After four years of managing a Drupal site, I recently made the jump to WordPress with Divi. This wasn’t a decision I made lightly—Drupal had been reliable in some ways, but the day-to-day overhead of maintaining it was becoming more of a liability than a strength. Below is a breakdown of my experience, what I learned, and how the two platforms stack up.
The Maintenance Burden: Drupal vs. WordPress
Drupal updates were my biggest pain point. Core and module updates often felt like wrestling with a finicky machine—relying on Drush or convoluted web-based update workflows. Even with experience, it never felt smooth. The risk of breaking dependencies or running into compatibility issues was always lurking in the background.
By contrast, WordPress updates are refreshingly straightforward. Core, theme, and plugin updates are handled directly from the dashboard with clear versioning and rollback options. Automation options are abundant, and I’ve had fewer “hold-your-breath” moments compared to Drupal. Simplicity here is a huge win.
What is Divi?
For those unfamiliar, Divi is a premium WordPress theme and visual page builder created by Elegant Themes. At its core, it transforms WordPress from a CMS that often requires developers to touch code into a fully visual design system.
Divi comes with:
- A drag-and-drop builder that lets you create layouts in real time.
- Pre-built templates for landing pages, blogs, portfolios, and more.
- A flexible design system where fonts, colors, and components can be reused site-wide.
- Native support for responsive editing—what you design automatically adapts to mobile and tablet.
In short, Divi bridges the gap between design and content management. Non-technical users can create polished layouts without breaking the site, and technical users still have full access to customize with code when needed.
Visual Editing: A Different World
Drupal can be powerful, but visual content editing has always been its weak spot. Building layouts typically requires extensive use of modules, theming layers, or custom coding. Content creators often depend on developers for even simple page adjustments.
Switching to WordPress with Divi has been like stepping into another era. Divi’s visual builder makes layout and design adjustments something anyone can handle. Drag-and-drop editing, real-time previews, and pre-built layouts mean content teams aren’t bottlenecked by developers. For organizations where marketing agility matters, this is a clear advantage.
Performance and Weight
Out of the box, Drupal carries a reputation for being “heavier” than WordPress, relying on robust caching mechanisms to stay performant. Drupal’s caching layers are effective, but they add complexity to both setup and ongoing tuning.
WordPress, on the other hand, starts lightweight by design. Even with Divi layered in, it doesn’t feel bloated, and with simple caching plugins, performance is more than competitive with Drupal’s setup. In practice, the performance tradeoff is close to a wash—but the simplicity of achieving a fast site in WordPress makes it lean in its favor.
Lessons Learned
- Maintenance overhead matters. Drupal is powerful, but its maintenance complexity was draining. WordPress wins for smoother, safer updates.
- Visual editing is a game-changer. Divi empowers non-technical users to manage content without developer intervention, increasing speed and flexibility.
- Performance parity is possible. While Drupal relies on caching complexity, WordPress achieves comparable speed with a lighter footprint.
Final Thoughts
Drupal shines in enterprise-scale, highly customized environments where its structured approach is indispensable. But for many organizations—including my own—the agility, ease of use, and lower maintenance overhead of WordPress with Divi provide a better balance.
After four years with Drupal, the move to WordPress + Divi has simplified workflows, cut down maintenance time, and put more power in the hands of content creators. For me, that’s a trade well worth making.