WordPress.com Enables AI Agents Write, Edit, Publish Content

Updated on Mar 23, 2026 06:02 PM
WordPress.com Enables AI Agents Write, Edit, Publish Content - feature image

San Francisco: WordPress.com powers over 43% of all websites on the internet. That statistic just took on a new dimension. The platform has announced that AI agents can now draft, edit, and publish content on customers’ websites directly, autonomously, and at scale.

Built on MCP support introduced last October, the new capability lets any MCP-enabled AI client, Claude, Cursor, ChatGPT, or others connect to a WordPress.com site and take action, not just read.

The scope is wider than just writing posts. AI agents can now create landing pages, About pages, and full site structures. Agents can approve, reply to, and moderate comments. They can manage tags, categories, and metadata. They can fix alt text and captions for SEO.

Every change is logged through the site’s Activity Log. Posts written by AI are saved as drafts by default, and all actions require user approval before going live.

The agent also reads the site’s existing theme before creating anything. It learns the colors, fonts, spacing, and block patterns already in use, so new content fits rather than clashes.

To enable it, customers visit wordpress.com/mcp, toggle on the capabilities they want, and connect their preferred AI client. The whole setup takes minutes.

The implications are significant. WordPress.com sees 20 billion pageviews and 409 million unique visitors monthly. Allowing AI agents to create and manage content at that scale reshapes what the web looks like and who, or what, is building it.

It follows a broader pattern already underway. Meta recently acquired Moltbook, a social network where AI agents posted and interacted autonomously. The line between human-authored and machine-authored content online is disappearing faster than most expected.

Published on March 21, 2026

Anurag Shukla

Sr. Journalist

Anurag Shukla is a Senior Journalist with over two decades of experience across television, digital, and print media. He has worked with leading national news organisations and has also served as a Research Officer in the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO), contributing to media research and policy-level content. A former journalism academic, Anurag bri...

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