Skip to content
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • X (formerly Twitter)
  • Instagram
  • Linked In
  • Bluesky
  • Projects
  • Contact
  • Online Store
  • Our Products
  • E-Commerce Solutions
  • Blog
  • Home
  • The Mash Tun – Blog
  • Our Projects
  • Online Store
  • Our Products
  • Contact
  • Hosting Solutions
  • E-Commerce Solutions
Two Row Studio

Two Row Studio

Innovative Web solutions

Migrations without Drama: A Zero-Downtime Checklist

WordPress migrations can be risky, but with proper planning and a zero-downtime checklist, you can move hosts or platforms without losing traffic or data.

Why Migrations Fail

Common pitfalls

Most migration problems stem from poor planning: incomplete backups, missing DNS records, broken redirects, or plugin conflicts. Rushing a migration without testing leads to downtime, lost data, or Search Engine Optimization (SEO) damage.

The good news: with a methodical checklist and staging validation, you can achieve zero-downtime migrations even for complex sites.

Pre-Migration Planning

Audit your current site

Document everything before you start:

  • WordPress version, PHP version, database size
  • Active plugins and themes (with versions)
  • Custom code, cron jobs, external integrations
  • DNS records (A, CNAME, MX, TXT)
  • SSL certificates and renewal process

Choose your migration method

Options include:

  • Plugin-based: Use migration plugins like Duplicator or All-in-One WP Migration (good for small sites)
  • Manual: Export database, transfer files via SFTP, update URLs (more control, higher complexity)
  • Host-provided: Many managed hosts offer migration services (easiest, but less control)

For mission-critical sites, manual or host-provided methods offer more reliability.

Test environment setup

Create a staging copy of your new host. This is where you’ll dry-run the migration and catch issues before touching production.

Migration Execution Checklist

1. Full backup

Backup your current site (database + files). Store it offsite. Verify you can restore it if needed.

2. Database export and import

Export your WordPress database using phpMyAdmin or WP-CLI. Import it to the new host. Run search-replace to update URLs (old domain → new domain or old paths → new paths).

Example WP-CLI command:

wp search-replace 'https://old-domain.com' 'https://new-domain.com' --all-tables --dry-run

Run with --dry-run first, then remove that flag to execute.

3. File transfer

Copy WordPress files (wp-content, themes, plugins, uploads) to the new host via SFTP or rsync. Preserve file permissions and ownership.

4. DNS preparation

Lower your DNS Time To Live (TTL) to 300 seconds (5 minutes) at least 24 hours before migration. This speeds up DNS propagation when you switch.

5. Test on new host

Use a hosts file entry or temporary domain to test the new site before changing DNS. Verify:

  • Homepage loads correctly
  • Admin login works
  • Forms submit successfully
  • Media files load (check for broken image paths)
  • SSL certificate is active

6. Redirects and permalinks

Set up 301 redirects for any URL changes. Update WordPress permalink settings if needed (Settings → Permalinks, click Save).

7. DNS cutover

Update DNS A records to point to the new host’s IP. Wait for propagation (5-30 minutes with low TTL). Monitor both old and new hosts during this window.

8. Final sync

After DNS propagation, do a final sync of any content added to the old site during migration (if applicable). Then shut down the old site to prevent split-brain issues.

9. Post-migration verification

Check:

  • All pages load
  • Forms and checkout work
  • Analytics and tracking codes fire
  • SSL certificate is valid
  • Email (if hosted on same domain) still works

10. Monitor for 48 hours

Watch error logs, uptime monitors, and user reports. Keep the old host backup active for at least a week in case you need to roll back.

Troubleshooting Common Migration Issues

Broken images or assets

If images don’t load, check that file paths are correct and that search-replace updated all URLs. Also verify file permissions (typically 644 for files, 755 for directories).

Database connection errors

Double-check wp-config.php database credentials (host, name, user, password). Ensure the database user has full privileges.

Redirect loops

If you see infinite redirects, check .htaccess rules and WordPress Site URL / Home URL settings (in wp_options table or Settings → General).

References

Pantheon Documentation
WordPress Documentation

Key Takeaways

  • Plan thoroughly: audit current site, choose migration method, set up staging.
  • Execute methodically: backup, export/import database, transfer files, test before DNS cutover.
  • Monitor post-migration and keep old host backup active for rollback.

Get migration help

Post navigation

Previous: Cloudflare for WordPress: Practical Setup for Speed and Security

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Home
  • Our Process
  • The Mash Tun – Blog
  • Hosting Services
  • E-Commerce Solutions
  • Online Store
  • Projects
  • Our Products
  • Need Help?
  • Contact
  • Cart
  • My Account
Two Row Studio Logo

Join the Mailing list!

Get Website and Digital Marketing tips right to your inbox by joining our mailing list. Also learn about promotions and offers.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Name

Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: Harvest by Two Row Studio. © 2026