
Bookly vs BookingPress 2026: An Honest WordPress Booking Plugin Comparison
Methodology. Pricing verified on https://www.booking-wp-plugin.com/pricing/ and bookingpressplugin.com/pricing on June 17, 2026. We installed BookingPress on a clean WordPress 6.9 site between February and April 2026 to test pricing math, free-tier limits, and migration paths firsthand.
If you are weighing Bookly against BookingPress for your WordPress site, the comparison turns on three honest questions: how comfortable are you running a plugin that is not discoverable in WordPress.org plugin directory search, do you need a free tier with real WordPress distribution, and how do the lifetime price ladders actually line up against each other tier for tier. This is a one-to-one comparison between two WordPress booking plugins in the same category — no SaaS competitors, no “ten best” listicle.
We make Bookly. We also installed BookingPress on a clean WordPress 6.9 environment and walked the free tier, every paid tier, and the import/export flows ourselves. The most important distribution fact in this comparison happens to favor us, and we are going to explain it in full before anything else: BookingPress does not appear in WordPress.org plugin directory search as of this review, while Bookly has been continuously listed on WordPress.org since 2014. Read on for what that means in practice and where BookingPress is still the honest pick.
Bookly vs BookingPress at a Glance
- Bookly is better for: anyone who wants a free tier with full WordPress.org distribution, single-site owners looking for the cheapest lifetime ($129 Pro vs $229 Standard lifetime), buyers who value a 10+ year WP.org track record and 570 reviews over a plugin that is not discoverable in WordPress.org plugin directory search, and teams who prefer flat published pricing over countdown-timer urgency.
- BookingPress is better for: existing BookingPress customers who already paid for a lifetime license and are happy with it, small agencies needing exactly 3 sites at the lowest published bundle price, and buyers who specifically want a high published payment gateway count (20+ in the cheapest paid tier).
- Both products have: a WordPress plugin form factor, three paid tiers, lifetime license options, a one-author blog of how-to content, an iOS/Android app story (Bookly has both; BookingPress has neither native to the plugin), and English-only marketing sites.
- Honest disclosure: this is Bookly’s own comparison. BookingPress runs their own /bookly-vs-bookingpress/ page on their domain. Read both, and decide for yourself.
Bookly vs BookingPress at a Glance (Quick Comparison Table)
| Dimension | Bookly | BookingPress |
|---|---|---|
| Type | WordPress plugin | WordPress plugin |
| WordPress.org status | Listed continuously since 2014 | Not discoverable in WordPress.org plugin directory search |
| WP.org reviews | 570 × 4.4★ (live June 17, 2026) | Previously ~181 reviews (no longer accessible) |
| Active installs | 70,000+ (WP.org header) | Marketing site claims 100,000+; not third-party verified |
| Annual entry | $49/yr Pro (1 site) | $89/yr Standard (1 site, normally $99) |
| Lifetime entry | $129 Pro (1 site) | $229 Standard (1 site, 3-year support) |
| Annual top tier | $249/yr Ultimate (20 sites) | $249/yr Enterprise (20 sites) |
| Lifetime top tier | $599 Ultimate (20 sites) | $599 Enterprise (20 sites) |
| Free tier source | WordPress.org plugin directory | GitHub repo (lite version) |
| Free tier limits | 5 services / 1 staff member | Marketing claims “unlimited websites, limited support” |
| Add-ons | 40+, many bundled in Business/Ultimate | 45-60+, bundled in mid/top tier |
| Payment gateways | Stripe Payments in Free; WooCommerce and PayPal Express in Pro; Stripe, 2Checkout, Mollie, Authorize.Net and other processors via add-ons | 20+ gateways in Standard, 20+ in higher tiers |
| Mobile apps | Native iOS + Android | Not native to plugin |
| Plugin UI localization | 9 production-quality languages | Translation portal unavailable; no public WP.org listing surfaced |
| Marketing site languages | English only (DE pilot H2 2026) | 5 languages (EN, FR, DE, ES, PT) |
| Money-back guarantee | 30 days | 14 days |
| Parent company | NOTA-INFO (Moldova, since 2013) | Repute Infosystems (Rajkot, India, since 2003) |
| Pricing transparency | Flat published prices | Countdown timer + “First 100 copies sold out!” scarcity |
Pricing verified on https://www.booking-wp-plugin.com/pricing/ and bookingpressplugin.com/pricing on June 17, 2026.
Pricing — Bookly vs BookingPress (Annual, Lifetime, and 3-Year TCO)
Pricing is the question most switch-intent readers come here to resolve. Both plugins now publish site-count packages, but the ladders are shaped differently. We will walk both transparently.
Bookly Pricing in 2026 (Verified)
Bookly has a free tier on WordPress.org and three paid tiers. Current public pricing:
| Tier | Sites | Annual | Lifetime |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free (WordPress.org) | — | $0 | $0 |
| Pro | 1 | $49/yr | $129 |
| Business | 1 | $149/yr | $349 |
| Business | 5 | $199/yr | $449 |
| Ultimate | 20 | $249/yr | $599 |
| Ultimate | 100 | $299/yr | $799 |
Free tier limit: up to 5 services and 1 staff member. Stripe Payments is included in Free; WooCommerce starts in Pro.
Bookly publishes site-count packages: Pro is a 1-site license, Business is available for 1 or 5 sites, and Ultimate is available for 20 or 100 sites. Add-ons: 40+ available, many bundled into Business and Ultimate so most service businesses do not need to purchase anything beyond their plan tier. Pricing verified on https://www.booking-wp-plugin.com/pricing/ on June 17, 2026.
BookingPress Pricing in 2026 (Verified)
BookingPress has a free version distributed only via the GitHub repository (it does not appear in WordPress.org plugin directory search as of this review) and three paid tiers. The pricing page anchors every paid tier with a struck-through “regular” price next to a discounted “current” price, plus a “Selling Fast” badge on the Professional tier.
| Tier | Annual (current) | Annual (regular) | Lifetime | Sites |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | — | — | unlimited (lite, GitHub only) |
| Standard | $89/yr | $99/yr | $229 | 1 |
| Professional | $139/yr | $199/yr | $379 | up to 3 |
| Enterprise | $249/yr | $499/yr | $599 | up to 20 |
Lifetime plans include three years of premium support. Money-back guarantee: 14 days. All paid tiers ship with the same 20+ payment gateways. The Enterprise tier matches Bookly Ultimate’s 20-site published price at $249/yr or $599 lifetime. Pricing verified on bookingpressplugin.com/pricing on June 17, 2026.
3-Year Total Cost — Solo, Small Team, 20-Site Agency
Where Bookly competes hardest on price is the entry tier and the 20-site Ultimate bundle. Where BookingPress competes hardest is the 3-site Professional bundle and the breadth of included payment gateways. The 3-year total cost picture:
| Scenario | Bookly | BookingPress | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-site lifetime | $129 (Pro) | $229 (Standard) | Bookly $100 cheaper |
| 1-site annual × 3yr | $147 (Pro $49 × 3) | $267 (Standard $89 × 3) | Bookly $120 cheaper |
| 3-site lifetime | 3 × $129 = $387 (Pro × 3 licenses) or $449 (Business 5-site bundle) | $379 (Professional, 3 sites bundled) | BookingPress $8-70 cheaper at 3 sites if Pro-level features are enough |
| 3-site annual × 3yr | 3 × $147 = $441 (Pro × 3 licenses) or $597 (Business 5-site bundle × 3yr) | $417 (Professional $139 × 3) | BookingPress $24-180 cheaper annual at 3 sites |
| 20-site lifetime | $599 (Ultimate, 20 sites) | $599 (Enterprise, 20 sites) | Tie on published 20-site lifetime price |
| 20-site annual × 3yr | $747 (Ultimate $249 × 3) | $747 (Enterprise $249 × 3) | Tie on published 20-site annual price |
The honest read: at 1 site, Bookly Pro lifetime undercuts BookingPress Standard by $100. At 3 sites, BookingPress Professional is still a little cheaper if Pro-level features are enough. At 20 sites, Bookly Ultimate and BookingPress Enterprise are now tied on published price; the decision shifts from price to distribution, mobile apps, add-ons, payment gateway catalog, and support model. Pricing verified June 17, 2026.
Which Pricing Model Is Right for You
- Single-site owner, cheapest lifetime: Bookly Pro Lifetime $129. Cheapest entry-point lifetime in this comparison.
- Single-site owner, cheapest annual: Bookly Pro $49/yr. Half the cost of BookingPress Standard.
- 3-site small agency, Pro-tier features sufficient: BookingPress Professional $379 lifetime or $139/yr annual. Cheaper than running 3 Bookly Pro licenses if you do not need Business-tier features.
- 10-20 site WordPress agency: Bookly Ultimate and BookingPress Enterprise are tied at $249/yr or $599 lifetime for 20 sites. Choose based on WP.org distribution, mobile apps, add-ons, payment gateways, and support preferences.
- WP.org distribution, deep review base, and free tier with real WordPress install path: Bookly. BookingPress is not discoverable in WordPress.org plugin directory search and only distributes its free version via GitHub.

Features — Side-by-Side
We installed both plugins on clean WordPress 6.9 sites and walked the actual features. Here is how each compares.
Setup and Scheduling Core
Both plugins install from Plugins → Add Plugin (Bookly) or from a downloaded ZIP (BookingPress, since it is no longer on WP.org). Both ship a setup wizard, and both get you to a working booking form in 10-15 minutes. They handle services, staff, locations, availability rules, buffer times, and booking windows in conceptually similar ways. The differences are in what is gated behind which tier.
- Bookly Free allows up to 5 services and 1 staff member, includes Stripe Payments, supports WPML for translation, and ships with email notifications and SMS via Bookly Cloud (pay-as-you-go).
- Bookly Pro and above unlocks WooCommerce and PayPal Express, unlimited services, multiple staff members with individual schedules, Google Calendar two-way sync, Zoom/Google Meet/Jitsi integration, deposits, custom fields, recurring appointments, and the full add-on catalog.
- BookingPress Free (lite, GitHub only) offers basic appointment booking on unlimited websites with limited support and a subset of features.
- BookingPress Standard and above unlocks the full feature catalog including 20+ payment gateways out of the box, 45-60+ premium add-ons free with the plan, and full notification channels.
Bookly Free is a capacity-constrained free tier with a robust WP.org install path. BookingPress Free is a GitHub-distributed lite version — installable but without the WP.org ecosystem (auto-updates, the WP.org repo, plugin compatibility scanning, etc.).
Payment Processors
| Tier | Bookly | BookingPress |
|---|---|---|
| Free | Stripe Payments | Lite version, Stripe-only typical |
| Paid | WooCommerce and PayPal Express in Pro; Stripe, 2Checkout, Mollie, Authorize.Net and other supported payment add-ons, many bundled in Business/Ultimate; pay locally | 20+ gateways including Stripe, PayPal, Authorize.Net, Mollie, Square, Braintree, Razorpay, Paystack, MercadoPago, and more |
If you need a wide payment gateway catalog in one paid tier, BookingPress Standard is broader out of the box. Bookly Free supports Stripe Payments; WooCommerce and PayPal Express are available in Pro; and additional payment add-ons are covered through individual purchases or Business and Ultimate bundles, depending on the processor. Teams should compare against the exact payment methods they need rather than treating all regional gateways as interchangeable.

Notifications: SMS, WhatsApp, Email
Email notifications are included on both free tiers. For SMS and WhatsApp:
- Bookly Cloud offers pay-as-you-go SMS billed per message — no separate gateway to provision. WhatsApp uses a “bring your own account” model where you connect your own Meta Cloud API credentials and pay Meta directly.
- BookingPress offers SMS via 30+ vendor integrations (Twilio, BulkSMS, MessageBird, etc.) — you bring your own gateway account. WhatsApp is also supported with Telegram as an additional channel.
For small business owners who do not want to provision Twilio, Bookly Cloud’s pay-as-you-go model is operationally simpler. For agencies who already run a Twilio or regional SMS gateway, BookingPress’s 30+ vendor integration list gives more sourcing flexibility.
Customization, Theming, and Mobile
Both plugins are theme-agnostic and install on any WordPress theme. Both ship Gutenberg blocks. Bookly ships native iOS and Android apps for managing bookings on the go — BookingPress does not have a comparable native mobile app offering at this writing. If your operations rely on a mobile interface for managing appointments away from a desktop, this is a real difference.
Add-Ons and Extensions
- Bookly has 40+ add-ons covering service-business needs: Gift Cards, Coupons, Custom Fields, Packages, Group Bookings, Recurring Appointments, Special Hours, Locations, Staff Cabinet, and more. Many are bundled into Business and Ultimate so most service businesses will not need to purchase anything beyond their plan tier.
- BookingPress ships with 45+ premium add-ons free in Standard and 60+ free in Professional and Enterprise. The “add-ons are bundled, not à la carte” pitch is the core BookingPress sales angle on their own /bookly-vs-bookingpress/ page.
For Bookly buyers, the typical question is “which tier covers the add-ons I need.” For BookingPress buyers, the assumption is that all add-ons come with the plan tier. Both models are defensible; the right answer depends on whether you use 3-4 add-ons heavily or want a broad library you can pick from over time.
WordPress.org Track Record, Reviews, and Maturity
This is the section where Bookly’s defensible position is clearest, and we are going to state it without overstating it.
WordPress.org Status — the Single Most Material Fact
- Bookly has been continuously listed on WordPress.org since 2014. Version 27.7 is the current release as of June 4, 2026 (verified live on wordpress.org/plugins/bookly-responsive-appointment-booking-tool/).
- BookingPress does not appear in WordPress.org plugin directory search as of this review. BookingPress is still actively maintained and sold via bookingpressplugin.com and a public GitHub repository, but new users do not find it through the WordPress.org plugin directory the way they find Bookly.
What WP.org listing actually delivers:
- Automatic plugin updates via WordPress admin.
- Inclusion in the WordPress plugin directory search.
- Visibility into review trends, rating distribution, support thread resolution.
- Reachable through the official WP.org changelog and translation portal.
What BookingPress retains despite the directory-search gap:
- Active product development and support via their own site.
- A public GitHub repository (reputeinfosystems/bookingpress-appointment-booking) for the lite version.
- Existing customers continue to use the plugin without disruption.
If you are evaluating long-term operational risk for a booking plugin running mission-critical appointments, the WP.org delisting is a material data point. We are not going to tell you it is disqualifying — paid customers of BookingPress continue to operate without issue — but we are also not going to pretend it does not exist.
Review Depth and Distribution
- Bookly (WP.org, live June 17, 2026): 570 reviews × 4.4/5 stars. Distribution: 453 × 5-star, 30 × 4-star, 19 × 3-star, 15 × 2-star, 53 × 1-star.
- BookingPress (previous WP.org snapshot): ~181 reviews, ~4.7/5 average. No current public listing surfaced in WordPress.org plugin directory search.
- BookingPress (other platforms): Capterra 4.5/5 (71-89 reviews), Trustpilot 4.3/5 (81 reviews, 78% 5-star, 13% 1-star).
Bookly’s larger review base on WP.org reflects 10+ years of accumulated user feedback including edge-case users hitting problems only an older plugin surfaces. BookingPress’s previous star average reflects a smaller, more self-selected sample. Neither is “better” in a vacuum; what matters is sample size relative to how complex your booking flow is.
Localization
- Bookly plugin UI ships in 9 production-quality languages with the broader translation portal covering 40+ locales via WPML. Marketing site is English only, with a German pilot planned for H2 2026.
- BookingPress plugin UI translations were maintained on the WordPress.org translation portal before the public listing became unavailable (Korean and Dutch at 100%, Spanish/French at 95-97%, Italian 82-86%, with lower coverage for Russian, German, Swedish). The marketing site is published in five languages (EN, FR, DE, ES, PT) — more than Bookly’s English-only marketing site.
Marketing site localization and plugin UI localization are separate concerns. If you are reading evaluation pages in French or German, BookingPress’s marketing site has the advantage. If you need a customer-facing booking form in production-quality German or French, both plugins require independent translation review for your specific deployment.
Pros and Cons
Bookly Pros and Cons
Pros:
- Listed on WordPress.org since 2014 with 570 reviews and a 4.4★ rating (verified June 17, 2026).
- Free tier on WP.org includes Stripe Payments; WooCommerce starts in Pro.
- Cheapest single-site lifetime in this comparison ($129 Pro vs $229 BookingPress Standard).
- 40+ add-ons with many bundled in Business and Ultimate tiers.
- Native iOS and Android apps for managing bookings on mobile.
- Bookly Cloud pay-as-you-go SMS without provisioning a third-party gateway.
- 30-day money-back guarantee (vs BookingPress 14 days).
- Flat published pricing with no countdown timer or scarcity messaging.
Cons:
- Free tier limited to 5 services and 1 staff member — capacity-constrained, not feature-constrained.
- Marketing site English only — German pilot is on the H2 2026 roadmap but not live yet.
- Pro remains a 1-site license; agencies should compare Business and Ultimate site-count packages instead of multiplying Pro by every client site.
BookingPress Pros and Cons
Pros:
- 20+ payment gateways shipped in every paid tier without extra purchases.
- 45-60+ premium add-ons free with the plan (vs Bookly’s à la carte model for some add-ons).
- Enterprise tier at $599 lifetime covers 20 sites, matching Bookly Ultimate’s 20-site lifetime price.
- Marketing site published in 5 languages (EN, FR, DE, ES, PT).
- High release cadence (one release every 2-3 weeks).
- Three-year premium support included with lifetime tiers.
Cons:
- Not discoverable in WordPress.org plugin directory search. Free version now distributed only via GitHub.
- 14-day money-back guarantee (vs Bookly 30 days).
- Pricing page uses countdown timer and “First 100 copies sold out!” scarcity messaging — some buyers find this off-putting.
- No native iOS or Android app for managing bookings on mobile.
- Trustpilot reviews include a notable cluster of complaints about refund policy (some reports of conditional refunds tied to review removal) — verify current terms before purchase.
- Single named blog author across 300+ posts; depth of editorial team is unclear.
When BookingPress Is the Better Choice
Three scenarios where BookingPress is the honest pick:
You Need Exactly 3 Sites at the Lowest Published Bundle Price
BookingPress Professional Lifetime is $379 for up to 3 sites. The closest Bookly math is 3 × Pro lifetime at $387, or the Business 5-site bundle at $449 if you need Business add-ons. If your exact scenario is 3 sites and Pro-level features are enough, BookingPress is still slightly cheaper on pure license price.
You Need a Wide Payment Gateway Catalog in the Cheapest Tier
BookingPress Standard ships with 20+ payment gateways for $89/yr. If your purchase decision is mainly about getting the widest gateway list inside one paid tier, BookingPress’s catalog is broader out of the box. Bookly is stronger when the payment methods you need are Stripe Payments, WooCommerce, PayPal Express, or payment add-ons included in the Business or Ultimate bundle you already plan to buy.
You Already Bought BookingPress Lifetime and It Works for You
If you are an existing BookingPress lifetime customer and the plugin works for your booking flow, BookingPress’s absence from WordPress.org plugin directory search does not retroactively change what you already own. Continued support is delivered through bookingpressplugin.com. There is no urgent technical reason to switch if your installation runs, your customers can pay, and your bookings come through. We would say so even if it cost us a customer.
When Bookly Is the Better Choice
Four scenarios where Bookly is the honest pick:
You Want a Plugin Continuously Listed on WordPress.org
Bookly has been on WordPress.org since 2014. Version 27.7 ships through standard WordPress auto-updates. New users find the plugin through the WP directory search. The review base of 570 entries is publicly accessible and updated by real users. If WordPress.org distribution and auto-update infrastructure are part of how you evaluate plugin risk, Bookly clears that bar and BookingPress no longer does.
You Want the Cheapest Single-Site Lifetime
Bookly Pro Lifetime is $129 — $100 cheaper than BookingPress Standard at $229. If you run one WordPress site and want a one-time payment with no renewals, Bookly Pro lifetime is the cheapest entry in this comparison.
You Need a Native Mobile App for Managing Bookings
Bookly ships native iOS and Android apps for the plugin. BookingPress does not have a comparable native mobile app for managing appointments. If your operations include managing bookings away from a desktop — between client visits, on the road, etc. — Bookly’s mobile apps are a real workflow difference.
You Prefer Flat Pricing Over Countdown-Timer Marketing
Bookly’s pricing page shows fixed published prices: Pro $49/yr or $129 lifetime, Business from $149/yr or $349 lifetime, and Ultimate from $249/yr or $599 lifetime. BookingPress’s pricing page uses an always-on countdown timer and “First 100 copies have sold out!” scarcity messaging. If you find that style off-putting and want to evaluate pricing without urgency tactics, Bookly is the cleaner buy.
How to Migrate from BookingPress to Bookly (Step-by-Step)
If you are an existing BookingPress customer considering a switch, here is the documented migration path. There is no AI tool and no concierge offer — this is a plain CSV import path we have verified ourselves.
- Export your BookingPress data. In the BookingPress admin, export the data as CSV from the Settings > Export tool.
- Back up your WordPress database using your hosting provider’s snapshot tool, UpdraftPlus, or any backup plugin you trust. Not optional — this is what restores your site if anything goes wrong during the swap.
- Install Bookly Free from WordPress.org. In WP admin:
Plugins → Add Plugin → search "Bookly" → Install → Activate. Free is enough to verify the import; upgrade to Pro, Business, or Ultimate after the data lands cleanly. - Import appointments. In Bookly admin:
Bookly → Diagnostics → Import appointments. Upload the CSV from step 1. Bookly parses it and creates the appointment records. - Re-create services, staff schedules, and availability rules in Bookly’s admin to match your BookingPress setup. Plan 30-60 minutes for a single-staff service business; longer for multi-staff or multi-location.
- Configure payment methods in Bookly. Set up Stripe, WooCommerce, or any other payment method according to Bookly’s documentation. Test a $1 booking end-to-end before going live.
- Update booking page shortcodes. Replace BookingPress shortcodes with Bookly shortcodes — the pattern is similar, the names differ. Spot-check your most-trafficked booking pages.
- Deactivate BookingPress once Bookly is verified end-to-end. Keep the BookingPress export CSV archived for at least 90 days as a recovery snapshot.
For a longer walkthrough with screenshots, see the Bookly migration guide on our support site.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Bookly cheaper than BookingPress?
At the entry tier, yes: Bookly Pro Lifetime is $129 versus BookingPress Standard Lifetime $229 — Bookly is $100 cheaper for a single site. At 3 sites with Pro-tier features sufficient, BookingPress Professional Lifetime $379 (3 sites) is roughly $8 cheaper than 3 Bookly Pro lifetime licenses at $387. At 20 sites, Bookly Ultimate Lifetime and BookingPress Enterprise Lifetime are both $599. The answer depends on how many sites you run and which tier features you actually need.
Why isn’t BookingPress available in WordPress.org plugin directory search?
As of this review, BookingPress does not appear in WordPress.org plugin directory search. The plugin is still actively maintained and sold via bookingpressplugin.com and a public GitHub repository (reputeinfosystems/bookingpress-appointment-booking). Existing installations continue to function. The distribution difference means new installations no longer come through the WP.org plugin directory and auto-updates run through BookingPress’s own update server rather than the WordPress.org infrastructure.
Can I migrate from BookingPress to Bookly?
Yes. In the BookingPress admin, export the data as CSV from the Settings > Export tool, install Bookly Free from WordPress.org, then use Bookly → Diagnostics → Import appointments to load the CSV. Re-create services and staff schedules in Bookly admin, configure payment methods according to Bookly’s documentation, update booking page shortcodes, and deactivate BookingPress once verified. Plan 1-3 hours for a typical single-staff service business; longer for multi-staff or multi-location setups.
Does BookingPress have a free tier I can install?
Yes, but not through WordPress.org. The free “lite” version of BookingPress is distributed via their GitHub repository (reputeinfosystems/bookingpress-appointment-booking). You download a ZIP and install it manually through Plugins → Add Plugin → Upload Plugin. Auto-updates for the lite version do not run through WordPress.org’s plugin update infrastructure. Bookly’s free tier installs the standard WP.org way and gets auto-updates through WordPress’s normal update channel.
Is Bookly or BookingPress better for an agency?
It depends on agency scale and which tier features you need. For an agency running 1-2 client sites, Bookly Pro is the cheapest single-site path ($129 lifetime). For 3 sites with Pro-tier features, BookingPress Professional at $379 lifetime is slightly cheaper than 3 Bookly Pro licenses at $387. For 10-20 client sites, Bookly Ultimate and BookingPress Enterprise are tied at $599 lifetime for 20 sites, so the decision should come down to WP.org distribution, mobile apps, add-ons, payment gateways, and support preferences.
Does BookingPress have mobile apps?
BookingPress does not currently ship native iOS or Android apps for managing bookings. Bookly ships native iOS and Android apps. If managing appointments from a mobile device is part of your workflow, this is a real product difference today.
What about BookingPress’s /bookly-vs-bookingpress/ page on their own site?
BookingPress runs their own /bookly-vs-bookingpress/ comparison page on bookingpressplugin.com. It frames the comparison around BookingPress’s bundled add-on model and 20+ payment gateway count, which are real advantages in their favor. It does not currently surface that BookingPress is not discoverable in WordPress.org plugin directory search in the same comparison context, which is the single most material distribution fact in this category today. We recommend reading both their comparison and this one and making your own call. We are biased in our direction; they are biased in theirs.
How long will my BookingPress license keep working?
Your existing BookingPress license continues to function as long as bookingpressplugin.com keeps validating it. Lifetime customers keep the version they bought. Annual customers receive updates and support during their active subscription year. BookingPress’s absence from WordPress.org plugin directory search does not retroactively invalidate licenses purchased before that distribution change. We are not lawyers and we are not BookingPress — for the specific contract details, ask Repute Infosystems directly.
Is Bookly’s mobile app actually maintained?
Yes. Bookly ships native iOS and Android apps maintained by the Bookly team. The apps connect to your WordPress installation via the Bookly API and let you view, create, reschedule, and cancel appointments from a phone or tablet. Apps are free to download; the underlying Bookly plugin license tier governs feature access.
Verdict — Which Should You Pick?
The honest take after walking both plugins on clean WordPress 6.9 sites and pricing-out the full matrix:
Pick Bookly if…
- You want a plugin continuously listed on WordPress.org with auto-updates and the standard plugin directory install path.
- You are a single-site owner looking for the cheapest lifetime ($129 Pro).
- You need a native iOS or Android app for managing bookings.
- You want a 30-day money-back guarantee over BookingPress’s 14 days.
- You prefer flat pricing over countdown-timer scarcity marketing.
- You sell mostly via Stripe and WooCommerce and don’t need 20 payment gateways in the cheapest tier.
Pick BookingPress if…
- You run exactly 3 client sites and want the lowest published 3-site bundle price.
- You need a wide payment gateway catalog (20+) in the cheapest paid tier without layering add-ons.
- You are an existing BookingPress lifetime customer who is happy with the product and does not want to migrate just because BookingPress is not discoverable in WordPress.org plugin directory search.
- Your business reads marketing content in French, German, Spanish, or Portuguese and you value the localized BookingPress marketing site.

Hybrid Approach
If you are an agency A/B-testing both plugins across different client segments, Bookly Pro for single-site clients and BookingPress Enterprise for high-volume client builds is a defensible split. Most readers do not need this — pick one based on the matrix above.
If you have decided on Bookly, the next steps are simple:
Pricing verified on https://www.booking-wp-plugin.com/pricing/ and bookingpressplugin.com/pricing on June 17, 2026. WordPress.org review counts verified on wordpress.org/plugins/bookly-responsive-appointment-booking-tool/ on June 17, 2026 (570 reviews × 4.4★). BookingPress availability checked through WordPress.org plugin directory search on June 17, 2026; no public listing surfaced. We installed both plugins on fresh WordPress 6.9 sites between February and April 2026 to test pricing math, free-tier limits, and migration paths firsthand.


