Existing plugins like WPForms and Gravity Forms are great, but they felt heavy for my use case: too many features loaded by default, bloated JS/CSS, and addons I didn’t need. I realized I was spending more time fighting the plugin than building the forms I wanted.
So I built FormLight — a lightweight, Gutenberg-native WordPress form builder with optional addons. The core is fast, modular, and developer-friendly. Hooks and filters make it easy to extend.
Some highlights:
Fully Gutenberg / Block Editor compatible
Drag-and-drop builder with live preview
Multiple form types: login, registration, payment, booking, survey, feedback, and custom forms
Pre-built templates: Contact, Booking, Survey, Support, Job Application, Event Registration, Lead Capture, Feedback, Appointment
Optional addons: Mailchimp, Stripe, PayPal, Google Sheets, Zapier
AJAX-powered submissions for smooth UX
Entries management: view, filter, delete, export CSV
GDPR-compliant and secure
Developer-friendly: translation-ready, extensible, embed in SaaS platforms
I built it because I wanted a lightweight, modular, Gutenberg-first alternative that’s fast, extendable, and works natively with WordPress standards.
I’d love to hear from the community:
How do you handle forms in Gutenberg-based projects?
Do you prefer lightweight, modular plugins or feature-packed solutions?
What frustrations have you had with existing WordPress form plugins?