I love the potential of Go High Level—especially as an all-in-one platform. But coming from a WordPress/Divi background, I’m constantly frustrated by how poorly multi-column content aligns in the page builder.
🚨 The Core Issue
When using rows with multiple columns, any difference in content height between columns causes misaligned bottoms. This throws off visual balance, especially on landing pages where layout polish matters. It ends up looking unprofessional—and for marketing or conversion-focused pages, that’s a deal-breaker.
🔁 The Pattern
Every time I adjust the text, I have to fix the alignment again manually. I’ve worked with GHL support multiple times to “patch” the layout, but as soon as content changes, it breaks again.
That’s not sustainable. It makes the builder feel unstable and unreliable for professional use.
🧱 This Isn’t a Preference—It’s Table Stakes
Virtually every major page builder (Divi, Elementor, Webflow, etc.) has native equal-height column controls. This isn’t a fancy feature. It’s a baseline UX expectation.
✅ Proposed Solution
  • Add native equal-height column support using Flexbox or CSS Grid.
  • Include a simple toggle in Row or Column Settings (e.g., “Match Column Heights”).
  • Ensure it’s responsive, so columns still stack correctly on mobile.
💡 Why It Matters
  • Saves users from hacky CSS workarounds.
  • Prevents sloppy layouts that damage brand trust.
  • Reduces strain on your support team (who have to fix what should be standardized manually).
GHL has the bones to be a complete website solution. But until this is fixed, it still feels like a half-step for serious designers.
🖼️ Visual Proof
  • Image 1: GHL — uneven column bottoms. Hard to read. Looks broken.
  • Image 2: WordPress/Divi — same content, aligned columns, clean flow, client-ready.
No amount of padding/margin fiddling fixes the GHL version. It needs structural alignment.
Thanks for considering it. This fix would make GHL feel less like a workaround and more like a professional-grade site builder.