How to Reduce TTFB in WordPress (Step-by-Step Guide for 2026)

If your WordPress website feels slow even after optimizing images and caching, the real issue is often TTFB (Time To First Byte).
TTFB directly impacts:
- SEO rankings
- Core Web Vitals
- Conversion rates
A slow server response = lost traffic and revenue.
This guide will show you exactly how to reduce TTFB in WordPress, using real-world techniques that work in 2026.
Step 1: Upgrade to High-Performance Cloud Hosting (Most Important)
Your hosting alone can reduce TTFB by 70%+.
Cheap shared hosting = high TTFB.
π Recommended (High Performance Cloud Hosting):

Why this works:
- Uses DigitalOcean / AWS / Google Cloud
- Built-in caching (Varnish, Redis)
- Optimized stack (Nginx + Apache hybrid)
π If you are running a beginner site or blog:
π Alternative (Beginner Friendly Hosting):
Step 2: Use Built-in Server Caching
Cloudways already includes:
- Varnish cache
- Redis
- Memcached
This drastically reduces server processing time β lower TTFB.
Step 3: Enable CDN (Critical for Global Speed)
Even with good hosting, distance matters.
Best practice:
- Enable Cloudflare CDN
- Use edge caching
Cloudways makes CDN integration very easy.
Step 4: Enable Object Cache (Redis)
Redis reduces database queries.
π On Cloudways:
- Go to Manage Services
- Enable Redis
This alone can reduce TTFB by 100β300ms
Step 5: Use Lightweight Theme
Heavy themes slow backend processing.
Recommended:
- Astra
- GeneratePress
Step 6: Reduce Plugin Load
Too many plugins = more PHP execution time.
Fix:
- Keep under 15β20 plugins
- Remove unused plugins
Step 7: Upgrade PHP Version
Use:
- PHP 8.2 or higher
Cloudways allows 1-click upgrade.
Step 8: Optimize Database
Database queries directly affect TTFB.
Fix:
- Remove revisions
- Clean spam
- Optimize tables
(covered in next post in detail)
Step 9: Enable HTTP/3 + QUIC
Cloudways + Cloudflare supports this.
Benefits:
- Faster handshake
- Lower latency
Step 10: Reduce External Scripts
Avoid loading:
- Too many fonts
- Third-party trackers
Step 11: Use DNS with Low Latency
Cloudflare DNS is fastest.
Step 12: Monitor TTFB
Use:
- GTmetrix
- PageSpeed Insights
Real Case Study
Before:
- Hosting: Shared
- TTFB: 850ms
After switching to Cloudways:
- TTFB: 120ms
Final Checklist
β Cloud hosting (Cloudways)
β Redis enabled
β CDN active
β PHP updated
β Plugins optimized
Conclusion
If you want fast WordPress in 2026, reducing TTFB is non-negotiable.
The biggest improvement always comes from:
π Switching to better hosting

