Tables are often the best way to present structured information inside a WordPress post or page. But if you’ve ever tried building one using the default Table block, you already know how limiting that experience can be. It gives you a basic grid and not much else.
Tableberg was built to flip the script on WordPress tables. Instead of forcing you to work around limitations, it gives you a smarter toolkit: one that lives entirely in the block editor yet functions like a dedicated table builder.
Unlike traditional table plugins or the default block, Tableberg focuses on reducing the number of steps it takes to build and manage a table.
When time matters and tables are a regular part of your workflow, a small change may start to make a big difference. Here are five time-saving features in Tableberg that help you create better WordPress tables in less time.

1. Build and Edit Tables Inside the Editor
Tableberg lets you create, edit, and customize every part of your table directly inside the WordPress block editor. You can insert the Tableberg block by opening the block inserter, typing Tableberg in the search field, and selecting a layout or starting from scratch. You do not need to switch to a backend interface or manage shortcodes in a separate settings panel.
🖱️Click
Insert
✅Go
Everything from layout structure to individual cell styling happens in real time within the same editing screen where you are writing your post or page. This helps you stay focused on the content and design without jumping between tools or preview windows. The ability to stay in one place while building advanced tables will save you time and let you publish faster with fewer steps involved.

2. Pre-Built Table Patterns
Tableberg includes a range of pre-designed table templates that cover common use cases such as pricing tables, product comparisons, and feature showcases. You can access these templates from the block inserter and insert them into your page with a single click.
One-Click Insertion
Smart Starting Point
Flexible Customization
Once added, the table appears fully structured with rows, columns, and placeholder content already in place so you don’t have to start from scratch. You can edit any part of the template, including text, images, icons, ratings, and buttons, or remove rows and columns that you don’t need. If your layout requires changes, you can reshape the template easily by dragging to reorder rows or adding more cells as needed.
The entire purpose is to give you a flexible structure so you can adapt it to fit your content while still keeping the original layout as a helpful base. The use of these pre-built patterns will speed up the initial design process as well as help maintain consistency across multiple tables throughout your site.

3. Convert Default Table Block to Tableberg
If you have already created tables using the default WordPress Table block, Tableberg lets you convert them into fully editable Tableberg blocks with a single click. The original structure and content remain unchanged, but the converted table instantly becomes more flexible. Each cell can now hold rich blocks like images, buttons, lists, icons, or star ratings. You can apply individual column styling, enable sticky headers, or make your table sortable using built-in features.
Default Table Block
One-Click Transformation
Tableberg
This feature is particularly useful when using AI tools that can generate table data in HTML or a plain copyable format. The table source might come from scanned images, PDF documents, spreadsheets, or even screenshots. You can paste that content directly into the editor, and WordPress will automatically create a default Table block based on the structure.
Instead of rebuilding the layout manually, you can convert that block to Tableberg and continue editing with more control and flexibility. This also works well when updating older posts or improving draft tables created by clients or writers who used the default block for quick input. The use of this conversion feature will save you time during layout refinement and allow you to modernize simple tables with advanced design elements.

4. Block-Based Cell Editing
Unlike traditional table plugins or the default Table block, Tableberg allows you to treat each table cell as a flexible content container. Inside any cell, you can add a wide range of Gutenberg blocks, including images, buttons, lists, icons, star ratings, ribbons, and even custom HTML. To do this, you simply click inside a cell, open the block inserter, and choose the block you want to insert. The layout remains stable while you freely build rich content inside the table. This level of flexibility means you no longer need to use shortcodes or rely on extra plugins to achieve a content-rich table layout. Whether you’re building a pricing table with call-to-action buttons, a feature comparison with visual icons, or a product listing with ratings and highlights, you can manage everything inside the editor using the blocks you already know.

5. Toggle Feature for Switchable Views
Tableberg includes a toggle block that allows you to organize multiple tables under separate tabs within the same section. This helps you keep related tables grouped in one place without needing to create and manage separate blocks for each version. This feature can be used to separate content by category, such as different product types, service groups, or sports divisions. It is also useful for showing variations of the same content, like monthly and yearly pricing or weekday and weekend schedules. Each tab holds a complete Tableberg table that can be edited directly from the editor using the same block-based workflow. The use of the toggle feature will save you time by allowing you to structure multiple tables under clearly labeled tabs, reduce layout duplication, and make future updates easier to manage.

Conclusion
Most table solutions in WordPress either lock you into rigid layouts or take you away from the editor entirely. Whether you are using the default Table block or a plugin that depends on shortcodes and backend interfaces, the process often adds more steps than it removes. Tableberg takes a different approach. Everything happens inside the block editor, and each feature is built to reduce the time it takes to design, update, and manage your tables. From ready-made layouts to tabbed content and full block-level control, it focuses on cutting repetition without limiting what you can build. If saving time is a priority, this is the kind of table plugin that makes it count.