The Best Markdown Plugins for WordPress

Adrian Try
Share

Markdown is a fast and efficient way to write content for the Web. It’s easy to write, easy to read, and easily converted to HTML. It empowers writers and bloggers to write without the use of overcomplicated and visually exhausting code.

The syntax was created by John Gruber in 2004 and became popular in blogs and forums. It’s used on Reddit, Trello, GitHub, Stack Overflow, SourceForge, and Stack Exchange. Chances are, you’re familiar with it already.

Markdown offers a number of benefits to writers and bloggers, but by default, WordPress doesn’t support it. You need to either convert your Markdown to HTML before pasting it into WordPress, or use a plugin.

In this article, we’ll cover five of the best Markdown plugins for WordPress. Just to be clear from the beginning: it’s best to avoid having more than one active at the same time, and to avoid surprises with formatting by using the text editor rather than the visual editor.

Now, let’s dive in.

Markdown Plugins for WordPress

Here are five WordPress Markdown plugins that are actively developed and work with recent versions of WordPress.

1. WP Githuber MD

WP Githuber MD is an all-in-one Markdown plugin that uses GitHub Flavored Markdown. It’s under active development and offers syntax highlighting, a live preview pane, spell check, image paste, and can convert HTML to Markdown. Markdown can be individually enabled or disabled for each post.

When enabled, your posts are saved in Markdown for ease of editing. The plugin parses the Markdown to HTML and saves the results into wp-posts.post_content. This ensures that your posts will display correctly even if the plugin is turned off.

A toolbar is offered at the top of the editor. It includes icons for formatting, headers, lists, links, images, and more. When I tested the plugin, I learned that lists are not continued automatically on pressing enter. A new number, hyphen, or asterisk needs to be typed on each line.

The plugin is highly rated and updated regularly. It’s the best WordPress Markdown editor I’m aware of.

Screenshot of WP Githuber MD

2. Jetpack

Jetpack is a well-known plugin by Automattic that gives self-hosted WordPress installations the same feature set as you find on WordPress.com. And that includes Markdown. The plugin currently follows CommonMark syntax that supports tables, footnotes, and more.

Markdown editing needs to be manually activated from Jetpack’s settings, and LaTeX can be separately enabled for writing mathematical equations and formulas. You can then create and edit posts in Markdown using either the Block Editor or Classic Editor. Unfortunately, neither syntax highlighting nor a Markdown preview pane are offered.

If you use the block editor, a new Markdown block will become available. If you use the classic editor, you’ll get the best results in the text editor. The visual editor can produce unexpected results.

The Markdown version of your post is retained for future editing, and the published post is saved in HTML automatically, so that your site will still look good even if the plugin is deactivated. Markdown comments are also supported.

Screenshot of Jetpack

3. WP Editor.md

WP Editor.md is a WordPress Markdown editor with syntax highlighting and a preview pane. Unfortunately, very little documentation is available for it. It resembles WP Githuber MD’s interface and uses the Markdown module from Jetpack for parsing and saving content. When I tested the plugin, lists in the preview pane appeared double-spaced but looked fine when published.

However, when it converts your posts to HTML it seems to save in that format. This frustrated one user who had been using Jetpack previously. He was surprised to learn that all of his Markdown posts were no longer in Markdown.

Screenshot of WP Editor.md

4. Import Markdown

I’m cheating a little with this plugin. Import Markdown isn’t a Markdown editor but instead imports Markdown files you created elsewhere into WordPress.

The Markdown is parsed and saved as HTML. Various flavors of Markdown are supported. Just select one of the five parsers that are included.

Screenshot of Import Markdown

5. Iceberg

Iceberg is a unique, flexible writing editor for crafting posts in Markdown with the WordPress block editor. Iceberg allows you to write within the WordPress block editor in a way that feels much more natural than working with “blocks”. As Iceberg puts it:

Our goal is not to remove blocks, but rather to deemphasize them — and any non-essential elements within the editor — to promote a focus on writing.

Iceberg costs $49.

Screenshot of Iceberg

Markdown Plugins to Avoid

Sadly, the list of available WordPress Markdown plugins is surprisingly short. That’s largely because many of our former recommendations have not been maintained and no longer work with recent versions of WordPress.

You may come across them when checking out older roundups and reviews, so I’ll list them here so that you don’t waste your time.

  • PrettyPress was closed in 2018 and is no longer available for download.
  • Typewriter hasn’t been updated in eight years and may have compatibility issues with recent versions of WordPress.
  • Markdown QuickTags was closed in 2018 and is no longer available for download.
  • Easy Markdown hasn’t been updated in five years and is no longer available from the developer’s website.

There’s also one actively developed plugin that I can’t recommend. WP-Markdown is a commercial plugin that looks promising but most of the reviews it has received in the last year have been one star.

It looks attractive and seems feature-rich, but I can’t comment on its effectiveness because the free version is crippled. It only enables dark mode in WordPress and doesn’t offer any Markdown features.

It also aggressively markets the paid version. You have to pay $52.15/year or $89.95 lifetime to unlock the Markdown editor.

Screenshot of WP-Markdown

So, What Is the Best WordPress Markdown Plugin for You?

Many of the Markdown plugins that were recommended in the past have been abandoned. They haven’t been updated in years. New features will never be added, bugs will never be fixed, and they don’t work with recent versions of WordPress.

The five plugins I recommend above are not like that. Which one is best for you?

If you’re looking for a plugin that does Markdown and nothing else, I recommend WP Githuber MD. It’s the most feature-rich plugin in our roundup, and is highly rated and in active development. It saves your posts in Markdown format for easy editing, and saves the published version in HTML so that your site will display correctly even if the plugin is disabled.

Jetpack is another good option but may be overkill if you only need a Markdown plugin. It also offers security, backup, anti-malware, and much more. Consider it if those are features you’re looking for. It will let you type in Markdown as well, but be aware that it doesn’t offer syntax highlighting or a preview pane.

Iceberg is a very nice-looking plugin and fits well within the existing WordPress block editor. It has a natural feel and is very nice to work with. It’s currently the preferred WordPress Markdown plugin for the SitePoint editors. It’s definitely worth a try if you’re willing to pull out your credit card.