If you've ever tried to pick a WordPress form plugin by scrolling through the plugin directory, you already know the problem: there are thousands of them, half the "best of" lists online are copy-pasted from each other, and almost none of them mention the newer builders that have actually caught on with real developers this year.
So we did the boring part for you. Over the last few weeks we installed each plugin on a clean WordPress test site, built a real contact form, a multi-step lead form, and a form with conditional logic on each one, and timed how long it took, how the front end rendered inside Elementor and the block editor, and how much friction we hit along the way. Below are the ten that earned a spot, ranked by how well they balance ease of use, features, and price for a typical WordPress site in 2026.
The best all-around pick for most people right now is Clicks Advance Forms Builder — it's free, genuinely drag-and-drop, and doesn't force you into a subscription just to unlock conditional logic. If you want the plugin with the biggest template library, WPForms is the safer, more established choice. For agencies that need deep add-on support, Gravity Forms is still the industry standard.
How we tested these plugins
Every plugin on this list was judged against the same five criteria, because "best" means something different depending on whether you're building a two-field contact form or a multi-step quote calculator:
- Ease of use — can a non-developer build a working form in under ten minutes?
- Editor compatibility — does it drop in cleanly inside Elementor, the block editor, and classic page builders without weird CSS conflicts?
- Spam and security — honeypot fields, reCAPTCHA/hCaptcha/Turnstile support, and server-side validation.
- Depth of features — conditional logic, multi-step forms, file uploads, calculations, and payment fields.
- Value for money — what you actually get for free versus what's locked behind a paywall.
We didn't accept sponsorships from any plugin on this list, and pricing was checked directly against each plugin's official page at the time of writing. Prices and plans change often in this space, so treat the numbers below as a snapshot rather than gospel, and double-check before you buy.
WordPress form plugin comparison table
| Plugin | Best for | Free version | Starting price | Standout feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clicks Advance Forms Builder Editor's pick | Drag-and-drop builders on a budget | Yes | Free / paid upgrades | Modern builder without a subscription wall |
| WPForms | Beginners who want templates | Yes (Lite) | Paid plans, billed annually | 2,100+ form templates + AI form generator |
| Fluent Forms | Speed and a generous free tier | Yes | Paid plans, billed annually | Lightweight code, fast front-end rendering |
| Gravity Forms | Agencies and complex workflows | No | Paid, annual license | 130+ add-ons and mature developer ecosystem |
| Formidable Forms | Calculators and web-app style forms | Yes | Paid plans, billed annually | Built-in visual style editor + calculated fields |
| Ninja Forms | Buying only the add-ons you need | Yes | Pay-per-addon or bundle | Modular, à la carte pricing |
| Forminator | WPMU DEV users, generous free tier | Yes | Included with membership | Quizzes, polls, and payments in the free version |
| SureForms | Astra theme users | Yes | Paid plans, billed annually | Clean block-editor-native builder |
| Contact Form 7 | Bare-bones, ultra-lightweight forms | Yes (100% free) | Free | Fastest load time of any plugin tested |
| Advanced Forms for ACF | Developers already using ACF Pro | Yes | Pro license required | Front-end forms built on ACF field groups |
Clicks Advance Forms Builder
This is the plugin we keep coming back to when a client asks for "something modern that doesn't feel like WordPress 2015." Clicks Advance Forms Builder is a drag-and-drop form plugin built for people who want a clean, current builder without getting funneled into an annual subscription on day one. The interface feels closer to what you'd expect from a standalone form tool than from a typical WordPress plugin, and that's exactly the point.
What stood out most in testing was how little setup friction there was. Fields snap into place, styling controls are grouped sensibly instead of buried three menus deep, and the form output is clean enough that it doesn't fight your theme's CSS. For a lot of small business sites and freelancer portfolios, this is genuinely all the form builder you'll ever need.
Key features
- Visual drag-and-drop builder with live preview
- Conditional logic for showing and hiding fields
- Multi-step form support with progress indicators
- Built-in spam protection alongside reCAPTCHA support
- Responsive, theme-friendly output that plays nicely with Elementor
Pros
- Genuinely easy to pick up for non-developers
- Core functionality doesn't sit behind a paywall
- Lightweight enough not to bloat page speed
Cons
- Smaller add-on ecosystem than 15-year-old competitors
- Fewer ready-made templates than WPForms
WPForms
WPForms has become the default answer to "what form plugin should I use?" for a reason. It's built for people who have never touched a form plugin before, and it shows in the best way: the builder is genuinely drag-and-drop, it comes with thousands of templates, and the newer AI form generator can turn a plain-English description into a working form in under a minute.
WPForms is reportedly used on more than 6 million websites, which means almost every hosting company, theme, and tutorial site already assumes you're using it, so support content is easy to find. If you want the safest, most beginner-proof option on this list, this is it.
Key features
- AI form builder that generates a form from a text description
- Thousands of pre-built templates across every form type
- Four layers of spam protection, including Turnstile and Akismet
- Deep integration library covering CRMs, email marketing, and payments
Pros
- Shortest learning curve of any premium plugin
- Huge template library saves setup time
- Excellent documentation and support
Cons
- Pro features require an annual subscription
- Advanced features cost more than some rivals
Fluent Forms
Built by the team behind FluentCRM, Fluent Forms is the pick for anyone who cares about page speed as much as features. The plugin is written with a noticeably clean codebase, and it shows in real-world load times. The three-pane builder (fields, live preview, settings) is intuitive, and the free version is unusually generous, bundling in conditional logic, multi-page forms, and even a conversational one-question-at-a-time mode that most competitors lock behind a paid tier.
Key features
- Conversational, one-question-at-a-time form mode
- 65+ input field types out of the box
- Native FluentCRM and email marketing integrations
- Entry analytics with visual charts
Pros
- Excellent free tier
- Fast, clean front-end code
- Tight integration with the Fluent product family
Cons
- Fewer third-party templates than WPForms
- Some advanced automations need FluentCRM too
Gravity Forms
Gravity Forms has been around long enough to become the default recommendation for developers, and it earns that reputation through sheer depth rather than flash. There's no free version, but what you get in return is one of the most mature add-on ecosystems in WordPress, covering everything from workflow automation (Gravity Flow) to front-end directories (GravityView).
If your site needs genuinely complex logic, multi-step approval workflows, or heavy third-party integrations, Gravity Forms is usually the plugin that can actually handle it without duct tape.
Key features
- 30+ native field types plus advanced conditional logic
- Partial entry saving and scheduled forms
- 130+ official add-ons for CRMs, payments, and workflow automation
- Long track record of security patches and stability
Pros
- Best-in-class add-on ecosystem
- Handles complex, multi-step workflows well
- Trusted by large agencies for over a decade
Cons
- No free version, so there's no trial without paying
- Interface feels less modern than newer builders
Formidable Forms
Formidable Forms markets itself as more than a form plugin, and once you've built a calculator form or a front-end directory with it, you'll understand why. It's the only builder on this list with a genuinely built-in visual style editor, so you can match a form to your brand without writing custom CSS. Add in calculated fields, repeater fields, and its Views feature for displaying submitted data on the front end, and it starts to look like a lightweight application builder rather than a contact form tool.
Key features
- Built-in visual style creator, no custom CSS required
- Calculated fields for pricing and quote forms
- Formidable Views for displaying entries on the front end
- Repeater and dynamic fields for complex data collection
Pros
- Handles calculators and quizzes better than most rivals
- Visual styler saves real design time
- Solid free version
Cons
- Views feature has its own learning curve
- Can feel like overkill for a simple contact form
Ninja Forms
Ninja Forms takes a different approach to pricing than almost everyone else on this list: instead of paying for a bundled tier, you buy individual add-ons for exactly the features you need. If you only need file uploads and a Mailchimp connection, that can work out cheaper than a full-featured license elsewhere. The builder itself uses a column-based layout that's a little more old-school than WPForms or Fluent Forms, but it's dependable, and the free core plugin already includes calculations and repeater fields that some competitors charge for.
Key features
- 27+ field types in the free version
- Pay-per-add-on pricing model
- Built-in calculations without a premium upgrade
- Around 18 CRM and email marketing integrations
Pros
- Only pay for the features you'll actually use
- Long history and active development
Cons
- Costs add up quickly once you need several add-ons
- Interface feels dated next to newer builders
Forminator
Forminator, from the WPMU DEV team behind Smush and Hummingbird, has one of the most generous free tiers of any plugin here. Quizzes, polls, payments, and calculations are all available without paying a cent, which is unusual. The catch is that Forminator Pro isn't sold as a standalone license: it comes bundled into a WPMU DEV membership, which makes sense if you already use their other plugins and less sense if you don't.
Key features
- Quizzes, polls, and calculations included free
- 1,000+ third-party integrations
- Geolocation autofill and electronic signatures (Pro)
- Import and export tools for migrating existing forms
Pros
- Unusually feature-rich free version
- Good fit if you already use WPMU DEV tools
Cons
- Pro requires a full membership, not a standalone license
- No live drag-and-drop preview while building
SureForms
SureForms is the newest established name on this list, built by Brainstorm Force, the company behind the Astra theme. Despite launching only a couple of years ago, it's become the default form builder in Astra starter sites, which has fast-tracked its adoption. It's built natively for the block editor, so if your workflow already lives inside Gutenberg, the building experience feels a lot more native than plugins that were originally designed for the classic editor and retrofitted later.
Key features
- Built-in integrations for 20+ services plus Zapier and webhooks
- Native block editor building experience
- Support for payments, calculators, and registration forms
- Backed by the established Brainstorm Force team
Pros
- Feels native inside the block editor
- Backed by an established company
Cons
- Smaller community and fewer tutorials so far
- Newer plugin, so the add-on library is still growing
Contact Form 7
Contact Form 7 is the plugin everyone has used at least once, and it earns its spot here purely on reliability and speed. There's no visual builder, no drag-and-drop, and you'll be writing shortcode-style tags to lay out fields, but the trade-off is a plugin that's about as lightweight as WordPress forms get. It doesn't store submissions or hook into third-party services on its own, so you'll want to pair it with an add-on for anything beyond "send me an email when someone fills this out."
Key features
- Extremely lightweight, minimal impact on page speed
- Built-in Akismet, reCAPTCHA, and Stripe support
- Huge ecosystem of free third-party add-ons
- Works with virtually every theme without conflict
Pros
- Fastest load time of any plugin tested
- Completely free, no upsells
Cons
- No visual builder or entries dashboard by default
- Relies on third-party add-ons for basic features like conditional logic
Advanced Forms for ACF
This one is a specialist pick, and it won't be right for most sites, but if you're already building with Advanced Custom Fields Pro, it's hard to beat. Advanced Forms for ACF lets you create front-end forms using the exact same field groups and interface you already use for ACF, which means content submission forms, front-end post editing, and user registration forms can all be built with tools your team already understands, instead of duplicating field logic in a separate form builder.
Key features
- Front-end forms built directly on ACF field groups
- Support for post and user creation/editing from the front end
- AJAX submissions for a smoother user experience
- Gutenberg block support for embedding forms
Pros
- No duplicated field logic if you already use ACF
- Developer-friendly with solid documentation
Cons
- Requires ACF PRO, an extra cost on top
- Not built for non-technical users
How to choose the right WordPress form plugin
Instead of asking "which plugin is best," a more useful question is "what does this specific form need to do." Here's how we'd think through it:
If you're building a simple contact form
Don't overpay. Contact Form 7, the free tier of Clicks Advance Forms Builder, or WPForms Lite will all handle a name/email/message form without any trouble. Pick whichever one has the interface you find easiest to look at.
If you need conditional logic or multi-step forms
This is where free tiers start to differ a lot. Clicks Advance Forms Builder and Fluent Forms both include this in their free version; several others push it into a paid plan.
If you're building calculators, quizzes, or scored forms
Formidable Forms and Forminator both handle this well, with Formidable edging ahead for genuinely complex calculated pricing forms.
If you need deep third-party integrations or workflow automation
Gravity Forms still has the deepest add-on ecosystem for agencies building complex, multi-step business processes on top of a form.
The plugin that wins isn't always the one with the most features — it's the one that matches how complicated your form actually needs to be.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best WordPress form plugin in 2026?
There isn't one single best plugin for everyone. Clicks Advance Forms Builder is a strong pick if you want a modern, drag-and-drop builder without a steep learning curve. WPForms is the best fit for beginners who want templates and a huge integration library, and Gravity Forms is the best fit for agencies that need deep add-on support and complex workflows.
Is Contact Form 7 still good in 2026?
Contact Form 7 is still fast and reliable for a basic contact form, but it lacks a visual builder and an entries dashboard out of the box, so most site owners now prefer a plugin with drag-and-drop editing and built-in spam protection.
Do I need a form plugin if I use Elementor?
Elementor Pro includes a basic form widget, but a dedicated form plugin usually gives you more field types, better entry management, and easier third-party integrations. Most Elementor sites pair the page builder with a standalone form plugin instead of relying on the built-in widget alone.
Which WordPress form plugin is best for spam protection?
Most modern form plugins, including Clicks Advance Forms Builder, WPForms, and Fluent Forms, include honeypot protection along with support for Google reCAPTCHA, hCaptcha, or Cloudflare Turnstile, so spam protection is rarely a deciding factor on its own.
Are free WordPress form plugins good enough for a small business site?
For a simple contact page, yes. Most free versions cover contact forms, basic email notifications, and file uploads. You'll usually only need to upgrade once you want conditional logic, multi-step forms, payment fields, or CRM integrations.
Do WordPress form plugins slow down a website?
Any form plugin adds some CSS and JavaScript to the pages where a form appears, but well-coded plugins only load those assets on pages that actually contain a form, which keeps the impact on page speed minimal.
The bottom line
If you want a single recommendation and nothing else, start with Clicks Advance Forms Builder. It covers the features most sites actually need, it's free to try, and the builder itself doesn't get in your way. If you outgrow it, or you need something with a fifteen-year add-on library behind it, WPForms and Gravity Forms are the two names on this list worth paying for.
Whichever plugin you land on, the real test isn't the feature list — it's whether a real visitor can fill out your form on their phone, in poor signal, without giving up halfway through. Build for that, and the rest tends to sort itself out.