# Ghost

- Tool: Platform Reviews
- Last updated: July 2026

## TL;DR

Ghost scores 7.3/10. At 1,000 paying subscribers paying $5/month, Ghost(Pro) Publisher costs ~$348/year while Substack takes ~$6,000/year — a $5,652 annual difference that makes the math undeniable for serious publishers. It is the strongest economics-plus-ownership combination in the newsletter/publishing category. The main limitation: no plugin ecosystem and no built-in discovery network.

## Frequently asked questions

### Is Ghost worth it in 2026?

Yes — for any publisher generating over ~$290/month in paid subscription revenue, Ghost(Pro) Publisher at $29/month (annual) pays for itself versus Substack's 10% platform fee. At 1,000 paying subscribers at $5/month, the annual saving exceeds $5,600. For publishers below that revenue threshold, Substack's built-in discovery network often delivers more value than the fee savings. Ghost is also worth it for any publisher who prioritizes content ownership and platform risk, independent of revenue level, given the MIT open-source license and non-profit foundation structure.

### How does Ghost compare to Substack?

Ghost wins on economics (0% fee vs Substack's 10% + ~3% Stripe), content ownership (MIT OSS, own domain and Stripe account), and technical SEO (posts on your own domain compound domain authority; Substack posts do not). Substack wins on discovery — its Notes feed and recommendation network deliver new subscribers without any effort on the publisher's part, which is decisive for publications without an established audience. The Substack Apple IAP change in August 2025 means iOS-paying Substack subscribers do not appear in publishers' own Stripe accounts — a platform-control issue Ghost does not have. The break-even where Ghost saves more than it costs vs Substack is approximately $290/month in subscription revenue.

### What is the real cost of Ghost self-hosting?

The '$6 VPS' figure circulated in older guides is not realistic for Ghost 6.0. The honest math from Magic Pages' 2026 analysis: approximately $15–17/month for a small blog (2GB VPS + Mailgun Flex at low send volume), and approximately $48–50/month for a growing newsletter with 5,000+ subscribers sending 4× per month — once server, Mailgun, backups, monitoring, and operator time are all counted. Mailgun's December 2025 Flex price doubling ($1 → $2/1,000 emails) made this calculation materially more expensive for high-volume senders. Ghost 6.0's multi-service architecture also raised RAM requirements to 2–4GB minimum.

### Can you make money on Ghost's Starter plan?

No. As of August 2025, paid membership support was removed from the Starter plan. Starter ($15/month) supports free-list blogging and unlimited email sends, but enabling paid subscriptions requires upgrading to Publisher ($29/month, annual). This change caught teams who signed up on Starter expecting to monetize — if you plan any paid memberships, start on Publisher from day one.

### What happens when you hit your Ghost member limit?

Ghost disables new post publishing when you exceed your plan's member count. The site stays live and existing posts remain accessible, but you cannot publish new content until you upgrade your plan. There is no advance warning notification before the hard stop. Monitor your member count in Ghost admin and upgrade proactively when you approach your tier limit — Publisher covers 1,000 members; the plan price scales to approximately $50/month at 3,000 members.

### Is Ghost open source?

Yes. Ghost is published under the MIT open-source license. You can download, run, modify, and redistribute the code. Ghost(Pro) is a managed hosting service running the same open-source codebase — you are paying for managed infrastructure, not for a proprietary platform. This means you can migrate off Ghost(Pro) to self-hosting or another managed provider without rebuilding, and no licensing fee applies to self-hosted deployments.

### How does Ghost 6.0's ActivityPub federation work?

ActivityPub is an open protocol that enables different social platforms (Mastodon, Threads, WordPress, Bluesky via Bridgy Fed) to share content natively. Since Ghost 6.0 (shipped August 4, 2025), every Ghost publication is followable from any Mastodon account — if someone on Mastodon follows your Ghost site, your posts appear in their Mastodon feed. Ghost also shipped a Notes micro-publishing feature (short posts in the fediverse) and an Inbox for following other ActivityPub publishers from within Ghost admin. This is a genuine differentiator — no other mainstream managed publishing platform offers native fediverse federation — but adoption at scale is still early as of July 2026.

### Ghost vs WordPress: which should I choose?

Choose Ghost if: you want a clean integrated publishing and newsletter stack without plugin maintenance, your revenue comes from direct subscriber relationships, and you want 0% platform take on memberships. Choose WordPress if: you need a massive plugin ecosystem (WooCommerce, Yoast, Advanced Custom Fields, security plugins), you have complex custom post types or content structures, or your team already has strong WordPress expertise. The maintenance burden of a WordPress site with 15+ plugins is a real ongoing cost — Ghost eliminates it, but only by removing the extensibility that those plugins provide.

### What are the biggest Ghost footguns to avoid?

Four documented footguns from agency and community experience: (1) Self-hosting on a 1GB VPS — Ghost 6.0 requires 2–4GB RAM; a 1GB server will OOM under newsletter-send load. (2) Not switching from Mailgun Flex to Foundation when email volume exceeds ~18,500/month — the December 2025 doubling means Flex costs ~$40/month at that volume vs $35 flat. (3) Upgrading self-hosted Ghost 5 to Ghost 6 without running gscan and testing on staging first — the Docker Compose architecture change is not backward-compatible. (4) Starting on Starter if you plan paid memberships — Starter lost monetization support in August 2025; you will need to upgrade to Publisher before your first paying subscriber.

### Should I migrate my Substack to Ghost, and can RapidDev help?

If your paid subscription revenue exceeds ~$290/month, the Ghost economics are almost certainly in your favor — the fee saving alone pays for Ghost(Pro) Publisher many times over at serious scale. Ghost provides a Substack CSV import tool and migration documentation. The migration itself typically takes a day for content; the main effort is theme selection and Stripe reconnection for existing subscribers. For teams with large subscriber lists, DNS migration timing, SEO redirect setup, and email deliverability warm-up require careful sequencing. RapidDev handles Ghost(Pro) migrations with member transfer, redirect mapping, and delivery verification — book a free scoping call at rapidevelopers.com/contact.

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Source: https://www.rapidevelopers.com/review/ghost
© RapidDev — https://www.rapidevelopers.com/review/ghost
