Pillar pages and WordPress categories
Overview
WordPress categories can represent broad topics, but pillar pages should usually be separate, intentional pages. A category archive groups posts; a pillar page teaches, organizes, links, and converts.
Category vs Pillar Page
| Element | WordPress Category | Pillar Page |
|---|
| Purpose | Group related posts | Explain and organize a topic |
| Format | Archive listing | Custom content page |
| SEO role | Supports site organization | Central topical authority asset |
| Control | Limited unless customized | Full layout and CTA control |
| Example | /category/accounting/ | /accounting/balance-sheet-guide/ |
Recommended Approach
- Use categories for broad topic organization.
- Use pages for pillar content.
- Link category archives to pillar pages when useful.
- Link pillar pages to the best cluster posts in that category.
- Avoid relying on default category archives as pillar pages unless they are heavily customized.
Example For A 10-Category Site
| Layer | Recommendation |
|---|
| Categories | Keep them broad and stable. |
| Pillar pages | Create only for high-value topics with enough cluster content. |
| Cluster posts | Publish under the relevant category. |
| Supporting content | Use posts, FAQs, glossary pages, or custom post types. |
Common Mistakes
- Creating a pillar page for every category before enough content exists.
- Letting default category archives compete with custom pillar pages.
- Creating too many categories with thin coverage.
- Forgetting to link from posts back to pillar pages.