At a glance

Eleventy Divi
Best for Developers wanting a simple, zero-config static site generator WordPress users wanting a powerful visual builder
Starting price Free $89/yr
Free tier
Open source
Free tier available
Open source
2000+ Layouts
A/B Testing
Data Cascade
Multiple Templates
Plugins
Theme Builder
Visual Builder
Zero Config

Eleventy

Strengths

  • Open source and transparent
  • Includes Zero Config as a core feature, purpose-built for website builder workflows
  • Fully open-source — you can self-host, audit the code, and avoid vendor lock-in
  • The core product is free with no paywalled essentials

Weaknesses

  • May lack some advanced features
  • Self-hosting is free but requires server maintenance and DevOps knowledge
  • Fewer built-in features means you may need additional tools to cover gaps
  • Performance and SEO control is limited compared to custom-coded sites

Divi

Strengths

  • Includes Visual Builder as a core feature, purpose-built for website builder workflows
  • Includes 2000+ Layouts as a core feature, purpose-built for website builder workflows
  • Pricing starts at $89/yr, which includes the full website builder feature set
  • Established product with 13+ years on the market and a mature ecosystem

Weaknesses

  • Starts at $89/yr — on the expensive side, especially for small teams or solo users
  • Fewer built-in features means you may need additional tools to cover gaps
  • Performance and SEO control is limited compared to custom-coded sites
  • Limited team/admin features if your organization eventually scales up

The bottom line

Pricing: Eleventy is completely free, which makes it the obvious pick if budget is the top concern. Divi starts at $89/yr. That cost buys you a more polished or feature-rich experience, so it comes down to whether the extras justify the spend.

Feature gaps: Eleventy offers Data Cascade, Multiple Templates and Plugins that Divi lacks. Divi brings 2000+ Layouts, A/B Testing and Theme Builder that Eleventy does not have.

Team fit: Both tools target individuals teams, so the decision hinges on features and workflow fit rather than scale.

Open source: Eleventy is open source, meaning you can self-host, audit the code, and avoid vendor lock-in. Divi is proprietary — you are trusting the vendor with your data and uptime.

Where each tool shines: Eleventy's biggest strengths are: open source and transparent. includes zero config as a core feature, purpose-built for website builder workflows. Divi's biggest strengths are: includes visual builder as a core feature, purpose-built for website builder workflows. includes 2000+ layouts as a core feature, purpose-built for website builder workflows.

Watch out for: With Eleventy, users commonly note that may lack some advanced features. With Divi, the main complaint is that starts at $89/yr — on the expensive side, especially for small teams or solo users.

Choose Eleventy if...

  • Your profile matches its sweet spot: developers wanting a simple, zero-config static site generator
  • Budget is a hard constraint — Eleventy is free, Divi is not
  • You need self-hosting, data sovereignty, or the ability to audit source code
  • You specifically need Data Cascade and Multiple Templates
  • You care about includes zero config as a core feature, purpose-built for website builder workflows

Choose Divi if...

  • You need a tool built for wordpress users wanting a powerful visual builder
  • You specifically need 2000+ Layouts and A/B Testing
  • You care about includes 2000+ layouts as a core feature, purpose-built for website builder workflows

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