---
title: "Paperform vs Gravity Forms: Which Is Better in 2026? | Paperform"
description: "Paperform vs Gravity Forms compared in detail: pricing, features, payments, WordPress integration, and platform independence. An honest breakdown for 2026."
url: "https://paperform.co/form-builders/paperform-vs-gravity-forms"
type: static
generatedAt: "2026-04-13T00:51:43.323Z"
---

![](/images/og/form-builders/paperform-vs-gravity-forms.png)

# Paperform vs Gravity Forms: Which Is Better in 2026?

This is a comparison between two fundamentally different architectures. Gravity Forms is a WordPress plugin — deeply integrated with the WordPress ecosystem, extended through PHP hooks and filters, and completely dependent on WordPress to function. Paperform is a standalone SaaS platform — hosted independently, embeddable anywhere, with a document-style editor, five payment gateways, and a calculation engine built into the core product.

The right choice depends entirely on one question: is WordPress your permanent home, or might you ever need forms that work outside it? Everything else — pricing, features, design, payments — flows from that answer.

## Who Is Gravity Forms?

Gravity Forms was created by Rocketgenius, Inc., a company founded in 2008 by Carl Hancock and Alex Stine. It launched as a premium WordPress form plugin and quickly became the most popular paid form solution in the WordPress ecosystem, now powering over 5 million active installations. The company is bootstrapped — no venture capital, no private equity, no acquisition. Revenue comes entirely from annual license sales, which fund a focused team building exclusively for WordPress.

Paperform was founded in 2016 in Sydney, Australia by Dean and Diony McPherson. Also bootstrapped and profitable, Paperform took the opposite architectural approach: a platform-independent SaaS that works on any website, not just WordPress. Both companies share a bootstrapped DNA — growth funded by customers, not investors — which means both are stable, long-term platform bets. The difference is purely architectural: WordPress-native versus platform-independent.

### Quick Verdict

Choose Paperform if:

 - You want forms that work on any platform, not just WordPress
 - You need 5 payment gateways with full eCommerce capabilities
 - You want an Excel-style calculation engine for dynamic pricing and scores
 - You need e-signatures, workflow automation, or landing-page-quality design

Choose Gravity Forms if:

 - You're committed to WordPress and want deep native integration
 - You're a developer who needs PHP hooks, filters, and custom extensions
 - You want the lowest annual cost for a WordPress-only site
 - You need forms that integrate with WordPress user roles and custom post types

## Feature Comparison

Side-by-side across every feature category. Paperform is highlighted for reference.

| Feature | Paperform | Gravity Forms |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Form Building |
| Document-style editor | Yes | No |
| AI form creation | Yes | No |
| Field types | 26+ | No |
| File uploads | Yes | No |
| Multi-page forms | Yes | Yes  Basic |
| Guided mode (one question at a time) | Yes | Yes  Elite |
| Conditional logic | Yes | Yes  Basic |
| Calculations field | Yes  essentials | Yes  Basic |
| AI calculations assistant | Yes  essentials | No |
| Scoring | Yes  essentials | Yes  Elite |
| Answer piping | Yes | Yes  Basic |
| Pre-filling and hidden fields | Yes  essentials | Yes  Basic |
| Save and resume | Yes | Yes  Basic |
| Auto-close by number | Yes  essentials | No |
| Auto-close by date | Yes  pro | No |
| Appointment/booking field | Yes | No |
| Signature field | Yes | Yes  Elite |
| Color picker field | Yes | No |
| API-powered dropdowns | Yes  business | No |
| Google address search | Yes  business | No |
| Drag-and-drop builder | No | Yes  Basic |
| 30+ field types | No | Yes  Basic |
| Payments |
| Stripe payments | Yes | Yes  Pro |
| PayPal payments | Yes | Yes  Pro |
| Square payments | Yes | Yes  Pro |
| Braintree payments | Yes | No |
| Google Pay | Yes | Yes  Pro |
| Product sales (eCommerce) | Yes  essentials | Yes  Basic |
| Subscriptions | Yes  essentials | Yes  Pro |
| Coupons and discounts | Yes  essentials | Yes  Elite |
| Custom pricing rules | Yes  essentials | No |
| Tax calculations | Yes | No |
| Quotes/invoices | Yes | No |
| Refunds | Yes | Yes  Pro |
| 3D Secure | Yes | Yes  Pro |
| Design & Customization |
| Template gallery | 30,000+ | Yes  Basic |
| Rich media (images, GIFs, videos) | Yes | Yes  Basic |
| Unsplash and Giphy integration | Yes | No |
| Image editor | Yes | No |
| Adobe Creative Cloud | Yes | No |
| Language translation | Yes | Yes  Basic |
| Advanced theming | Yes  pro | Yes  Basic |
| Custom form URL | Yes  pro | No |
| Custom domains | Yes  pro | No |
| Custom HTML & CSS | Yes  pro | Yes  Basic |
| Remove branding | Yes  pro | Yes  Basic |
| Custom email domains | Yes  business | Yes  Elite |
| Analytics |
| Submission results and reports | Yes | Yes  Basic |
| AI report insights | Yes  pro | No |
| Paperform analytics | Yes  pro | No |
| Drop-off analysis | Yes  pro | No |
| Google Analytics & Facebook Pixel | Yes  essentials | Yes  Elite |
| Custom analytics scripts | Yes  pro | Yes  Basic |
| Partial submissions | Yes  pro | Yes  Elite |
| Collaboration |
| Multi-user accounts | Yes  pro | Yes  Basic |
| User permissions and management | Yes  pro | Yes  Basic |
| Advanced permissions & admin | Yes  enterprise | No |
| Form sharing (templates) | Yes | Yes  Basic |
| Spaces and tag management | Yes | No |
| Security |
| SOC 2 Type II | Yes | No |
| GDPR compliant | Yes | Yes  Basic |
| SSL encryption | Yes | Yes  Basic |
| Two-factor authentication | Yes | No |
| Enforce 2FA for all users | Yes  business | No |
| SSO (SAML) | Yes  business | No |
| reCAPTCHA | Yes | Yes  Basic |
| Local data residency | Yes  enterprise | Yes  Basic |
| Custom S3 storage (BYO) | Yes  business | No |
| Integrations & API |
| Native integrations | 2,000+ | No |
| Zapier | Yes | Yes  Pro |
| Make (Integromat) | Yes | No |
| Webhooks | Yes  pro | Yes  Elite |
| Standard API | Yes  pro | Yes  Basic |
| Business API | Yes  business | No |
| WordPress plugin | Yes | Yes  Basic |
| oEmbed support | Yes | No |
| 50+ official add-ons | No | Yes  Basic |
| Stepper workflow automation | No | No |

## Where Paperform Wins

 ![Paperform editor](/images/form-builders/paperform/screenshot-homepage.png)

*Paperform's document-style editor lets you build forms that look like designed landing pages — on any platform.*

### Platform Independence

This is the single biggest architectural difference. Paperform forms live on Paperform's hosted infrastructure and work everywhere: embedded on WordPress, Squarespace, Wix, Shopify, Webflow, static sites, or shared as standalone URLs. Gravity Forms requires WordPress. If you migrate to a different CMS, redesign your site outside WordPress, or need forms on multiple platforms simultaneously, Gravity Forms stops working entirely. Paperform's platform independence means your forms survive any technology decision you make about your website.

### Payment Processing

Paperform connects **five payment gateways — Stripe, PayPal, Square, Braintree, and Google Pay** — on every plan including free, with full eCommerce: product catalogues, subscriptions, recurring payments, coupons, discount codes, tax calculations, and refund processing. Gravity Forms supports Stripe and PayPal on paid licenses ($159+/year for both), with additional gateways available through third-party add-ons. The payments are functional but lack Paperform's integrated commerce layer. For any form that processes transactions, Paperform offers more gateways, deeper commerce features, and no per-gateway license costs.

### The Calculation Engine

Paperform's Excel-style calculations are a core differentiator. These formulas compute dynamic pricing, scores, risk assessments, tax amounts, and conditional totals across questions, pages, emails, integrations, and success pages. A mortgage broker builds a repayment calculator. A caterer creates a dynamic menu pricing form. An HR team generates salary band estimates.

Gravity Forms has basic merge tags and simple arithmetic in its pricing fields, but nothing approaching a general-purpose computation engine that drives logic across the entire form ecosystem. For forms that need to think — not just collect — the calculation gap is a decisive advantage for Paperform.

### Design Quality

Paperform's document-style editor creates forms that look like professionally designed landing pages. Text, images, videos, and fields coexist freely with full brand customisation — custom fonts, colour palettes, full-width media, and rich content between questions.

Gravity Forms produces functional forms styled by your WordPress theme. You can customise via CSS, but the baseline aesthetic is "form widget" not "designed page." For customer-facing forms where visual quality impacts conversions and brand perception — order pages, client intake, event registrations — Paperform delivers a meaningfully better experience.

### Built-in E-Signatures and Workflow Automation

Paperform includes **Papersign** (e-signatures) and **Stepper** (multi-step workflow automation) at no additional cost. Gravity Forms has no built-in e-signature capability — you need a third-party add-on (GravitySign or equivalent) at additional cost. Workflow automation in Gravity Forms requires external plugins or Zapier. Paperform bundles both capabilities natively, reducing your tool stack and total cost.

### Template Library

Paperform offers **30,000+ professionally designed templates** covering eCommerce, payments, bookings, surveys, registrations, and beyond. Gravity Forms has a smaller template/pre-built form library — functional starting points but designed within WordPress's visual constraints. The 30,000+ gap reflects both quantity and the breadth of use cases Paperform's feature set enables.

### Zero Infrastructure Management

Paperform is a fully hosted SaaS — you sign up and start building. No server to manage, no WordPress installation to maintain, no security patches to apply, no database backups to schedule, no SSL certificates to renew. Gravity Forms requires a self-hosted WordPress installation, which means you're responsible for hosting costs, uptime, security hardening, core/plugin updates, and backups. For non-technical users or teams without a dedicated developer, Paperform's zero-infrastructure approach eliminates an entire category of operational overhead.

## Where Gravity Forms Wins

 ![Gravity Forms](/images/form-builders/gravity-forms/screenshot-homepage.png)

*Gravity Forms — the most popular premium WordPress form plugin with 5M+ active installations.*

### WordPress Integration Depth

This is where Gravity Forms is genuinely unmatched. As a WordPress-native plugin, it hooks directly into the WordPress ecosystem: PHP hooks and filters for custom logic, WordPress user system integration (pre-populate forms with logged-in user data, restrict access by role), custom post type creation from submissions, and compatibility with virtually every major WordPress plugin. WooCommerce, Advanced Custom Fields, Elementor, Divi — Gravity Forms talks to all of them natively. This level of integration is impossible for any external SaaS form builder, Paperform included.

### Developer Extensibility

Gravity Forms has one of the richest developer ecosystems in WordPress. Hundreds of documented hooks and filters, a well-maintained REST API, custom field type creation, and a massive community of developers building add-ons and extensions. If your team includes WordPress developers, Gravity Forms can be extended to do almost anything — custom validation rules, dynamic field population from external APIs, complex multi-step workflows triggered by WordPress cron jobs. Paperform offers API access and webhooks, but the extensibility ceiling is lower for developers who think in PHP and WordPress.

### Cost for WordPress-Only Sites

Gravity Forms Basic License costs **$59/year** — a fraction of Paperform's $348/year (Essentials, billed annually). Even the Elite License at $259/year is cheaper than Paperform Pro. If you're already paying for WordPress hosting and maintenance, and your forms only need to exist on that WordPress site, Gravity Forms' annual licensing is substantially cheaper. The cost advantage narrows when you factor in WordPress hosting, add-on purchases, and maintenance time — but for WordPress-committed teams, the sticker price is meaningfully lower.

### Native WordPress Theming

Gravity Forms renders within your WordPress theme — forms automatically inherit your site's fonts, colours, and styling. No iframe borders, no cross-origin style conflicts, no "embedded widget" appearance. For WordPress sites where visual consistency across every page element matters, Gravity Forms delivers a seamless native experience. While Paperform forms can be embedded on WordPress and styled to match, they live inside iframes — a subtle but real difference in rendering fidelity for design-conscious WordPress sites.

### Massive Install Base and Community

With **5M+ active installations**, Gravity Forms has an enormous community. Thousands of tutorials, Stack Overflow answers, community forums, third-party add-ons, and agency developers with deep Gravity Forms expertise. Finding help, hiring developers, or sourcing pre-built solutions is straightforward. Paperform, as a smaller SaaS platform, has excellent official support but a much smaller community ecosystem. Founded in 2008 and bootstrapped throughout, Gravity Forms has proven long-term stability — nearly two decades of continuous development funded by license revenue.

## Where Paperform Falls Short

 - **No WordPress-native integration:** Paperform embeds via iframe — it can't hook into WordPress actions, filters, user roles, or custom post types
 - **Higher annual cost:** Paperform Essentials ($348/year) costs more than Gravity Forms Elite ($259/year), though the comparison isn't apples-to-apples since Paperform includes hosting
 - **No developer extensibility via PHP:** WordPress developers can't extend Paperform with custom code in the same way they can with Gravity Forms hooks and filters
 - **Embedded form appearance:** Despite responsive design, embedded Paperform forms sit inside iframes — not rendered natively in the page DOM like Gravity Forms within WordPress

## Where Gravity Forms Falls Short

 - **WordPress lock-in:** 100% dependent on WordPress. If you migrate to any other platform — Shopify, Squarespace, headless CMS, custom stack — your forms break completely. This is the biggest risk for any Gravity Forms investment.
 - **No standalone form pages:** Every form requires a WordPress page to live on. You can't share a form via direct URL, use it as a standalone landing page, or embed it on a non-WordPress site without workarounds.
 - **Limited payment capabilities:** Stripe and PayPal via paid add-ons. No Square, Braintree, or Google Pay. No product catalogue, coupon engine, subscription management, or tax calculations. Payment processing is a field, not a commerce platform.
 - **No calculation engine:** Basic merge tag arithmetic exists, but nothing approaching Paperform's Excel-style formulas that compute across questions, pages, emails, and integrations.
 - **No built-in e-signatures:** Requires third-party add-ons at additional cost. Paperform includes Papersign natively on all plans.
 - **Add-on cost accumulation:** Many features require paid add-ons or the $259/year Elite License. Stripe ($159/yr minimum), survey add-on, quiz add-on, signature add-on — costs accumulate beyond the base license.
 - **Infrastructure overhead:** Gravity Forms requires WordPress hosting, domain, SSL, maintenance, security updates, and backups. Paperform includes all infrastructure in its subscription.

## Pricing Comparison

 ![Gravity Forms pricing page](/images/form-builders/gravity-forms/screenshot-pricing.png)

*Gravity Forms pricing — annual licenses from $59/year, but many features require add-ons or higher tiers.*

Direct price comparison requires factoring in Gravity Forms' WordPress hosting costs and add-on expenses.

| Tier | Paperform | Gravity Forms | Key Difference |
| --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Free | 30 responses, 5 payment gateways, calculations | Free Lite plugin (limited fields, no payments) | Paperform free includes payments and calculations; GF Lite is basic only |
| Entry Paid | Essentials: $29/mo ($348/yr) — payments, eCommerce, hosting | Basic: $59/yr — 1 site, basic add-ons | GF is cheaper annually but requires WordPress hosting ($60-360/yr extra) |
| Mid-Tier | Pro: $49/mo ($588/yr) — CSS, analytics, API | Pro: $159/yr — 3 sites, Stripe, more add-ons | GF Pro adds Stripe; Paperform includes 5 gateways on all plans |
| Top Tier | Business: $99/mo ($1,188/yr) — 10K responses, SSO, S3 | Elite: $259/yr — unlimited sites, all add-ons | GF Elite is cheaper; Paperform Business includes enterprise features |

Gravity Forms prices are annual license fees. Factor in WordPress hosting ($5-30/month) and maintenance for true total cost comparison.
  ComparevsWith
#### Paperform
Free plan14 days trialFreeFreeforms: Unlimitedsubmissions: 30/monthstorage: 100 submissionsusers: 1file uploads: 100 MBEssentials$29/mo$24/mo billed annuallyforms: Unlimitedsubmissions: 100/monthstorage: 1,000 submissionsusers: 1file uploads: 1 GBPro$59/mo$49/mo billed annuallyforms: Unlimitedsubmissions: 1,000/monthstorage: 10,000 submissionsusers: 3file uploads: 10 GBBusiness$129/mo$99/mo billed annuallyforms: Unlimitedsubmissions: 10,000/monthstorage: 100,000 submissionsusers: 5file uploads: 100 GBVerified 2026-03-21
#### Gravity Forms
14 days trialBasic—$59/mo billed annuallyforms: Unlimitedsubmissions: Unlimitedstorage: WordPress database (self-hosted)users: Unlimited (WordPress users)Pro—$159/mo billed annuallyforms: Unlimitedsubmissions: Unlimitedstorage: WordPress database (self-hosted)users: Unlimited (WordPress users)Elite—$259/mo billed annuallyforms: Unlimitedsubmissions: Unlimitedstorage: WordPress database (self-hosted)users: Unlimited (WordPress users)Nonprofit—$129/mo billed annuallyforms: Unlimitedsubmissions: Unlimitedstorage: WordPress database (self-hosted)users: Unlimited (WordPress users)Verified 2026-03-21
| Product | Plan | Monthly Price | Annual Price (per month) | Free Plan | Free Trial | Limits |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Paperform | Free | Free | Free | Yes | 14 days | forms: Unlimited, submissions: 30/month, storage: 100 submissions, users: 1, file uploads: 100 MB |
| Paperform | Essentials | $29/mo | $24/mo billed annually | forms: Unlimited, submissions: 100/month, storage: 1,000 submissions, users: 1, file uploads: 1 GB |
| Paperform | Pro | $59/mo | $49/mo billed annually | forms: Unlimited, submissions: 1,000/month, storage: 10,000 submissions, users: 3, file uploads: 10 GB |
| Paperform | Business | $129/mo | $99/mo billed annually | forms: Unlimited, submissions: 10,000/month, storage: 100,000 submissions, users: 5, file uploads: 100 GB |
| Gravity Forms | Basic | Not listed | $59/mo billed annually | No | 14 days | forms: Unlimited, submissions: Unlimited, storage: WordPress database (self-hosted), users: Unlimited (WordPress users) |
| Gravity Forms | Pro | Not listed | $159/mo billed annually | forms: Unlimited, submissions: Unlimited, storage: WordPress database (self-hosted), users: Unlimited (WordPress users) |
| Gravity Forms | Elite | Not listed | $259/mo billed annually | forms: Unlimited, submissions: Unlimited, storage: WordPress database (self-hosted), users: Unlimited (WordPress users) |
| Gravity Forms | Nonprofit | Not listed | $129/mo billed annually | forms: Unlimited, submissions: Unlimited, storage: WordPress database (self-hosted), users: Unlimited (WordPress users) |

## What Users Say
    Paperform  4.82 / 5 (498 reviews)        G2  4.8 (78)   Capterra  4.8 (104)   GetApp  4.9 (104)   Trustpilot  4.8 (212)      Gravity Forms  4.63 / 5 (515 reviews)        G2  4.7 (240)   Capterra  4.6 (89)   GetApp  4.6 (89)   Trustpilot  4.5 (97)
Paperform averages 4.8/5 with consistent praise for design quality, customer support, and the calculation engine. Gravity Forms averages around 4.6/5 on G2 and WordPress.org, with high marks for reliability and developer flexibility but criticism of add-on costs and the learning curve for non-developers. Common Gravity Forms feedback: "incredibly powerful if you know WordPress, frustrating if you don't." Both platforms have strong reputations — the right choice depends on your WordPress commitment level.

An interesting pattern in reviews: Gravity Forms is frequently praised by developers and criticised by non-technical users. The plugin's power is only accessible through WordPress knowledge. Paperform reviews are more uniformly positive across technical skill levels — the document-style editor makes advanced features (calculations, payments, conditional logic) accessible without code. If your team includes WordPress developers, Gravity Forms reviews will resonate. If your form builders are non-technical, Paperform's reviews better predict your experience.

## See Them in Action

  ![(iframe)](https://www.youtube.com/embed/8kbAu-QiEPk)

*"Paperform — Complete Beginners Guide" by AppFind*

  ![(iframe)](https://www.youtube.com/embed/TNmS31YEEcE)

*"Paperform Review: My Favorite Form Building Tool" by Capterra*

## The Verdict

**Paperform is the better choice if platform independence matters.** It works everywhere, includes five payment gateways on every plan, has a calculation engine Gravity Forms can't match, and produces forms that look like designed landing pages. You don't need WordPress, hosting, or development skills. For businesses that want powerful forms without being locked into a single CMS, Paperform is the clear winner.

**Gravity Forms is the better choice for WordPress-committed developers.** The depth of WordPress integration — hooks, filters, user system, custom post types, and 5M+ installs of community knowledge — is genuinely unmatched. If your entire web presence lives on WordPress and you have development resources, Gravity Forms offers deeper native integration at a lower annual cost. It's a strong choice if you're certain you'll stay on WordPress for the foreseeable future.

The risk calculation is worth considering. Gravity Forms locks your form investment into WordPress. If you ever migrate — to headless, to Shopify, to a custom stack — those forms break completely. Paperform forms survive any platform migration because they're hosted independently. For businesses where technology decisions might change over the next 3-5 years, Paperform's platform independence is insurance that Gravity Forms can't offer.

Both are stable, long-term platforms from bootstrapped, profitable companies. Paperform has been building since 2016; Gravity Forms since 2008. Neither is VC-backed, neither is acquisition-dependent. The choice isn't about quality — it's about architecture: platform-independent SaaS versus WordPress-native plugin. For details on more options, see our [complete Gravity Forms alternatives analysis](/form-builders/gravity-forms-alternatives/) or the [full best form builders ranking](/form-builders/best-form-builders/).

## Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use Gravity Forms without WordPress?

No. Gravity Forms is a WordPress plugin — it requires a self-hosted WordPress installation to function. It cannot be embedded on Squarespace, Wix, Shopify, static sites, or any non-WordPress platform. If you ever migrate away from WordPress, your Gravity Forms stop working entirely. Paperform is platform-independent: forms are hosted on Paperform's infrastructure and can be embedded anywhere via iframe, direct link, or popup — on any website builder, CMS, or even shared as standalone pages. If platform flexibility matters, this is a fundamental difference.

Is Gravity Forms cheaper than Paperform?

At surface level, yes — Gravity Forms Basic License costs $59/year versus Paperform Essentials at $29/month ($348/year). But the comparison is misleading. Gravity Forms requires a WordPress hosting plan ($5-30/month), a domain, SSL certificate, and WordPress maintenance (updates, security, backups). The total cost of ownership for Gravity Forms is typically $120-420/year when you factor in hosting. Additionally, many useful Gravity Forms features require paid add-ons or the $259/year Elite License. Paperform's pricing includes hosting, SSL, CDN, backups, and all features in one subscription — no hidden infrastructure costs.

Which has better payment processing: Paperform or Gravity Forms?

**Paperform wins on gateway variety and built-in commerce.** Paperform connects five payment gateways (Stripe, PayPal, Square, Braintree, Google Pay) on all plans including free, with full eCommerce: subscriptions, coupons, tax calculations, and product management. Gravity Forms supports Stripe and PayPal on paid licenses, with additional gateways available through third-party add-ons. The payments work but lack Paperform's integrated commerce layer — no coupon engine, no tax calculations, no product catalogue. For simple payment collection within WordPress, Gravity Forms is adequate. For anything resembling eCommerce, Paperform is substantially more capable.

Can Paperform match Gravity Forms' WordPress integration depth?

No, and it's not trying to. Gravity Forms is deeply embedded in WordPress: it uses WordPress hooks and filters, integrates with the WordPress user system, respects WordPress roles and permissions, works with custom post types, and can be extended by any WordPress developer using PHP. Paperform embeds into WordPress via iframe or shortcode but doesn't integrate with WordPress internals. If your workflow depends on WordPress-native data flows — populating custom fields, triggering WordPress actions, or extending forms with custom PHP — Gravity Forms' native integration is genuinely superior. Paperform trades that depth for platform independence.

Should I choose Gravity Forms if my site is on WordPress?

It depends on what you need. If you're a developer who wants to extend forms with custom PHP, hook into WordPress actions, and keep everything within the WordPress ecosystem, Gravity Forms is the natural choice. If you need designed landing-page-style forms, five payment gateways, an Excel-style calculation engine, e-signatures, or workflow automation — and you want those to work regardless of whether you stay on WordPress — Paperform is the better choice. Many WordPress site owners embed Paperform forms rather than using a plugin, because the design quality and feature depth exceed what any WordPress plugin offers.

## Sources & References

 1. [Best Online Form Builder to Use in 2026 — Top 20 Tools](https://www.emailtooltester.com/en/blog/best-online-form-builder/) — EmailToolTester, 2026
2. [Gravity Forms Review: Is It Worth It in 2026?](https://www.wpbeginner.com/plugins/gravity-forms-review/) — WPBeginner, 2026
3. [Paperform — Complete Beginners Guide (YouTube)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8kbAu-QiEPk) — AppFind, 2025

Last updated March 21, 2026

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