Most conversations about AI in CMS platforms start in the wrong place.
They focus on features. Content generators. Chatbots bolted into sidebars. Assistive tools that demo well but rarely change how work actually happens. These additions feel modern, but they do not compound. They live in isolation, disconnected from the systems that organisations rely on day to day.
The defining shift for WordPress in 2026 is not a single AI feature at all. It’s the foundation being laid to enable thousands, or millions, of intelligent capabilities over time.
This is the moment where WordPress begins to move from CMS to agentic platform.
Why point features fall short
Most proprietary platforms are still treating AI as an add on. Each feature is designed, shipped, and monetised independently. A writing assistant here. A chatbot there. Useful in isolation, but operationally shallow.
The problem is not ambition. It’s architecture.
Without a shared, machine readable understanding of what a platform can actually do, AI tools are limited to suggestion rather than execution. They can recommend actions, but they cannot reliably take them. And without governance baked in, they remain risky to automate at scale.
WordPress is taking a different approach.
The Abilities API changes the model
At the centre of this shift is the Abilities API.

Rather than hard coding intelligence into individual features, the Abilities API allows plugins to declare what they are capable of doing in a standardised, machine readable way. Create content. Process an order. Publish a campaign. These are no longer implied behaviours buried in code. They are explicit capabilities that machines can discover and understand.
This applies to the entire ecosystem, including custom plugins built by teams themselves.
Once exposed, these abilities can be executed by AI agents. That might happen inside WordPress, or through external automation tools such as n8n. The important change is that WordPress is no longer just a system that humans operate through an interface. It becomes a system that agents can operate directly.
This is how a CMS quietly starts to resemble an operating system for digital work.
Governance without shortcuts
One of the most important details in this design is what does not change.
When agents create, update, or publish content, they do so using the same permissions and governance models as human users. There are no back doors. No elevated privileges. Automation respects the same rules as people.
This matters far more than flashy AI demos. It is what makes agentic workflows viable in enterprise environments, where trust, auditability, and control are non negotiable.
It also opens the door to a future where traditional user interfaces are no longer required for many tasks. Content can be created, updated, and distributed programmatically, without losing oversight.
MCP closes the loop
The Model Context Protocol completes this picture.
MCP allows AI models to connect to WordPress as a server, grounding conversations and actions in real site data and user granted capabilities. Instead of relying on vague prompts or disconnected tools, agents operate with context that actually reflects the state of the system.
This approach aligns closely with how enterprises already think about AI. Rather than being locked into opaque credit based models, organisations increasingly demand flexibility. Bring your own key. Bring your own model. Azure OpenAI today. AWS Bedrock tomorrow.
Open source enables this by default.
The ecosystem advantage
The real differentiator, however, is not any single API or protocol. It it’s scale.
WordPress has a plugin ecosystem of more than 60,000 extensions. Once those plugins can declare their abilities in a standard way, they become part of a shared agentic environment. Each new capability increases the value of the whole.
Proprietary vendors can compete on individual features. They can build impressive demos. What they cannot replicate is this kind of network effect.
What WordPress offers out of the box, when agent enabled, is structurally impossible for closed platforms or smaller ecosystems to match.
A different kind of AI platform
WordPress is not reselling generic AI wrappers at a markup. It is building the substrate those tools would need to actually matter.
This is not about replacing editors or developers. It is about changing how work flows through systems. From manual interaction to orchestration. From features to capabilities. From interfaces to agents that can act safely at scale.
That is the real shift underway.
To be clear, WordPress in 2026 isn’t becoming an AI powered CMS. Rather, it’s becoming an agentic platform, with an ecosystem advantage that compounds over time.
Join the conversation at WP:26
These ideas are not theoretical. They’re already shaping how teams build, automate, and govern digital work.
If you want to explore what an agentic WordPress platform means in practice, join us at WP:26, our upcoming event focused on the future of WordPress and the intelligent CMS.
Register now and be part of the conversation.

Can’t wait till March 12? Get a sneak preview of just some of the themes we’ll be discussing – download the report: WordPress in 2026: The dawn of the intelligent CMS
