Bluehost Web Hosting Help

Managed WordPress Disallowed Plugins

One of the benefits of Managed WordPress is the management level we invest in maintaining a list of plugins that will have a detrimental effect on your site. This article will provide you with a list of plugins that we actively restrict use on our Managed WordPress platform. We will cover the most common reasons why a plugin will be added to this list.



Why Plugins are Disallowed

There are 4 main reasons why plugins may be disallowed. While a plugin may be disallowed for less common reasons, the primary 4 causes for blacklisting a plugin will be covered by this article. If you have additional questions or concerns, please contact us for assistance.

The main reasons a plugin may be blacklisted are as follows:

Duplicate Functionality

You will find that our concerns ultimately coincide with keeping your site fully functional. Managed WordPress is not a development platform and is designed around providing a highly optimized hosting experience with outstanding uptime, reliability, security, and performance.

For your website and the server's overall health, and to provide the most optimized hosting solution possible, plugins that duplicate services that we already provide and include with your Managed WordPress account may not be used.

Plugins that duplicate existing solutions can cause harm to your website. Multiple caching solutions can corrupt files required to view a site, over-compressing Javascript and CSS, or redundantly storing images preventing them from being updated.

Performance Detractors

Often plugins include functionality that may increase the server load at the time that the site is loaded. A high server load can prevent your site from being loaded quickly and can even cause site and server downtime. This can be done in many ways:

  • Loading and reviewing large amounts of your code with every load.
  • Over frequent database access.
  • Poor database optimization resulting in database stability and speed issues.

These are just a few examples and are not by any means a comprehensive list. To ensure that your site is served quickly and reliably, we must restrict the inefficient plugins.

Security Vulnerabilities

We take the security of your website very seriously. It is important to note that malicious third parties can potentially access software on your website.

Both SiteLock and CodeGuard are included with Managed WordPress, allowing you to scan your site for malware and restore when damage has been found. We also actively track many plugins with known vulnerabilities and prevent their installation and provide you with the most secure possible hosting experience.

A Known Vulnerability is when software has a documented method for circumventing your security, allowing anyone who wishes explicitly to target your site to do so with a simple internet search.

Plugins with known vulnerabilities are often targeted by campaigns to compromise every site they are installed on due to the likelihood of widespread success.

We do our best to actively maintain a list of plugins with known vulnerabilities and blacklist them accordingly to help you maintain a healthy and secure website.

SPAM Plugins

To ensure the best experience for you, we blacklist plugins that are known to send SPAM. Many plugins can send mail via a script, which can result in plugins that abuse this privilege.

Plugins that send spam to users can be detrimental to your domain, as it may become blacklisted or worse. It's important that sending email practices adhere to current SPAM laws.

Note: If you cannot use a plugin because of the way it maintains its email lists, you may wish to consider Constant Contact. Constant Contact allows you to easily maintain an email marketing campaign that adheres to all SPAM laws effectively and affordably.

What Plugins Are Disallowed

Here is a list of plugins that are disallowed on our Managed WordPress platform:

  • adminer
  • broken-link-checker
  • counterize
  • dbc-backup
  • dynamic-related-posts
  • ezpz-one-click-backup
  • file-commander
  • fuzzy-seo-booster
  • google-xml-sitemaps-with-multisite-support
  • gosquared-livestats
  • hc-custom-wp-admin-url
  • jr-referrer
  • pressbackup
  • repress
  • seo-alrp
  • simple-backup
  • simple-wordpress-backup
  • statpress-reloaded
  • statpress-visitors
  • stats
  • superslider
  • toolspack
  • track-that-stat
  • tweet-blender
  • visitor-stats-widget
  • vm-backups
  • vsf-simple-stats
  • wordpress-gzip-compression
  • wp-cache
  • wp-complete-backup
  • wp-database-optimizer
  • wpdbspringclean
  • wpengine-migrate
  • wp-time-machine

Note: This list is complete as of Sept 2021. Plugins may be added to the disallowed list at any time and without warning or notification. If a plugin meets any of the criteria outlined in this article, it is likely to be disallowed.

Knowledgebase Article 11,734 views bookmark tags:


Was this resource helpful?

Did this resolve your issue?


Please add any other comments or suggestions about this content:





Recommended Help Content

Managing Themes and Plugins with WordPress Tools

This article will explain how to manage WordPress plugins and themes using WordPress Tools.

How to Update WordPress Plugins

A guide on how to update your WordPress plugins

How To Disable Or Delete Plugins / Themes On A Disabled WordPress Site

This article explains how to deactivate, change or delete themes and plugins on a WordPress site without the dashboard.

Related Help Content

Welcome to Bluehost WordPress Marketplace

The Bluehost Marketplace helps you browse, purchase, install, and manage WordPress themes, plugins, and add-ons directly from your Bluehost.com dashboard. Choose from over 900 premium WordPress themes, dozens of WooCommerce eCommerce plugins and add-ons, and even professional ser

Logging in and Using WordPress: Installing Plugins

Install Plugins These steps will help you install and select a WordPress plugin for your blog. Inside the WordPress Dashboard, select the Add New link from the Plugins menu. You can search for a plug

How To Install WordPress - WordPress Installation Guide

Learn how to use WordPress, WordPress started as just a blogging system, but has evolved to be used as full content management system and so much more through the thousands of plugins, widgets, and themes now available.

How To Delete Or Uninstall A WordPress Theme - Step By Step Guide

How to Delete or Uninstall a WordPress Theme

WordPress Plugins to increase Performance.

My WordPress site is slow or seems down.

Managed WordPress (Beta) FAQ

FAQ related to Bluehost Managed WordPress (Beta)

My Sites: Manage WordPress Sites

Our updated 'Rock' user interface offers a fresh new look, along with several useful tools and helpful features. One such feature is the My Sites tab, where you can easily manage your websites.

How To Migrate An Existing Wordpress.com Site

If you have a WordPress blog hosted on WordPress.com, you can easily export it and import it to WordPress that is installed on your hosting account with bluehost. Login to the WordPress Data