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๐Ÿค For digital agencies ยท Updated May 2026

White Label WordPress Development
for Agencies โ€” 2026 Guide

How to scale your agency's WordPress output without hiring โ€” and without your clients ever knowing.

~15 min read Written by Rajan Gupta ยท 9 years white-label experience

1. What is white-label WordPress development?

White-label WordPress development means hiring a developer to build WordPress sites under your agency's brand โ€” so your client never knows a third party was involved. The developer works silently in the background. You present the work as your own. The client pays your agency rate. You pay the developer your arrangement rate.

This model is extremely common in the digital agency world. Many agencies that appear to have large development teams are actually a frontend designer + project manager with one or two white-label developers handling the technical execution. It's not deceptive โ€” it's simply how modern agencies operate at sustainable margins.

The alternative โ€” hiring a full-time senior WordPress developer โ€” typically costs ยฃ45,000โ€“70,000/year in the UK or $60,000โ€“90,000/year in the US. For agencies that don't have consistent enough WordPress work to justify a full-time hire, white-label development is the rational choice.

2. Why agencies use white-label developers

The reasons vary, but the most common are:

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Overflow work

More projects than your team can handle. A reliable white-label partner acts as a capacity valve โ€” no missed deadlines, no "we're fully booked" emails.

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Specialist skills

A client needs WooCommerce with complex shipping logic, WPML multilingual, or a Sage 10 custom theme โ€” and nobody on your team does that at a senior level.

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Margin preservation

You quote the client ยฃ8,000. The developer delivers it for ยฃ2,500. You keep ยฃ5,500. That's your PM overhead covered plus profit โ€” on every project.

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Scale without headcount

New hires need onboarding, benefits, holiday cover. White-label developers are on/off as needed โ€” zero fixed overhead.

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Risk reduction

Taking on your first WooCommerce project? White-label lets you deliver without risking the client relationship if your team can't execute.

3. What to include in a white-label development agreement

This is where most agencies underinvest. A handshake is fine for a first project โ€” but for any ongoing relationship, get it in writing. Here's what to cover:

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Non-disclosure + client confidentiality

The developer must not contact your client directly, disclose their involvement, or solicit your client after the project. This is the core of white-label. I sign this as standard before any project discussion.

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Intellectual property assignment

All code, designs, and assets must become your agency's property on full payment. The developer retains no rights to reuse the work โ€” including custom plugins built for the project.

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Non-solicitation clause

The developer should not approach your clients directly, during the engagement or for a defined period (12โ€“24 months) after. This protects your client relationships from being bypassed.

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Deliverables and timeline

What is being built, by when, and in what format. Staging URL, Git repo access, live deployment, handover documentation. Define your handoff standards upfront.

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Revision policy

How many rounds are included. What counts as a revision vs a new feature. How revision requests are submitted and tracked. Scope creep prevention starts here.

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Payment terms

50% upfront / 50% on delivery for new agency relationships. Established partners often move to net-30 monthly invoicing. Either way: get it in writing.

4. How to vet a white-label WordPress partner

The vetting process for a white-label partner is more intensive than for a one-off project โ€” you're trusting someone with your client relationships.

1

Review portfolio PageSpeed scores

Run their portfolio sites through PageSpeed Insights. A developer representing your agency's quality should deliver 85+ on mobile. If they can't do it for their own portfolio, they won't do it for your client.

2

Test communication latency

Send a detailed project brief. Measure how long it takes to receive a structured, specific response. A good partner responds with scoped questions and a clear sense of process โ€” within one business day.

3

Ask for a technical walk-through

Request a 20-minute Loom or Zoom where they walk through a recent project's codebase. What decisions did they make, and why? This immediately separates developers who built the site from those who just took credit.

4

Start with a small, low-risk project

Never start with your most important client. Give a new partner a well-scoped project with an internal deadline earlier than your client's. See how they handle the scope, communication, and delivery first.

5

Verify NDA willingness

Any professional white-label developer will sign your NDA before any project discussion. Hesitation is a significant red flag. I sign NDAs as standard โ€” before I know the client name, before I see the brief.

5. How the handoff workflow works

A well-run white-label workflow looks like this:

1

You receive the brief from your client

Gather requirements, wireframes, brand assets, content, and technical specifications.

2

You brief your white-label developer

Send a structured brief โ€” not a forward of the client email. Summarise what's needed, the timeline, and the standard expected.

3

Developer sends a written scope + fixed price

You review and confirm. This becomes the source of truth for the project.

4

Development on staging

The developer builds on a staging environment. You review each milestone โ€” not the client.

5

Your internal QA round

You review before the client sees anything. Add finishing touches, check brand alignment, catch issues.

6

Client review

You present the work as your agency's output.

7

Revisions through you

All client revision requests go through you, then to the developer. The client never contacts the developer directly.

8

Deployment + handover documentation

Developer deploys to live and provides a build notes doc. You pass along what the client needs.

6. Common mistakes agencies make

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Letting the developer contact the client directly

Even once. It sets a precedent. Maintain the boundary firmly on every project.

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No written scope before work starts

"We'll figure it out" leads to scope creep, overruns, and missed deadlines you absorb alone.

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Only one white-label partner for everything

If they get sick or overloaded, you're exposed. Maintain 2โ€“3 trusted partners so you always have capacity.

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Not reviewing the build before client presentation

QA is non-negotiable. A developer's bug is your bug in the client's eyes.

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Choosing on price alone

The cheapest developer costs more in client management time than you save on the rate.

7. How I work as a white-label partner

I've been working as a white-label development partner for digital agencies in the UK, US, Canada, and Switzerland since 2016. Here is how I approach the relationship:

  • NDA before briefing. I sign your NDA or my standard white-label agreement before we discuss any client details.
  • Written scope on every project. Deliverables, timeline, revision rounds, fixed price โ€” in writing before any work begins.
  • You are the client's only contact. I do not communicate with your client, do not appear in email threads, and do not contact them after project completion. Ever.
  • 90+ PageSpeed on every build. This is guaranteed in writing. If I don't hit it, I keep working until I do.
  • Morning deliverables. IST is 4.5โ€“13.5 hours ahead of your timezone. You brief me. I deliver before you arrive at your desk.
  • Technical handover documentation. Every project comes with a one-page build notes document you can keep internally or share selectively with your client.
  • Long-term availability. I work with agencies on a retainer basis โ€” reserved hours each month, priority scheduling โ€” so you always have capacity when a project lands.

My standard white-label rate for agency partners is $30โ€“55/hr equivalent (fixed-price projects, not hourly). This gives you a comfortable margin versus UK/US client billing rates.

If you're a UK agency billing clients at ยฃ80โ€“100/hr for WordPress development, and my projects come in at the equivalent of ยฃ25โ€“40/hr, that margin is your overhead, management time, and profit โ€” on every project.

White-label enquiries

Looking for a reliable white-label WordPress partner?

I work with 5โ€“8 agency partners at any one time. If you need a senior developer who delivers clean, fast WordPress builds under your brand โ€” let's talk.

  • โœ“NDA signed before any project discussion
  • โœ“90+ PageSpeed guarantee โ€” in writing
  • โœ“Fixed price, written scope on every project
  • โœ“Morning deliverables (IST async advantage)
  • โœ“GBP / USD / CHF invoicing available
Rajan Gupta

About the author

Rajan Gupta โ€” Freelance WordPress Developer & White-Label Partner

I've been working as a white-label development partner for UK, US, and European digital agencies since 2016. 150+ projects delivered. Currently working with agency partners in London, New York, and Zurich. I also built WP Scan.