Ghost vs october

TaglineModern open-source publishing platform for blogs and newslettersLaravel-based CMS with a clean plugin marketplace
CategoryBlogging & CMSBlogging & CMS
ReplacesSubstack, Medium, WordPress.comWordPress.com, Squarespace, Contentful
GitHub stars54k11k
LanguageNodejsPHP
LicenseMIT⊘ Proprietary
Self-host difficulty
3/5
Moderate
3/5
Moderate
Deploy options
Docker
Docker Compose
Manual
Docker
Docker Compose
Manual
Managed hosting
Last updatedtodaytoday
View repoView repo

Where each falls short

The honest trade-offs — what you give up with each, versus the proprietary tools they replace.

Ghost
  • Membership and newsletter features require Stripe integration for paid tiers
  • Plugin/theme ecosystem is much smaller than WordPress
  • No built-in e-commerce beyond memberships and paid newsletters
  • Self-hosted email delivery needs a transactional email provider (Mailgun, Postmark) configured separately
october
  • Core product switched to a paid commercial license; the open-source v1 branch receives limited updates
  • Plugin ecosystem has shrunk since the license change, with fewer actively maintained free plugins
  • No official managed hosting; users must provision their own PHP/MySQL server
  • Headless/API mode is less mature than dedicated headless CMSes like Contentful

Bottom line

Both are a similar lift to self-host; choose Ghost for the larger community and ecosystem. Open each guide below for deploy steps and the full feature gap.

Ghost

Modern open-source publishing platform for blogs and newsletters

october

Laravel-based CMS with a clean plugin marketplace