COMPARISON GUIDE
EditWhere vs Pastel for WordPress Projects
Both tools promise smoother design feedback — but only one is built for the thing WordPress teams actually need: reviewing unpublished, password-protected pages securely. Here’s how they compare.
The Core Question: Can It Review Pages That Aren’t Live?
Most WordPress projects involve reviewing work before it goes live — a staging site, a draft page, or a password-protected preview. This is where the comparison between EditWhere and Pastel gets interesting.
Pastel is a polished visual feedback tool that works well on publicly accessible pages. You paste a URL, share a link, and collaborators can pin comments directly on the page. For live sites or public staging environments, it’s a smooth experience.
But here’s the friction: if your WordPress page is behind a password, in draft mode, or on a staging URL that requires authentication, Pastel can’t load it. The tool depends on being able to render the page in an iframe — and that breaks the moment a login wall appears.
EditWhere is built specifically for this scenario. It installs as a WordPress plugin, works inside your admin, and lets reviewers access draft and password-protected pages through a secure, time-limited share link — no login required on their end, no iframe issues.
Side-by-Side: EditWhere vs Pastel
How the two tools stack up on the workflows WordPress teams run every day.
FEATURE
EDITWHERE
Built for WordPress
PASTEL
URL-Based Feedback
Where Pastel Falls Short on WordPress Projects
Pastel is a well-designed tool — but its architecture assumes the page you’re reviewing is already publicly accessible. For many WordPress teams, that’s simply not true.
Here are the three workflow gaps that come up repeatedly:
The Draft Page Problem
Your client wants to review a page before you publish it. You send them the WordPress preview URL — but Pastel can't load it. Preview URLs require a logged-in WordPress session, which Pastel's iframe renderer doesn't have. You're back to emailing screenshots.
The Password-Protected Page Problem
Many agencies protect work-in-progress pages with a WordPress password. It's a sensible approach — but Pastel hits a wall. The iframe loads the password prompt, not the page. Your reviewer sees a login form, not the design they're supposed to be approving.
The Staging Site Problem
Staging environments typically sit behind HTTP authentication or a private domain. Pastel can't render these either. So even if your staging URL is shareable, the moment there's any auth layer in front of it, Pastel's feedback workflow breaks down completely.
How EditWhere Solves This
EditWhere is a WordPress plugin, not a browser-based iframe tool. Because it lives inside your WordPress install, it has direct access to your content — published or not.
When you share a page for review, EditWhere generates a secure, time-limited link. That link lets your reviewer see the page — exactly as it will look when published — without needing a WordPress account, without bypassing your security, and without any friction.
Reviewers can pin visual comments directly on the page, leave threaded notes, and you see every piece of feedback in your WordPress dashboard. No third-party platform to manage, no copy-pasting between tools.
When Pastel Is the Right Choice
To be fair: Pastel is a genuinely capable tool in the right context. If your workflow looks like this, it may suit you well:
But if you’re a WordPress-focused agency, freelancer, or in-house team who regularly reviews pages before they go live, Pastel’s iframe dependency will create friction at exactly the wrong moment — when your client is waiting for a review link.
Frequently Asked Questions
Part of the EditWhere Alternatives Series
This page is part of our in-depth guide comparing visual feedback tools for WordPress teams. The pillar guide covers EditWhere alongside Pastel, BugHerd, Markup.io, and Atarim — with a focus on which tools actually work on unpublished and password-protected WordPress pages.
Stop Sending Screenshots. Start Sharing Real Pages.
EditWhere lets you share any WordPress page — draft, password-protected, or staging — as a secure review link. Your clients see the real page. You get pinned visual feedback. No logins, no friction.
✓ Free plan available ✓ No reviewer accounts needed ✓ WordPress-native
