerce, and surrounding tooling
  • Senior developers, not bench fillers — your projects go to senior WordPress developers, not whoever is free
  • Bundled SEO available — most white label partners cannot do SEO; we have an in-house SEO team that ranks WordPress sites for a living
  • Strict NDAs and branded handoffs — your clients never see SiteMile in any deliverable, communication, or codebase comment
  • Flexible engagement — hourly for one-off tasks, retainers for steady volume, dedicated developer for agencies running consistent WordPress pipelines
  • Direct access to senior staff — no layered account management between you and the people building your work

Real numbers to anchor this: 250+ WordPress projects delivered, 36,000+ end-customers served across our partners’ books, and 180+ direct agency and end-client relationships. Recent white-labeled work includes a WooCommerce store rebuild that delivered +38% faster load times and a +21% conversion lift for one partner’s client, and a SaaS marketing site with custom theme and API integrations that ranked from week one because the SEO foundation was built in during development.

If you want a single WordPress partner who can take design, development, WooCommerce, SEO, and maintenance off your plate without you ever explaining who they are to your client, that is the case for SiteMile. Request a white label partnership call.

2. E2M Solutions

  • Location: USA + India
  • Years in business: 13+
  • Best for: Agencies that want subscription-based WordPress capacity with AI-augmented delivery
  • Pricing model: Hours-per-month subscription
  • Pricing: Starter $799/mo (15–20 hrs), Standard $1,299/mo (30–35 hrs), Pro $2,099/mo (50–60 hrs), Advanced $3,999/mo (100–120 hrs)
  • Website: e2msolutions.com

E2M is the most established player in this category and the closest thing to a category leader. They report serving 1,100+ agencies, 10,000+ WordPress sites built, and a team of 150+ WordPress specialists in-house. Their model is subscription-based hours per month, which is unusually predictable for white label work — you know exactly what you are getting and what it costs.

In 2026 their differentiator is AI-augmented delivery: AI-assisted development with Cursor and GitHub Copilot, AI-driven QA with Playwright AI, and Figma AI for design speed. This compresses timelines without obviously cutting corners. They also support every major page builder (Elementor, Beaver Builder, Bricks, Gutenberg, Divi, WPBakery, Oxygen) and offer headless WordPress builds with Next.js, which is rare in this category.

The trade-off is the same as any large operator: lower-tier plans use shared teams, and dedicated resources only kick in on the $3,999/mo Advanced tier. For smaller agencies the Starter plan can feel like you are sharing attention.

3. The White Label Agency

  • Location: USA + Europe
  • Years in business: 13+
  • Best for: Agencies needing dedicated developers for custom-coded WordPress builds
  • Pricing model: Dedicated developer / fixed price per project
  • Pricing: From $2,900/month for a junior developer
  • Website: thewhitelabelagency.com

The White Label Agency is one of the longest-running brands in this space, with a stated 20,000+ site builds since 2013 and 150+ developers and designers. They focus on custom-coded WordPress — not page builder shops, not template assembly — and assign a dedicated account manager to every partnership, which is the right structure for agencies running consistent WordPress pipelines.

They are particularly strong for agencies that want full-time outsourced developer capacity rather than ad-hoc tasks. The dedicated-developer model is more expensive than hourly partners on a per-task basis but cheaper per hour over a full month, and it gives you a developer who actually learns your stack, your conventions, and your clients.

If your agency only needs a few hours of WordPress work per month, the dedicated model is overkill — a per-hour or hours-per-month partner will fit better.

4. White Label IQ

  • Location: USA
  • Best for: Custom themes, custom plugins, complex builds
  • Pricing model: Custom quotes
  • Website: whitelabeliq.com

White Label IQ explicitly markets itself as “born from an agency, made for an agency,” and the product reflects that: their workflow, contracts, checklists, and onboarding materials are all designed around how agencies actually operate. They handle marketing websites, multisite networks, membership platforms, LMS portals, directory sites, and full custom web applications on WordPress.

They are particularly strong on custom plugin development — when off-the-shelf plugins do not meet a project’s requirements, they build them from scratch following WordPress coding standards. That depth matters for agencies whose clients have unusual requirements.

The downside of pure custom-quote pricing is opacity. You cannot benchmark them against E2M’s transparent tiers without going through a sales process, which slows down comparison shopping.

5. UnlimitedWP

  • Location: Boston, USA
  • Best for: Agencies wanting unlimited-style WordPress support
  • Pricing model: Hours per month
  • Pricing: $749/mo to $3,599/mo
  • Website: unlimitedwp.com

UnlimitedWP positions itself as an “unlimited” WordPress support and development service for digital agencies, and reports 200+ agency clients and 1,000+ optimized sites. The pricing tiers mirror E2M’s structure (20, 35, 60, 120 hours/month), but the brand identity leans heavier on agency partnerships specifically — they do not take direct end-client work.

That single-channel focus is the strength: the entire operation is built around agency workflows, agency client communication conventions, and agency margin requirements. Tasks include theme and plugin customization, technical SEO, site speed optimization, and full builds.

For very small agencies with sporadic needs, the lowest tier may still be more capacity than you can use. UnlimitedWP works best when you have a steady WordPress pipeline.

6. WPBeginner Pro Services

  • Location: Florida, USA
  • Best for: Agencies that benefit from name-brand WordPress credibility
  • Pricing model: Custom plans
  • Website: wpbeginner.com

WPBeginner runs the most-read WordPress publication on the internet, and their pro services arm offers WordPress development, maintenance, SEO, speed optimization, and security to agencies. The unique value here is brand: your client may already have read WPBeginner tutorials, and reputation matters in agency sales conversations.

The execution side is solid but more conservative than newer entrants — they focus on standard builds, maintenance, and SEO rather than complex custom plugin work or headless architectures. Pricing is custom, which again means you have to talk to sales to get numbers.

7. FigtoWP

  • Location: USA
  • Best for: Agencies that design in Figma and want fast WordPress conversion
  • Pricing model: Per page
  • Pricing: Starts at $200 per page based on design complexity
  • Website: figtowp.com

FigtoWP is a specialist, not a generalist — they convert Figma designs into working WordPress builds using Elementor, Divi, Gutenberg, or SeedProd. If your agency designs sites in Figma and needs a reliable conversion partner who will not break the design system, this is the right tool for that specific job.

It is the wrong tool for everything else. They do not lead strategy, they do not build custom plugins from scratch, and they do not do SEO. Their per-page pricing is also more expensive at scale than hourly or retainer models if you have steady volume — but unbeatable for one-off, design-driven projects.

8. Dynamic Dreamz

  • Location: India
  • Years in business: 18+
  • Best for: High-volume agencies needing dedicated developers
  • Pricing model: Dedicated developer or fixed-price project
  • Website: dynamicdreamz.com

Dynamic Dreamz reports 18+ years of experience, 100+ developers, 2,500+ client reviews, and 1,000+ WordPress websites delivered. Their model is full-time dedicated developers assigned to your agency — similar in structure to The White Label Agency, but with more aggressive India-based pricing.

The cost advantage is real and the team is genuinely WordPress-focused. The trade-offs are typical for offshore partners: time-zone overlap requires more deliberate scheduling, and direct-from-developer communication can require more pre-formatted briefs to land cleanly. Agencies with strong project management discipline get great value here.

9. GetDevDone

  • Location: USA, with global delivery
  • Years in business: 15+
  • Best for: Multi-platform agencies that need WordPress alongside Shopify, Webflow, and front-end conversion
  • Pricing model: Per project or retainer
  • Website: getdevdone.com

GetDevDone is broader than WordPress — they cover Shopify, Webflow, Drupal, Craft CMS, React, Vue, Angular, and PSD-to-HTML conversion. For agencies with mixed-stack client books, the single-vendor advantage matters: one partner relationship, one set of NDAs, one billing cadence.

For pure WordPress depth, more focused partners on this list will go deeper. GetDevDone is best when WordPress is part of a larger multi-platform delivery problem rather than the entire problem.

10. WP White Label

  • Location: USA
  • Best for: Agencies and freelancers needing ad-hoc hourly WordPress work
  • Pricing model: Hourly
  • Pricing: $99/hour
  • Website: wpwhitelabel.com

WP White Label runs a simple, transparent hourly model. No retainers, no monthly minimums — just $99/hr for WordPress development, design, Figma-to-WordPress conversion, and SEO services. For freelancers and small agencies with unpredictable workloads, this is the cleanest possible engagement model.

The flat hourly rate becomes expensive quickly compared to bulk-hours retainers like E2M or UnlimitedWP, so high-volume agencies will outgrow it. It is also less suited to large multi-month projects where senior strategy and account management add real value.

11. Seahawk

  • Location: Global
  • Best for: WordPress optimization, maintenance, and brand-trusted partnerships
  • Pricing model: Custom
  • Website: seahawkmedia.com

Seahawk is a global WordPress agency that lists DreamHost and GoDaddy among its partners, which is a meaningful credibility signal in WordPress circles. They offer development, optimization, maintenance, and white label partnerships across most agency needs.

The trade-off is generalism — Seahawk’s sweet spot is broad WordPress support rather than ultra-deep specialty work like custom plugin development or headless builds. Best suited to agencies whose clients need solid, dependable WordPress delivery rather than cutting-edge architecture.

What does white label WordPress development actually cover?

The category is wider than most agency owners realize. A real white label WordPress partnership can include any combination of:

Full WordPress site builds. Custom themes from Figma or PSD designs, multi-page marketing sites, content migrations, multisite networks, and multilingual setups. This is the bread and butter of most partnerships.

Custom plugin and feature development. When off-the-shelf plugins do not exist or are too bloated, a white label partner builds custom WordPress plugins with proper coding standards, ongoing maintainability, and security. This is where capability differences between partners become very visible.

WooCommerce builds and customization. Custom product templates, complex checkout flows, payment gateway integrations, subscription systems, dashboard customization, performance tuning for high-traffic stores. WooCommerce expertise is genuinely separate from generic WordPress expertise.

Maintenance and support retainers. Plugin and core updates, security monitoring, malware cleanup, backups, uptime monitoring, performance tuning, and bug fixes — packaged as a recurring service you can resell to clients under your brand.

WordPress SEO work. On-page optimization, technical audits, Core Web Vitals improvement, schema markup, structured data, content optimization. Most white label partners do not do this well; the ones that do are valuable.

Page builder specialty. Different partners specialize in Elementor, Divi, Beaver Builder, Bricks, Oxygen, Gutenberg, or WPBakery. Match the partner to your existing agency tooling.

Headless and API-driven WordPress. WordPress as a backend with React, Vue, or Next.js frontends. This is a fast-growing niche and only a handful of white label partners are genuinely strong here.

Design-to-WordPress conversion. Figma or Sketch to working WordPress site, treating design as the source of truth and producing pixel-accurate builds.

A strong partner covers four or five of these well. A weak one promises all of them and excels at none.

White label WordPress pricing models, explained

White label WordPress partners price work in five distinct ways, and understanding the difference is important before signing anything.

Hourly. Pay only for time used, typically $50–$120/hr for senior WordPress developers. Best for: ad-hoc work, unpredictable volume, small agencies. Worst for: high-volume agencies (you pay full retail every hour with no bulk discount).

Hours per month / subscription. Buy a bucket of hours each month at a discounted rate — typical tiers are 20, 35, 60, and 120 hours/month. Best for: agencies with steady but variable WordPress volume. Worst for: agencies that are still ramping up and may not use the full bucket.

Dedicated developer / full-time. Lock in a developer or team for a flat monthly fee, typically $2,500–$8,000/month per developer depending on seniority and location. Best for: high-volume agencies, agencies wanting deep stack knowledge from a partner. Worst for: agencies with sporadic project volume.

Per project / fixed price. One-time quote for a defined scope. Best for: well-scoped projects, occasional builds, design conversions. Worst for: anything that might shift in scope, since fixed-price quotes treat every change as a billable extra.

Per page. Specific to design conversion partners (FigtoWP), priced at $150–$400 per page based on complexity. Best for: design-driven projects with clean page-count scoping. Worst for: complex functionality or custom logic.

The right model depends almost entirely on your pipeline shape. Sporadic = hourly. Steady = hours per month. High volume = dedicated. Specific scope = per project.

White label or hire in-house — when does each make sense?

Hiring an in-house developer makes sense when:

  • You can predict steady WordPress work for at least 18–24 months
  • Your average project is large enough to keep one person busy full-time
  • You have the management capacity to onboard, train, review, and retain a developer
  • Your work needs deep institutional knowledge of your specific clients

White labeling makes sense when:

  • Your pipeline is variable or growing unpredictably
  • You take on WordPress projects occasionally, not constantly
  • You want to offer WordPress as a service without building deep WordPress expertise yourself
  • You need to scale up fast without recruiting timelines
  • You need specialty skills (custom plugins, WooCommerce, headless) that one in-house developer cannot reasonably cover

Many established agencies use both — an in-house developer for steady client work and a white label partner for overflow, specialty, and surge capacity. That hybrid model usually outperforms either pure approach.

How to choose the right white label WordPress partner

A short, practical checklist before you sign anything:

Demand a real WordPress portfolio. Not “we built websites” — actual WordPress sites with technical depth. Ask for examples of custom plugins, complex WooCommerce stores, or migrations. You will learn more from one detailed case study than ten testimonials.

Confirm the team is WordPress-only or WordPress-led. Multi-CMS shops can be fine, but their attention is divided. WordPress-focused partners go deeper because they have to.

Get the NDA in writing before any conversation. Reputable white label partners offer NDAs proactively. If they hesitate or push back, walk away.

Test their communication during the sales process. How they respond to your initial inquiry is a perfect preview of how they will respond when your client is breathing down your neck about a launch date. Slow sales replies = slow delivery replies.

Understand who actually does the work. Ask whether you get a dedicated team or shared resources, and whether you get a senior developer or a junior. Big-team agencies often sell with seniors and deliver with juniors.

Check the page builder fit. If your agency standardizes on Elementor and the partner only does Divi, you will fight that mismatch on every project. Match the tooling.

Confirm the white label process is real. No emails to your client, no agency name in code comments, no logos in screenshots, branded reports, branded documentation. Ask exactly how each of those works in practice.

Start with a small test project. Hand them one self-contained project before committing to a large engagement. The way they handle the first project tells you everything.

Red flags to watch for

  • Vague answers about who actually does the work. “We have a great team” without specifics usually means a fluctuating bench
  • Pricing that seems impossibly low. $15/hr WordPress developers exist; they typically deliver $15/hr quality
  • Reluctance around NDAs. Non-negotiable for any real white label relationship
  • No named clients or case studies. Not even unbranded ones — at minimum a partner should be able to describe project types in detail
  • Slow response during sales. This is the fastest version of them you will ever see
  • Multi-day delivery on simple tasks. A simple plugin update should not take a week
  • Account manager is also the sales manager and the project manager. Means they are too small to scale alongside you

White label WordPress agency FAQ

How does white labeling work in practice?

You sign a white label agreement and an NDA with the agency. Your client briefs you, you brief the white label partner using their preferred tools (Slack, ClickUp, Asana, Trello). The partner does the work, delivers it to you under your branding, and never communicates directly with your client. Your client sees only your agency throughout.

How quickly can I onboard with a white label WordPress partner?

The fastest partners (E2M, SiteMile) can onboard in 24–48 hours — strategy call, system access, first task assigned. Larger or more bureaucratic partners can take 1–2 weeks. Speed of onboarding is a strong proxy for speed of delivery later.

What if my client asks technical questions I cannot answer?

A strong white label partner will provide answers via your account manager — usually within hours. Some partners will join client calls under your agency’s branding if needed. Confirm this option exists during the sales process, especially for complex builds.

Are NDAs and confidentiality real, or just marketing?

With reputable partners, they are real and contractually enforced. The partner cannot use your client logos in marketing, contact your clients directly, or identify themselves to your client. Always sign an actual NDA — verbal assurances are worthless.

What pricing model is best for a small agency?

If your WordPress volume is sporadic — a few hours here, a small project there — go hourly ($50–$120/hr). If you have steady volume but it varies week to week, hours-per-month subscription tiers ($699–$3,999/mo) are more cost-effective. Save dedicated-developer models for when you have at least 80–100 hours of monthly WordPress work.

Can a white label agency handle WooCommerce stores?

Most can handle basic WooCommerce. Far fewer can handle the difficult parts: complex checkout customization, subscription systems, faceted navigation, product schema, performance optimization on high-traffic stores, and migration between platforms. Ask for specific WooCommerce case studies before committing to a partnership for a meaningful WooCommerce client.

Can a white label partner also do SEO?

Some can, most cannot — and the ones that try without real SEO expertise will damage your client relationships. If SEO is part of what you sell to clients, prioritize a partner with a genuine in-house SEO team rather than one who treats SEO as an add-on. The list of capable partners drops significantly when you filter for real SEO depth.

What happens if the project goes wrong?

This is what you are really paying for. Strong partners have escalation paths, dedicated account managers, and willingness to redo work at no charge when they have missed the brief. Weak partners disappear, blame the brief, or charge for revisions. Test this implicitly by reading their contract terms around revisions and how they handle missed deliveries.

Final thoughts

The right white label WordPress partner gives your agency a real superpower: the ability to say yes to client work that would otherwise require a costly hire, a stretched timeline, or a hard pass. The wrong one creates exactly the problem you were trying to avoid — late nights, embarrassed apologies, and damaged client trust.

Most agencies on this list are good at what they do. The right pick depends on your volume shape, your pricing tolerance, your existing tooling, and how much breadth you want from a single partner.

If you want one partner who handles WordPress design, development, WooCommerce, SEO, and maintenance under your brand — built by senior WordPress specialists who only do WordPress — that is the case for SiteMile.

Start a white label conversation with SiteMile and we will walk you through how a partnership would actually work for your agency’s specific pipeline.

This entry was posted in Affordable Web Design Services, Wordpress agency, wordpress developer, wordpress development. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply