If your agency delivers WordPress sites at any volume, standardising on one builder pays for itself in reusable components, faster QA and painless handovers between developers. The question is which one. Having shipped hundreds of builds on both, here’s the honest comparison for Elementor vs Divi in 2026.
Where Elementor wins
- Editing experience. The live editor is more predictable, and containers (flexbox) map to how developers actually think about layout. Junior team members get productive faster.
- Theme Builder. Headers, footers, single post templates, archive templates and popups under one roof — with display conditions that just work.
- Ecosystem. The addon market is enormous. Whatever the client wants, someone has built a well-maintained widget for it.
- Client-proofing. Role manager plus a tidy global design system means clients can edit text without detonating the layout.
Where Divi wins
- Lifetime pricing. Divi’s lifetime licence across unlimited sites is still the best deal in WordPress for a portfolio of client sites.
- Design presets. Divi’s global presets and the sheer volume of pre-made layouts accelerate certain kinds of brochure work.
- Divi 5 performance. The rewritten framework finally addressed the shortcode bloat that haunted Divi for years — new builds are dramatically leaner than Divi 4 sites.
Performance, honestly
A disciplined developer can make either builder pass Core Web Vitals. An undisciplined one can make either fail. That said, out of the box, a lean Elementor build with containers, selective widget loading and proper image sizing tends to hit green scores with less fighting. Legacy Divi 4 sites remain the slowest things we’re asked to rescue.
The developer-handoff test
Here’s the question agencies rarely ask: if your developer leaves tomorrow, how fast can someone else pick up the site? Elementor’s structure — global kit, theme builder templates, named containers — is more self-documenting. Divi sites depend more on how tidy the original builder was.
So which should your agency standardise on?
Choose Elementor if you build custom, design-led sites, care about theme building, and want the widest talent pool for hiring or outsourcing.
Choose Divi if your work is high-volume brochure sites on tight budgets and the lifetime licence maths matters to your margins.
Plenty of agencies run both — Elementor for flagship work, Divi for volume. There’s no prize for purity.
I build daily in both (plus Salient and Impreza for agencies with existing theme investments), mostly as a white-label partner for UK and US agencies. If you’ve inherited a builder mess or want a second pair of hands on either platform, get in touch.