Black Friday used to be a single chaotic day of bargain-hunting; in 2025, it’s a week-long sprint for SaaS and hosting deals that can change the economics of running a site for an entire year. DreamHost’s Black Friday sale this year is one of the more aggressive entries in the field: deep first-year discounts on its WordPress tiers, freebies (domain, SSL, migrations), and a clear push to turn undecided site owners into locked-in customers for 12 months. If you’re thinking of launching a blog, consolidating several client sites, or moving a small business off a creaky VPS — this is the kind of offer that demands a serious look.
DreamHost’s Black Friday lineup centers on three WordPress plans aimed at differing needs:
- Launch plan — first year from roughly $2.89–$2.99/month (big discount off the usual ~$10.99/mo).
Intended for solo bloggers or hobbyists: up to 25 sites, NVMe SSD storage in the tens of GBs, daily backups, a free domain for a year, and a simple starter website to get you moving. - Growth plan — first year $3.99/month (around 71% off).
A middle ground for creators and growing businesses: up to 50 websites, larger SSD storage, higher monthly traffic allowances, and expanded email/mailbox support. DreamHost’s special offers page lists Growth at $3.99 for the promotional term. - Scale plan — first year $9.99/month (around 64% off).
Built to host multiple client sites or media projects: up to 100 sites, 100GB NVMe, and higher monthly visit capacity. Third-tier perks typically include more mailboxes and priority resources.
Those prices are promotional first-year offers—renewals revert to standard rates after the initial term, so treat the 2025 sale as a one-year cost-locking opportunity rather than a permanent price cut.
What’s actually included
The raw price is tempting, but the bundled features are the practical value:
- Free domain for one year + free SSL — reduces immediate setup cost and removes a small but annoying barrier for new sites.
- Daily automated backups — meaningful insurance against human error or plugin mishaps; restores are a life-saver for publication-focused sites.
- Free site migration & starter site — DreamHost will move an existing WordPress install for you and offers a handcrafted starter template if you’re beginning from scratch, which shortens time to publish.
DreamPress (DreamHost’s managed WordPress product) remains a separate, higher-touch option for users who want “set it and forget it” management — it bundles CDN, one-click staging, on-demand backups and performance/security tuning. If you hate server tinkering, DreamPress is worth a look; DreamHost often discounts DreamPress separately during Black Friday windows.
Support, trust signals, and real-world reliability
DreamHost promotes 24/7 US-based support via chat and email and points to WordPress contributors on staff — useful signals if you expect to call support when something breaks. Independent watchdogs and review aggregators place DreamHost among the competitive, budget-friendly hosts this year, and Trustpilot pages show consistently positive customer stories about support responsiveness. Still, reviews vary by case; expected upsides of deeply discounted plans include a heavier load on support lines during promotional periods.
Who should grab this deal — and who should not
Grab this if:
- You want to lock a low first-year price for a new site and minimize upfront costs.
- You’re managing multiple small sites and want an inexpensive way to consolidate hosting.
- You prefer an all-in-one package with domain + SSL + backups included.
Skip or think twice if:
- You run an enterprise, high-traffic store, or mission-critical app that needs guaranteed enterprise SLAs — high discounts on shared or entry managed plans may not include the capacity guarantees you need long term.
- You plan to rely on the promotional price past year — renewals can be materially higher, so factor two-year or three-year cost modeling into your decision.
The catch (and the math)
Black Friday pricing is designed to get you in the door. The typical DreamHost playbook: blowout first-year discount, then standard renewal pricing after 12 months. That’s not a “scam” — it’s standard industry practice — but it means buying during the sale should be a deliberate choice, not one driven purely by fear of missing out. If you’re running a business, calculate Year 2 renewal into your budget and consider whether you’ll migrate elsewhere or stick around.
Is it worth it?
If you’re launching, experimenting, or consolidating light-to-medium WordPress sites, DreamHost’s Black Friday 2025 offers are among the most aggressive of the season and provide genuine value — particularly because of the free domain, daily backups, and free migrations bundled in. For larger businesses or mission-critical sites, the discounts are attractive but should be weighed against capacity and SLA needs. In short, for one year of low-cost, fully featured WordPress hosting, this is a buy-now, plan-ahead later situation.
Disclaimer: Prices and promotions mentioned in this article are accurate at the time of writing and are subject to change based on the retailers’ discretion. Please verify the current offer before making a purchase.
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