Angie is purpose-built for WordPress, which sets it apart from generic AI coding tools that generate code with no awareness of your site’s structure. Once installed, it automatically inherits your site context — theme, installed plugins, custom fields, and Elementor components — with no configuration required. Its core capability, Angie Code, lets you create custom Elementor widgets from scratch, extend existing widgets with new controls, customise the WordPress admin dashboard, and generate CSS, JavaScript, and PHP snippets for animations, interactive behaviours, and front-end apps. Everything is previewed in a sandbox environment first, so nothing touches your live site until you approve it.
Angie now operates in three modes. Agent mode handles everyday requests directly. Plan mode is suited to bigger tasks — Angie asks clarifying questions and lays out a brief before doing anything, which cuts down on mismatched results. Super Admin mode is the significant addition: an opt-in setting that gives Angie direct PHP execution and full database and file-system access, useful for bulk operations like updating hundreds of product prices, fixing broken URLs after a site migration, or cleaning up user roles site-wide. Every action in Super Admin mode requires you to review and confirm the exact change before it runs, and Elementor recommends testing it on a staging site with a backup in place first, given the level of access involved.
Angie is currently free during its beta phase, with daily-renewing AI credits and no option to purchase more in the meantime — a Freemium model, though the daily credit cap is worth knowing about if you’re planning to lean on it heavily. It requires a free Elementor account to sign in and runs on Elementor’s own AI infrastructure, so no separate third-party API key is needed. Paid plans are expected once the beta ends.









