I’ve been here a little over a year now. In that time, I’ve seen what works, where things get stuck, and how much care and effort contributors bring to this project every day. As I shared during State of the Word, 2026 is about momentum.
Momentum means building on what’s already working, being clearer about direction, and making it easier for people to participate and move forward. It means taking the energy that already exists in this community and turning it into progress that compounds.
This is my first time sharing big picture goals with the Make community. My aim is to be clear about priorities and direction, while keeping the door wide open for collaboration. WordPress works because contributors show up. 2026 is about making it easier for more people to do exactly that.
CoreCore Core is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress. Development and WordPress 7.0
2026 will return to 3 releases a year coinciding with our events. With WordPress 7.0 coinciding with WordCamp Asia. 7.0 aims to offer a significant step into Phase 3: Collaboration, with real-time co-editing bringing Google Docs-style collaboration directly into the Editor.
Efforts are underway to unlock powerful new workflows through the Abilities APIAPI An API or Application Programming Interface is a software intermediary that allows programs to interact with each other and share data in limited, clearly defined ways.-powered Command Palette and a standardized WP AI Client API, enabling plugins and hosts to integrate AI assistants in a provider-agnostic way.
Media handling will take a major leap forward in 7.0 with the graduation of client-side media processing into Core. Image resizing, compression, and format handling will increasingly happen directly in the browser, dramatically reducing server load while delivering faster, more reliable uploads for creators.
On the styling front, customization of mobile menus and responsive editing controls will finally give creators the ability to tailor layouts for different screen sizes and hide blocks by viewport, addressing a long-requested community need. The introduction of simplified pattern editing alongside new blocks like Tabs and Icon expands the creative toolkit available out of the box, making design more intuitive for a wider range of creators.
Together, these features represent a cohesive push toward a more collaborative, intelligent, and responsive WordPress experience.
[Get Involved with WordPress Core]
AI Everywhere, With Clear Guardrails and Benchmarks
WordPress will continue to invest in AI in a focused, intentional way. The goal is to make WordPress easier to use, easier to build with, and easier to contribute to, across the entire experience.
Guided by the AI building blocks, AI in WordPress will prioritize a few practical outcomes:
- Helping people create, edit, and refine content where they already work.
- Reducing friction in site building, configuration, and common workflows.
- Supporting contributors and users with clearer guidance, context, and next steps.
- Lowering the barrier to contribution by helping people find and complete meaningful work.
At the same time, the Core AI team will publish project-wide guidelines for AI usage within WordPress. These guidelines will focus on transparency, user control, data responsibility, and alignment with WordPress values. As AI becomes more embedded across the project, shared expectations matter, both for contributors and for the broader ecosystem.
[Read More from the Core AI Team]
Revamping Meetups
Meetups are the primary front door to the community. Let’s be more intentional about getting new people involved quickly.
As more contributors come in through initiatives like education programs, like Campus Connect and WordPress Credits, mentors should help them find a local meetupMeetup All local/regional gatherings that are officially a part of the WordPress world but are not WordCamps are organized through https://www.meetup.com/. A meetup is typically a chance for local WordPress users to get together and share new ideas and seek help from one another. Searching for ‘WordPress’ on meetup.com will help you find options in your area.. Meetups are often the first place WordPress feels real. They are local, human, and reputable. Many WordCamps started as meetups, and that pathway still matters.
This year, we want to double down on meetups as places of active participation, not passive attendance. As AI tools become more common across the web, the need for shared learning increases. Meetups are where people can sit side by side, learn how these tools actually fit into WordPress workflows, and build confidence together. AI moves fast and we can develop better understanding, judgment, and together as a community.
That means prioritizing issue-focused sessions where people work together on real problems, hands-on learning tied to actual WordPress needs, and clear next steps that move people from meetup participation into contribution.
Meetups are where people build confidence, relationships, and momentum. When they work well, they turn curiosity into commitment. That is why they remain the primary front door to WordPress in 2026.
[Find a Meetup] | [Start a Meetup]
Community, Education, and the Contributor Pipeline
WordPress education programs are scaling quickly. WordPress Credits and WordPress Campus Connect have students arriving ready to participate and eager to contribute.
The project needs to be much clearer about where new contributors should go next and how they get started. Program managers can help connect student groups to Make teams, but that only works if each team is prepared to receive them.
I’d like to ask the Make teams to help make this possible by:
- Maintaining clear onboarding materials and contribution paths.
- Identifying approachable first issues or starter tasks.
- Encouraging mentors who can help new contributors get oriented and moving.
Education is becoming one of WordPress’s strongest growth engines. It brings in new voices, fresh perspectives, and people eager to learn. As contribution continues to grow, the long-requested Contributor Dashboard will help make that work more visible.
Over time, we want to move toward WordPress Foundation credentials that help standardize how WordPress skills are understood and communicated. These credentials would reflect what someone knows, what they can do, and how they work, giving employers a clearer signal when hiring for WordPress-related roles.