Contact Form X
Displays a user-friendly contact form that your visitors will love. CFX: Contact form reinvented. Fast and friendly. Fresh and clean. Awesome for everyone 🙂 Overview Install, activate, and then display the form anywhere, using the widget, shortcode, or template tag. Here is an overview of Contact Form X: Easy to use Simple and secure ADA and WCAG compliant Lightweight and super fast Provides multiple form styles Customize just about everything Display the contact form anywhere Add Checkbox, Radio, and Select fields Customize the order of all form fields Send email to multiple recipients Complete documentation via Help tab Excellent free plugin support 😎 “The famous spam filter SpamAssassin” scores CFX = zero spam! For more details, check out the “Screenshots” section, below. Form Fields Easily choose which fields to display in the form. Each field may be set as required, optional, or disabled. Choose from these fields: Name Website Email Subject Custom Field 1 (can be dropdown, checkbox, radio, text, or phone number) Custom Field 2 (can be dropdown, checkbox, radio, text, or phone number) Custom Field 3 (can be dropdown, checkbox, radio, text, or phone number) Challenge Question Message Google reCaptcha (v2 or v3 Invisible) Cloudflare Turnstile (Invisible Captcha) Carbon Copy Agree to Terms You can change the order of these fields and customize their labels and placeholders, everything is super flexible. For a live demo of Contact Form X, visit my support page at Plugin Planet, and also my contact page at Perishable Press. Feel free to send a test email to see how it works, I won’t mind 😉 Also check out CFX in the “Screenshots” section (below) for a better idea of how the default form is styled out of the box. Geeky Stuff Lots of goodness for the geeks among us: Built with WordPress APIs Ajax-powered form submission Remembers all form data on error Cloudflare Turnstile (Invisible Captcha) Google reCaptcha (v2 or v3 Invisible) Drag/drop ordering of all form fields View your email messages on the WP Dashboard Option to enable/disable storing of email data in database Display form via widget, shortcode, or template tag Five CSS themes: Default, Classic, Micro, Synthetic, Dark Optionally disable all plugin styles and use your own CSS Optionally collect user data like IP, host, and referrer Works perfectly with or without Gutenberg Block Editor Focused on performance, security, and usability Include extra form and user info with each message Customize the form’s success and error messages Provides plenty of useful hooks for developers Targeted loading of CSS and JavaScript assets One-click remove email data from database One-click restore default options Translation ready Contact Form X is a fresh new, lighter alternative to the heavier contact forms out there. CFX is lightweight yet fully featured. As they say, “everything you want, nothing you don’t”. Privacy To help protect user privacy, Contact Form X provides the following features: Agree to terms checkbox, customizable Choose which fields to include with the form Option to disable collection of user IP address and other data Note: this plugin uses cookies to enhance form functionality Basically, this plugin enables visitors to send a message via contact form. Any information the user enters into the form will be sent directly to the recipient(s) according to plugin settings. When enabled in the plugin settings, details about each sent message will be stored in the WordPress database. Visit the “Advanced” plugin settings to control and/or disable this and other data-collection features. Note: CFX provides an option to enable Google reCaptcha, which is provided by Google as a third-party service. For details on privacy and more, please refer to official documentation for Google reCaptcha. Contact Form X is developed and maintained by Jeff Starr, 15-year WordPress developer and book author. Support development I develop and maintain this free plugin with love for the WordPress community. To show support, you can make a donation or purchase one of my books: The Tao of WordPress Digging into WordPress .htaccess made easy WordPress Themes In Depth Wizard’s SQL Recipes for WordPress And/or purchase one of my premium WordPress plugins: BBQ Pro – Blazing fast WordPress firewall Blackhole Pro – Automatically block bad bots Banhammer Pro – Monitor traffic and ban the bad guys GA Google Analytics Pro – Connect WordPress to Google Analytics Head Meta Pro – Ultimate Meta Tags for WordPress REST Pro Tools – Awesome tools for managing the WP REST API Simple Ajax Chat Pro – Unlimited chat rooms USP Pro – Unlimited front-end forms Links, tweets and likes also appreciated. Thanks! 🙂
Top keywords
- form24×3.20%
- wordpress12×1.60%
- contact11×1.47%
- contact form9×1.20%
- fields8×1.07%
- pro8×1.07%
- google7×0.93%
- email6×0.80%
- cfx5×0.67%
- checkbox5×0.67%
- data5×0.67%
- user5×0.67%
Was This Helpful? – Article Feedback
Was This Helpful? is a simple, effective WordPress feedback plugin that adds a “Was this helpful?” box at the bottom of your content to capture article feedback from your visitors. Let your readers give quick feedback with a thumbs up or thumbs down — no comments or forms needed. Designed for speed and simplicity, it helps you identify your most engaging posts and optimize underperforming ones. Unlike traditional comment forms, this feedback tool provides a frictionless way for users to respond with a single click — helping you understand content performance and engagement at a glance. Ideal for blogs, documentation, knowledge bases, and business websites. The Problem It Solves Many website owners and bloggers face the same challenges: Low comment engagement: Readers rarely leave comments, making it hard to know what content works. Unclear content performance: Analytics show visits, but not whether the article helped readers. Missed opportunities to improve content: Without feedback, you don’t know which posts need updates or rewrites. Was This Helpful is an article feedback plugin that solves these problems by providing quick feedback directly on your articles. A simple thumbs up/down helps you see: Which posts your audience finds useful. Which pages need updates or improvements. How user satisfaction changes over time. Key Benefits Collect instant feedback: learn what readers think without requiring them to leave a comment. Improve content strategy: identify helpful vs. unhelpful posts to guide updates and new content. Track content performance after updates: use the reset feedback feature to see how your posts perform after you make changes or optimizations, without losing historical data. Boost engagement: give users a one-click way to interact with your articles. Enhance SEO indirectly: updating low-rated content can improve dwell time and reduce bounce rates. Common Use Cases Blog posts: measure reader satisfaction and identify which articles resonate. Knowledge bases / documentation: quickly see if tutorials and how-to guides are effective. Product or service pages: understand if descriptions and details answer customer questions. Course or learning websites: track which lessons are clear or need more explanation. Business websites: gather visitor insights without long forms or surveys. Core Features Adds a “Was this helpful?” thumbs up/down box after posts and pages. Supports pages, posts, or both. Optionally disable the box on specific posts or pages. See percentage of positive feedback directly in the admin post list. Clean, minimal UI that adapts to your theme. Lightweight with optional CSS/JS loading. Includes shortcode to manually place the box. Reset feedback statistics per post or page without deleting historical feedback. Settings Show On Post Types: Choose which post types (posts, pages) the feedback box should appear on. Disable On Specific Posts: Option to disable the feedback box on individual posts or pages. PRO Version Settings: Show On Custom Post Types: Choose which custom post types the feedback box should appear on. License This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.