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19 Best Enterprise Websites Powered by WordPress

Jef van de Graaf
by Jef van de Graaf™
on 2 March, 2026

Web designers love to hate on WordPress. They often spread lies online like: “It’s insecure.” “It doesn’t scale.” “It’s not a real enterprise solution.”

I’ve heard it all. And every time, I have the same response: go look at what the biggest companies on the planet are actually using.

Because when PlayStation, NASA, Microsoft, and Meta need a website that handles millions of visitors, delivers content at scale, and doesn’t lock them into vendor hell—they choose WordPress.

Not some seven-figure proprietary CMS. Not a custom build that requires a dedicated engineering team just to publish a blog post. They’re powered by WordPress.

Below are 19 of the best enterprise websites running on WordPress right now. These aren’t obscure corner-cases. They’re household names, Fortune 500 companies, government websites, and media powerhouses. Every single one of them evaluated their options—with budgets and engineering teams most of us can only dream of—and landed on WordPress.

If WordPress for enterprise sounds like a stretch to you, keep reading. I’m about to change your mind.

19 Best Enterprise Websites Powered by WordPress

1. PlayStation

PlayStation — PlayStation's enterprise website powered by WordPress

One of the most dominant gaming brands on the planet trusts WordPress to power their news hub and content delivery. Let that sink in: a company that builds cutting-edge hardware and competes in one of tech’s most demanding spaces chose the supposedly “outdated” WordPress over enterprise solutions costing millions.

PlayStation’s site handles massive traffic spikes during console launches, manages rich media including 4K video and high-res imagery, and serves content to a global audience of millions. WordPress handles all of it. If it can manage the PlayStation audience, it can handle your business website without breaking a sweat.

2. Capgemini

Capgemini — Capgemini's global corporate website runs on WordPress

Capgemini is a $22 billion global consulting and technology services giant. Companies pay them millions for advice on digital transformation and which technology stack to use. So what did Capgemini choose for their own website? WordPress.

This isn’t a subsidiary blog. It’s their main corporate site, serving audiences across 50+ countries. They had access to every proprietary CMS and enterprise solution on the market. They could have built something custom from scratch. Instead, they recognized what competent WordPress developers have known for years: it’s enterprise-ready, infinitely customizable, and doesn’t trap you in vendor lock-in.

When the consultants consulting the consultants choose WordPress, maybe it’s time to stop parroting criticisms from 2012.

3. Facebook’s Newsroom (Meta)

Facebook Newsroom — Meta's Facebook Newsroom built on WordPress

Meta—the company behind Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp—uses WordPress for their official newsroom. The same Meta that employs thousands of world-class engineers and has unlimited resources to build anything they want. The same company that invented React.

They looked at every option available and said “WordPress is the right tool for this.” Their newsroom handles breaking announcements, press releases, and product launches that draw millions of simultaneous visitors. When I looked at the source code, it was unmistakably WordPress.

Meta’s engineering team—some of the most talented developers alive—evaluated WordPress’s architecture, security, and scalability and gave it the green light. But sure, tell me again how it “doesn’t scale.”

4. Salesforce (Blog)

Salesforce Blog — Salesforce blog powered by WordPress CMS

Salesforce, the $250 billion CRM giant and consistent Fortune 500 fixture, powers their blog with WordPress. This is the company that pioneered SaaS and has “innovation” baked into its DNA. They have the resources to build, integrate, or acquire anything.

Yet their content team chose WordPress. Why? Because it excels at what it was designed to do: publish and manage content efficiently at scale. No engineering support needed for every publish. No PhD required to operate. Salesforce’s blog serves millions of readers, and WordPress delivers exactly what they need without overcomplicating things.

5. Microsoft News Centre

Microsoft News Centre — Microsoft News Centre enterprise WordPress website

Microsoft literally makes competing CMS products. They built SharePoint. They run Azure. They have an entire ecosystem of enterprise software solutions.

And their official News Centre? It runs on WordPress. Not SharePoint. Not some custom Microsoft solution. WordPress.

This is where Microsoft announces major updates, product launches, financial results, and executive appointments. It’s mission-critical corporate communications serving journalists, investors, and stakeholders worldwide. When a company with every incentive to use their own platforms chooses WordPress instead, that tells you everything about its enterprise capabilities.

6. New York Post

New York Post — New York Post media website running WordPress

The New York Post isn’t some tiny indie blog—it’s one of America’s oldest newspapers, founded in 1801, pulling roughly 93.5 million monthly visits. Their site needs to handle massive traffic spikes when stories go viral, deliver content instantly to a global audience, and maintain uptime during breaking news events.

Could they have used a proprietary CMS with a six-figure annual license? Sure. Would it have been better? Not a chance. WordPress gives them the flexibility, speed, and reliability they need at a fraction of the cost.

7. Tech Crunch

TechCrunch — TechCrunch technology news site powered by WordPress

TechCrunch is one of the most widely-read technology publications in the world. They cover the companies building the future—startups, venture capital, AI, enterprise software—and they do it all from a WordPress-powered website.

There’s a beautiful irony in the fact that a publication covering cutting-edge tech runs on a platform some people dismiss as “basic.” TechCrunch’s editorial team publishes dozens of articles daily, manages complex content workflows, and serves a massive global audience. WordPress keeps it all running.

8. Snopes

Snopes — Snopes fact-checking website built with WordPress

The internet’s most trusted fact-checking website runs on WordPress. Snopes has been debunking misinformation since 1994 and their platform needs to be fast, reliable, and capable of handling traffic surges every time a viral claim needs fact-checking—which is basically every day in 2026.

When a website dedicated to verifying truth chooses a platform, that choice says something about the platform’s credibility.

WordPress isn’t just for content sites. With WooCommerce, it powers some serious online stores. These brands prove that WordPress enterprise solutions extend well beyond blogging and publishing into full-scale e-commerce.

9. Nalgene

Nalgene — Nalgene online store powered by WordPress WooCommerce
I love this bottle and have used them ’em since my tree planting days in 2011.

The iconic water bottle brand runs their entire online store on WordPress with WooCommerce. Product catalogs, inventory management, checkout flows, customer accounts—all handled by WordPress. If you’ve ever bought a Nalgene bottle online, you’ve shopped on a WordPress website.

10. Tonal

Tonal — Tonal e-commerce website running WordPress WooCommerce

Tonal—the smart home gym system backed by LeBron James—uses WooCommerce to power their online store. This is a premium product with a premium price tag, and they trust WordPress to handle the entire purchasing experience. Complex product configurations, financing options, accessory bundles—WordPress manages it all.

11. FN America

FN America — FN America product catalog on WordPress WooCommerce

FN America, one of the world’s leading firearms manufacturers supplying military and law enforcement agencies globally, runs their product catalog and e-commerce on WordPress with WooCommerce. I may not be a fan of guns, but I respect any brand that chooses WordPress.

12. YMCA Canada

YMCA Canada — YMCA Canada non-profit website built on WordPress

YMCA Canada—one of the country’s largest and most recognized charitable organizations—runs on WordPress. Their site serves communities across every province, manages program registrations, and communicates with millions of members and donors.

For non-profits working with limited budgets, WordPress is the smart play: powerful, cost-effective, and maintained by the largest open-source community in web development.

13. Ford Foundation

Ford Foundation — Ford Foundation enterprise website powered by WordPress

The Ford Foundation has an endowment of over $16 billion and funds social justice initiatives worldwide. Their website is the public face of that mission, and it’s built on WordPress. Clean design, complex content architecture, multilingual support—all running on a platform that some people still dismiss as “just for blogs.”

14. Pew Research Center

Pew Research Center — Pew Research Center data-driven WordPress website

Pew Research Center is one of the most cited research organizations in the world. Journalists, policymakers, and academics rely on their data daily. Their WordPress site handles complex data visualizations, interactive charts, extensive report archives, and massive traffic every time they release a major study.

This is enterprise WordPress development at its finest—content-heavy, data-rich, and built to perform.

Governments worldwide trust WordPress for their .gov sites

If the “WordPress isn’t secure” crowd needs one more reality check, here it is. Governments around the world—organizations with some of the strictest security and compliance requirements imaginable—trust WordPress to serve their citizens.

15. UK’s Civil Services Career Portal

UK Civil Service Careers — UK government career portal running WordPress

The United Kingdom’s official civil service career portal runs on WordPress. This is a government recruitment platform handling sensitive application data and serving millions of job seekers. The UK’s cybersecurity standards are no joke, and WordPress meets them.

16. Sweden’s Government Website

Sweden.se — Sweden's official government website powered by WordPress

Sweden’s national website—the country’s official digital presence to the world—is powered by WordPress. When an entire nation trusts WordPress to represent them on the global stage, the “it’s not enterprise-ready” argument officially dies.

17. Finland’s Government Website

Finland.fi — Finland's national website built on WordPress

Finland joins Sweden in the “governments that chose WordPress” club. Their official website showcases Finnish culture, business opportunities, and public services to a global audience. Two Nordic nations, both running WordPress, both known for their world-class digital infrastructure.

18. The White House

The White House — The White House official website running WordPress

The official website of the President of the United States, The White House, runs on WordPress. Here’s the most visible government website in the world, subject to constant cyber threats and scrutiny, serving as the primary communication channel between the US government and its citizens.

If WordPress isn’t secure enough for your local plumbing company’s website, someone should probably let the Secret Service know they made a terrible mistake.

19. Nasa

NASA — NASA's enterprise website powered by WordPress

NASA—the organization that put humans on the moon, operates rovers on Mars, and manages the International Space Station—runs multiple websites on WordPress.

“NASA-grade” is literally synonymous with the highest possible engineering standards. Their sites handle massive traffic spikes during launches, display complex scientific data and visualizations, manage extensive media libraries of high-resolution imagery, and maintain the security standards you’d expect from a government space agency.

WordPress delivers all of it. If it’s good enough for NASA, it’s more than good enough for your business.

So Why Do People Still Doubt WordPress?

Honestly? Because they’re either repeating what they heard from someone who doesn’t build with WordPress professionally, or they’re comparing WordPress to what it was a decade ago. The platform has evolved dramatically, and the enterprise WordPress ecosystem in 2026 is nothing like what existed in 2015.

The real culprit behind most WordPress horror stories isn’t the platform itself—it’s the implementation. Hiring an untrustworthy developer, using a bloated theme loaded with 40 plugins, or giving admin access to a stranger on Fiverr for $10 will torpedo any website, regardless of the CMS.

WordPress built right—with clean code, proper security hardening, quality hosting, and ongoing maintenance—is as solid as anything on the market. The 19 best enterprise websites listed above prove that.

WordPress is Best for Business Websites of All Sizes

Every company on this list had the budget, the engineering talent, and the options to choose anything. They evaluated proprietary enterprise CMS platforms, custom-built solutions, and every alternative in between. They chose WordPress.

PlayStation, Meta, Microsoft, NASA, The White House—these aren’t companies making casual decisions about their web infrastructure. They’re running rigorous evaluations with teams of architects and engineers. And WordPress keeps winning.

So the next time someone tells you WordPress isn’t a serious enterprise solution, send them this article. Then ask them which CMS their favorite billion-dollar company is using.

Chances are, it’s WordPress.

Need an enterprise WordPress website built right? I build fast, secure, maintainable WordPress sites for B2B companies—click here to get started.

Jef van de Graaf™ | Canadian Website Designer & Copywriter

About Jef van de Graaf™

Creative Director at Build An Online Business

Jef van de Graaf™ is a B2B web strategist and WordPress developer at BAOB.ca, serving industrial and B2B clients across North America and Europe. He's been a copywriter that builds websites professionally since 2017 and has operated remotely from Southeast Asia since 2014.

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