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The WordPress ecosystem is steadily moving forward—and one of the biggest shifts happening right now is PHP version support. According to recent discussions and roadmap updates, WordPress 7.0 (expected around April 2026) will officially drop support for PHP 7.2 and 7.3, while setting PHP 7.4 as the minimum supported version. The recommended version, however, remains PHP 8.3.

This isn’t just a technical detail buried in release notes. It directly impacts security, performance, and long-term stability of every WordPress website. To better understand what this means in practice, we looked at data from 150+ websites under our active maintenance. The result? The market has already started moving.

What’s Changing in WordPress PHP Requirements?

WordPress has been gradually raising its PHP requirements for years. The official WordPress requirements page already recommends PHP 8.x for optimal performance and security. At the same time, PHP itself follows a strict lifecycle—once a version reaches end-of-life, it no longer receives security updates. For example, PHP 7.4 reached end-of-life in November 2022, meaning it no longer receives security fixes. Newer versions like PHP 8.1, 8.2, and 8.3 continue to receive active support and improvements (source: php.net supported versions).

The direction is clear: WordPress is aligning with modern PHP standards, and older environments will increasingly fall behind.

Dropping support for PHP 7.2 and 7.3

Real Data: Where 150+ WordPress Sites Actually Stand

We manage a diverse portfolio of WordPress websites—ranging from small business sites to large-scale platforms. Looking at this dataset gives a realistic picture of where the industry actually is today. The majority of our clients are already running PHP 8+, with a strong concentration on PHP 8.3 and newer versions.

Based on our internal data (118 actively maintained websites), over 82% of sites are already running PHP 8+, with more than 50% on PHP 8.3 or newer. Here’s a simplified breakdown:

  • PHP 8.3 – 37.3% (dominant version across actively maintained sites)
  • PHP 8.4 – 13.6% (fast-growing adoption among newer setups)
  • PHP 8.1 / 8.2 – 28% combined (still present, but gradually being phased out)
  • PHP 7.4 – 17.8% (limited to legacy projects or compatibility constraints)
  • Below PHP 7.4 – 0.8% (practically nonexistent in our environment)

This confirms an important trend: the transition has already happened for most actively maintained websites. Those still on older versions are no longer the norm—they are exceptions.

Why PHP 8.3 Is Becoming the Standard

The move toward PHP 8.3 isn’t accidental. It’s driven by measurable improvements in both performance and reliability. According to benchmarks and release notes from PHP 8.3, newer versions bring faster execution, better memory efficiency, and improved error handling. In real-world WordPress environments, this translates into:

  • faster page load times,
  • more stable plugin and theme behavior,
  • reduced server load under traffic.

From our own experience, upgrading to PHP 8.x often results in immediate performance gains without changing a single line of code. That’s one of the highest ROI improvements you can make on a WordPress site.

What About Sites Still on PHP 7.4?

There are still cases where sites remain on PHP 7.4. Typically, this comes down to legacy dependencies—older themes, custom plugins, or integrations that haven’t been updated. However, it’s important to understand the risk:

PHP 7.4 is no longer actively supported. This means no security patches, no bug fixes, and increasing compatibility issues over time. As WordPress core, plugins, and hosting providers continue to evolve, these sites will face:

  • compatibility breaks during updates,
  • higher vulnerability to security threats,
  • limited access to modern hosting environments.

In short: staying on PHP 7.4 is a temporary workaround, not a long-term strategy.

What We Recommend (Based on 150+ Sites)

Working with a large number of WordPress installations has helped us refine a clear, practical approach to PHP upgrades.

  • Standardize on PHP 8.3 whenever possible
  • Keep WordPress core, themes, and plugins regularly updated
  • Test compatibility before major upgrades
  • Maintain ongoing monitoring—not just reactive fixes

This approach consistently leads to fewer incidents, better performance, and predictable maintenance costs. If you want to see how we approach this in practice, take a look at our WordPress maintenance process, where we break down everything from initial audits to long-term growth.

Conclusion: The Shift Has Already Happened

The upcoming WordPress changes are not introducing something new—they are formalizing a transition that is already underway. Our internal data shows that PHP 8+ is already the standard across actively maintained WordPress sites. With WordPress 7.0 raising the baseline, the gap between updated and outdated environments will only grow.

If your site is still running on older PHP versions, now is the time to act. Not later—because later usually means dealing with issues instead of preventing them.

If you’re unsure where your website stands, explore our recent projects and references or get in touch with our team—we’ll help you assess your setup and plan a safe upgrade.

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