For years, the goal of website optimization was simple: make it fast. If your site loaded in under two seconds, you were winning. However, the SEO landscape shifted significantly after Google introduced its Core Web Vitals (CWV) metrics in May 2020.
What are Core Web Vitals?
Core Web Vitals are Google’s metrics for measuring the loading, interactivity, and stability performances of websites, which can influence where a site is ranked in search engine results pages (SERPs) as a contributing factor.
While Core Web Vitals aren’t new at this point, it can still be forgotten that Google no longer looks at "speed" as a single, one-dimensional metric. Since Core Web Vitals launched, Google has generally cared less about how fast your site loads (though it is still important). Instead, they care more about how your site feels to your users.
Is the page stable, or does it jump around while loading? Does it respond instantly when you click a button, or does it freeze?
Despite Core Web Vitals being firmly established by now, they can still present a frustrating reality for many WordPress site owners: you can have a fast server, but still fail Google's tests. You might see a decent load time, but red or yellow scores in other CWV metrics.
To consistently pass all three Core Web Vitals, you need a holistic strategy that addresses both your WordPress site’s infrastructure (the server) and its application (the code). This is where the combination of managed WordPress hosting from Rocket.net and the WP Rocket plugin becomes the ultimate blueprint for green scores. By utilizing both, your WordPress site can unlock its potential and see significant improvements in its Core Web Vitals scores, increasing its favorability in the eyes of Google’s crawlers and search algorithms.
But how can this combo help your WordPress site, exactly? While we’ve looked at CWV as part of a wider PageSpeed Insights view previously, we’ll now look in-depth at each of the three pillars of Core Web Vitals to see how the hardware-software dream team of managed hosting services and WP Rocket can improve each one.
1. Largest Contentful Paint (LCP): The First Impression
The first CWV metric, Largest Contentful Paint (LCP), measures perceived load speed. Specifically, it marks the point in the page load timeline when the page's main content, usually a hero image or a large block of text, has likely loaded. To achieve a green LCP score, this must happen in 2.5 seconds or less.
LCP is the metric most heavily influenced by your server performance. If your web hosting server takes 1.5 seconds just to process the request (Time to First Byte), you only have 1 second left for the browser to actually download and paint the image. Most budget hosting options fail at this stage.
How Rocket.net managed WordPress hosting services and WP Rocket can improve LCP
Rocket.net managed WordPress hosting services (the hardware) does the heavy lifting to revitalize your WordPress site’s LCP score, as it is engineered specifically to reduce LCP latency through features like the following drastically:
Cloudflare Enterprise Edge: Unlike standard hosts that serve your site from one location (e.g., a data center in Texas), Rocket.net caches your content across 275+ locations worldwide. Your page’s hero image is already sitting on a server in the visitor's city before they even type your URL.
NVMe Storage & High-Frequency CPU: For the initial request, the server hardware is top-tier. This ensures that the "Wait Time" (TTFB) is often under 100ms, leaving you with a massive buffer to load the rest of your content.
Meanwhile, as Rocket.net delivers the file fast, WP Rocket (the software) ensures the browser knows it is a priority. WP Rocket can instruct the browser to preload the LCP image, ensuring it is the very first thing downloaded, rather than waiting for the rest of the page code to parse. Through “cache warming”, WP Rocket also ensures that the pages are ready to be served statically, rather than requiring PHP processing.
While Rocket.net managed hosting provides the raw horsepower to get the data there instantly, WP Rocket provides the roadmap to ensure the browser prioritizes the right data.
2. Interaction to Next Paint (INP): The Responsiveness
Note: CWVs’ responsiveness metric was previously First Input Delay (FID) before being replaced with Interaction to Next Paint (INP) by Google.
The second Core Web Vitals metric, Interaction to Next Paint (INP), measures your page’s responsiveness. It tracks how much time elapses between a user interacting with your page (clicking a menu, tapping a button) and the browser displaying the next frame to show that something happened. A good INP score to aim for is under 200 milliseconds.
If you’ve ever clicked an "Add to Cart" button and nothing happened for two seconds, you’ve experienced bad INP. This is usually caused by the browser's main thread being clogged up by heavy JavaScript such as analytics, chat widgets, Facebook pixels, and tracking codes.
How Rocket.net managed WordPress hosting services and WP Rocket can improve INP
As this is primarily a code issue, the WP Rocket plugin takes the lead when it comes to improving your WordPress site’s INP score:
Delay JavaScript Execution: This is arguably WP Rocket’s most powerful feature for INP. It prevents heavy scripts (like your live chat or heavy analytics) from loading until the user actually moves their mouse or scrolls. This keeps the "Main Thread" empty and ready to respond to user clicks immediately.
Defer JS: For scripts that must load, WP Rocket moves them to the end of the loading queue so they don't block the initial interactivity.
Rocket.net managed WordPress hosting contributes to improvements, too. While INP is mostly client-side, your server plays a critical role in dynamic interactions by providing unlimited PHP workers. If a user clicks a button that requires the server to perform an action (like "Update Cart" or "Submit Form"), a standard host with limited PHP workers might choke, causing a delay. Rocket.net offers unlimited PHP workers, ensuring backend processing never freezes the frontend.
While WP Rocket clears the clutter from the browser's path, Rocket.net’s managed hosting ensures the backend is always available to catch the request.
3. Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS): The Visual Stability
The third Core Web Vitals metric, Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS), measures visual stability. Have you ever been reading an article, and suddenly an ad loads and pushes the text down, causing you to lose your place? That is a Layout Shift. For your WordPress site’s page to pass with a green CLS score, your score must be 0.1 or less. A poor red score for CLS is 0.25 or greater, which is something to avoid.
A poor CLS is a quick way to kill your site’s user experience. It’s usually caused by images loading without defined height/width attributes, meaning the browser doesn't know how much space to reserve. A poor CLS score can also be caused by web fonts loading late, which can change the text size.
How Rocket.net managed WordPress hosting services and WP Rocket can improve CLS
Like with INP, CLS is almost entirely a code problem, and WP Rocket has dedicated fixes built in to help improve your site’s CLS score:
Add Missing Image Dimensions: WP Rocket automatically scans your HTML and adds width and height attributes to images that lack them. This forces the browser to reserve the correct amount of white space before the image even downloads, preventing the content from jumping around.
Optimize CSS Delivery: By generating Critical CSS, WP Rocket ensures the page's structural styling loads instantly, preventing the layout from shifting as different stylesheets load.
The Rocket.net managed hosting infrastructure also plays a subtle but vital role here regarding assets in the form of global font delivery. Often, layout shifts happen because a custom font file takes too long to download from a slow server. Rocket.net managed hosting serves your font files from the Cloudflare Enterprise CDN. Because the font arrives instantly, the Flash of Unstyled Text (FOUT) is minimized, keeping the layout stable.
While WP Rocket fixes the code structure to reserve space, Rocket.net delivers the assets (fonts and images) so fast that the visual assembly feels instantaneous.
Do I need both Rocket.net managed hosting and WP Rocket to get green Core Web Vitals scores?
In the WordPress ecosystem, there’s a tendency to look for a silver bullet in the form of one tool that solves all your site’s problems. However, Core Web Vitals exposes a flaw in that thinking. You can’t fix Server Response Time (LCP) with a plugin, no matter how good the plugin is. Likewise, you can’t fix Missing Image Dimensions (CLS) with a powerful server, no matter how much you pay for hosting.
This is why both managed WordPress hosting services by Rocket.net and WP Rocket are needed. They’re not just compatible, they’re complementary.
Think of the Infrastructure (Rocket.net) acting as your WordPress site’s engine. It guarantees that the raw data travels from the data center to the user’s device at light speed, solving the latency issues that kill LCP.
Meanwhile, the Optimization (WP Rocket) acts as the conductor. It organizes that data, deferring non-essential scripts and defining layouts to ensure the browser can paint a stable, interactive picture, solving INP and CLS.
Ultimately, User Experience is a contributing ranking factor. A site that passes Core Web Vitals signals to Google that it is pleasant to use and, in turn, has a better chance of ranking higher in search results.
By adopting this dual-layered approach with managed hosting for the backend and WP Rocket optimization for the frontend, you stop fighting against the metrics. You move from "optimizing for speed" to "optimizing for stability," securing the green lights from Core Web Vitals that act as the foundation for long-term SEO growth.
How to pass Core Web Vitals: a summary checklist
If you are struggling with your Core Web Vitals scores, use this checklist to quickly identify which part of the equation needs attention:
Struggling with LCP (Speed)?
Likely Cause: Slow Server Response Time (TTFB).
The Fix: Move to Rocket.net managed hosting to leverage Cloudflare Enterprise Edge caching and NVMe storage.
Struggling with INP (Responsiveness)?
Likely Cause: Heavy JavaScript is blocking the main thread.
The Fix: Enable "Delay JavaScript Execution" in WP Rocket.
Struggling with CLS (Stability)?
Likely Cause: Images are loading without dimensions.
The Fix: Enable "Add Missing Image Dimensions" in WP Rocket.
Ready to get those green CWV scores and help your WordPress site towards its full SEO potential? Explore our managed WordPress hosting services today, as well as the WP Rocket plugin to take your site to the next level.
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