Pages vs Posts: When to Use Each
What's the Difference?
WordPress has two main types of content: Pages and Posts. They look similar in the editor, but they serve very different purposes and behave differently on your website.
Understanding which one to use will save you time and keep your site well-organised — and it affects how your content appears in navigation menus, search results, and your site’s overall structure.
When to Use a Page
Pages are for permanent, standalone content that doesn’t change often. Think of them as the core structure of your website. They appear in your navigation menus and are not associated with a date.
Use a Page for:
- Your Homepage
- About Us or Our Story
- Contact Us
- Services or What We Offer
- Admissions or How to Apply
- Term Dates, Policies, or Handbooks
- Staff or Governors listings
- Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy
- Any content that should always be accessible from your main navigation
Pages can have parent pages, which allows you to create a hierarchy (e.g., About Us → Our Team → Leadership). This structure is reflected in your URL: yoursite.com/about-us/our-team/.
When to Use a Post
Posts are for timely, date-stamped content. They’re listed in reverse chronological order (newest first) and are designed for content that’s published regularly. Posts are what make up your Blog or News section.
Use a Post for:
- News articles and updates
- Blog entries
- Event announcements (open days, webinars, shows)
- Press releases
- Newsletter recaps
- Seasonal updates (start of term, exam results, Christmas messages)
- Any content that has a publish date and will eventually be superseded by newer content
Posts can be organised with Categories and Tags, making them easy to filter and group. For example, you might have categories like “School News”, “Events”, and “Academic”. See our guide on Managing Blog Categories & Tags for more.
Key Differences at a Glance
| Feature | Pages | Posts |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Permanent, structural content | Timely, date-based content |
| Appears in menus? | Yes — core navigation items | Rarely — accessed via blog/news feed |
| Has a date? | No | Yes — sorted by publish date |
| Categories & Tags? | No | Yes |
| Shows in blog feed? | No | Yes |
| Parent/child hierarchy? | Yes | No |
| Template options? | Multiple layout templates | Usually one standard template |
A Simple Rule of Thumb
Ask yourself: “Will this content still be relevant and in the same place in a year’s time?”
- If yes → it’s a Page
- If no (or it will be replaced by newer content) → it’s a Post
For example, your “About Us” page will always exist in the same place — that’s a Page. But an announcement about your 2026 Spring Open Day is time-specific — that’s a Post.
Still not sure? When in doubt, start with a Post. Posts can always be linked from pages, and they keep your news/blog section active — which is good for SEO.
If you’d like help deciding how to structure new content on your site, please get in touch with InnerMedia support — we’re happy to advise.
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