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If you visited iconicwp.com, kadencewp.com, or givewp.com in the past 24 hours and ended up on Liquid Web’s hosting site, you saw a major WordPress industry move in real time. But what happened to IconicWP, exactly?
On May 12, 2026, parent company StellarWP folded its entire portfolio of standalone WordPress plugin brands into Liquid Web. The familiar standalone websites are gone. The plugins themselves still run. However, the support model, license portal, and roadmap structure all changed overnight.
For store owners and site builders who depended on these tools, the consolidation creates a stack of practical questions: Will my plugin still get updates? Where do I renew? What happens to my support tickets? Should I be planning a migration?
This guide explains what actually happened and which brands were affected. Futhermore, we show you what to watch for over the next quarter, and where displaced users should look for replacements that match each plugin’s job.
IconicWP, Kadence, LearnDash, GiveWP, and The Events Calendar were all standalone brands inside the StellarWP plugin family. On May 12, 2026, their standalone websites began redirecting to Liquid Web’s hosting site.
PiunikaWeb covered the event the same day, noting that StellarWP’s portfolio is being concentrated into four core products. Kadence, LearnDash, The Events Calendar, and Give. Several plugins (including all of IconicWP’s catalog, SolidWP, MemberDash, and Restrict Content Pro) are being absorbed into the Kadence Shop Kit and adjacent bundles.
The practical takeaway for store owners is straightforward. Existing plugin installations keep functioning on live sites. The change is operational: license renewals, support tickets, and update downloads now route through Liquid Web’s unified portal at software.liquidweb.com. Old portal links redirect to the new portal, which has caused some friction in the first 48 hours.

StellarWP was Liquid Web’s umbrella brand for WordPress plugins. Formed in 2021, it held a series of acquisitions (iThemes, GiveWP, LearnDash, The Events Calendar, IconicWP, MemberDash, Restrict Content Pro, and others).
The consolidation collapses the brand structure. Instead of eight or ten standalone websites with separate marketing, sales, support, and dev attention, Liquid Web now markets four flagship products with everything else folded in as add-ons.
The stated reasoning is simpler customer navigation and fewer separate portals. So, what’s the trade-off? Basically niche plugins that belonged to one of many in the StellarWP catalog become one feature among many inside a flagship product’s bundle. Roadmap priority changes. Update cadence may slow on niche features. Bundle pricing replaces standalone licensing for some products. The unified login at software.liquidweb.com is the new single entry point regardless of which plugin you bought.
🔍️ What we’ve seen: Industry consolidations like this one tend to play out the same way over the following 12-18 months. Niche plugins with dedicated user bases get quietly deprioritized as the parent company optimizes for the bundle’s headline features. Updates ship slower. Edge-case bug fixes take longer. Support response times stretch. The plugins keep working, but the experience changes. For store owners whose revenue depends on a specific niche feature, the right time to evaluate alternatives is now (calm, calendar-controlled migration), not later (under pressure when something breaks).
The StellarWP family covered roughly a dozen products across distinct WordPress categories. Here’s the current consolidation map.
If a plugin you use isn’t on the retained list, it’s now part of a bundle rather than a standalone product. Your installation still works. However, the brand around it doesn’t exist independently anymore.
Iconic’s catalog was unusually broad. It covered cross-sell tools, checkout customization, variation display, delivery scheduling, image galleries, wishlists, and product configurators. Each plugin solved a distinct WooCommerce job. Basically, this means displaced users have different replacement paths depending on which Iconic plugin they ran.
The replacement map below is the cleanest swap for each major Iconic plugin. Where Rymera Web Co plugins fit, we’ve covered them. For plugins outside Rymera’s catalog, we’ve pointed to credible alternatives.
Did you run SolidWP (security/backup), MemberDash (membership), Restrict Content Pro, or other absorbed brands? Then the same pattern applies.
Your installation works for now. However, license renewal goes through software.liquidweb.com. Updates and support will reflect Liquid Web’s roadmap priorities, which are weighted toward the four flagship products.
Things worth tracking over the next 2-3 quarters:
🔍️ What we’ve seen: Migration windows narrow under pressure. Stores that started evaluating alternatives in the first month after a consolidation event had clean migration runways. Stores that waited until something broke or until a renewal cycle forced the decision had compressed timelines, higher mistake rates, and lost revenue during the cutover. The cost of evaluating early is low. The cost of waiting until you have to move is high.
Yes. Existing installations continue to function. Once you install a plugin, WordPress doesn’t care about the parent company structure. Basically, the change is operational: support, renewals, and updates now route through Liquid Web.
No. There is no immediate technical forcing function. The reason to evaluate alternatives sooner rather than later is roadmap uncertainty: niche features in absorbed plugins tend to drift down the priority list inside a flagship’s bundle. A calm migration window over 1-2 months is much easier than a forced cutover under deadline pressure.
The new unified portal is at software.liquidweb.com. Old portal URLs redirect there. Some users have reported friction finding the right login link in the first 48 hours; bookmark the new URL directly.
Existing licenses continue to validate on existing installations. Liquid Web is migrating renewal options to its portal. Watch for changes to the renewal flow that may bundle previously-standalone plugins together. After all, this is the cost-impact angle to track most closely.
Liquid Web is consolidating its WordPress plugin portfolio into four flagship products to reduce operational overhead and simplify customer navigation. The four retained brands (Kadence, LearnDash, The Events Calendar, Give) cover the largest categories. Liquid Web is absorbing other plugins, including all of IconicWP, into those flagships as bundled add-ons rather than maintaining them as standalone products.
It’s the next step. StellarWP was Liquid Web’s umbrella brand for WordPress plugins, formed in 2021 to hold its acquisitions. Basically, this consolidation collapses StellarWP into Liquid Web directly and reduces the brand count from a dozen-plus to four flagships.
The IconicWP and StellarWP consolidation is not a sky-falling event for store owners. The plugins keep running. Your revenue isn’t at immediate risk. However, the operational model around the plugins you use has changed, and the roadmap priorities have shifted.
Most store owners should stay calm. First, identify which absorbed plugins your site depends on. Next, map each one to a credible replacement. Lastly, run a migration evaluation in the next 1-2 months while you have time and not pressure.
Here’s the actionable shortlist:
For Iconic Sales Booster users, see how Advanced Coupons covers the same revenue jobs. For WooCommerce Show Single Variations users, see how Wholesale Order Form takes over the variation-display job. If your migration question doesn’t fit one of those replacements, share your setup in the comments. We’ll point you to a credible option.
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