WHMCS customers get ready for another round of price increases in the beginning of 2026.
The reaction against these increases is so strong this time that people are talking about it even more than before. WHMCS’s announcement of the new pricing changes taking effect on January 1 increases costs across nearly every license tier, prompting the hosting community to question fairness and value once again.
The Plus plan, once $29.95 a month, will climb to $34.95. The Professional tier rises to $54.95, while Business licenses see the steepest jump yet. A 10,000-client license now costs $399.95, and larger tiers reach well into the thousand-dollar range. For small and mid-sized providers, these numbers hit hard.
WHMCS has justified its past increases as part of aligning pricing with platform growth. But for many users, that explanation no longer holds weight. Long-time customers say the platform has changed little in recent years. Hosting providers fill the community forums with posts questioning whether the company still listens to user feedback.
Some industry professionals argue that WHMCS remains reliable and stable, yet many believe those strengths no longer justify the rising cost. People frequently name Blesta and WISECP as potential substitutes, however, changing a platform can be a lengthy process due to complicated migrations and expensive setups.
To reduce the aggravation, a spokesperson from WHMCS has declaimed the reforms that are going to be made, including a modern client interface and a new API system. While that gave some users a reason to stay hopeful, others remain cautious. The general feeling is that WHMCS needs to prove its commitment to real improvements, not just price adjustments.
The announcement marks another turning point for WHMCS. What once began as a flexible billing and automation tool for small hosting companies now appears to be shifting toward an enterprise model. Whether users adapt, migrate, or simply absorb the increase will likely depend on what happens next.
