A WordPress hosting migration where nothing gets left behind
A one-off, planned move to hosting that behaves. Your site is inventoried, copied and tested on the new hosting first — and switched over only when every item on the list is verified, with rollback standing by.
One move, one checklist — verified row by row before the move is called done.
Who it's for
For owners who know the hosting is the problem — but dread the move
Bad hosting is rarely dramatic — it's a slow leak. The site is down a little too often, support answers a little too late, and the renewal costs a little more each year. Moving fixes it; what stops most owners isn't the destination, it's the move.
A hosting migration here is a planned, one-off job: everything inventoried first, the site copied and tested on the new hosting, and switched only once the copy is verified — with rollback ready. The move gets treated like the risky operation people fear it is. That is exactly why it isn't one.
- Support blames your site — every time the hosting has a bad day.
- You've outgrown the starter plan — the site grew; the hosting didn't.
- You'd have moved long ago — if you weren't afraid of breaking what works.
- The renewal keeps climbing — same service, bigger invoice, every year.
The problems
What bad hosting puts you through
None of these mean you chose badly — most hosting is picked once, early, when the site was small. The problems arrive later, one renewal at a time, until staying costs more than moving.
The site keeps going down — and the host blames the site
Every outage ends with the same support reply: it's your plugins, your theme, your traffic. Nothing changes, and next month it happens again.
Support takes days to say nothing
You write a ticket, wait, and get a template answer. The site is your business — and nobody on the other end acts like it.
You've outgrown the plan, but the price keeps climbing
The hosting you picked when the site was small now strains under it — and each renewal charges more for the same struggling service.
The move itself feels like the biggest risk
You've heard the stories — sites down for days, lost emails, missing images. So the move keeps getting postponed, and the bad hosting stays.
You're not sure what would even move
The site, obviously — but the domain? Email? The SSL padlock? When you can't list what's involved, you can't judge anyone's offer to move it.
Whoever set it up is gone
The hosting was arranged years ago by someone no longer around. Logins, renewals, where the domain actually lives — nobody quite knows.
A move only feels risky when nobody has made a list. The next section is the same six worries again — each one answered by a specific part of how the migration is done.
The work
What makes the move safe instead of scary
The same six worries, answered in the same order — as one planned move that starts with an inventory, not with a download button.
The audit sorts out whose fault it is
The current hosting is assessed against what your site actually needs — so "it's your plugins" stops being an assertion and becomes something checked. What the host is responsible for gets named, in writing.
The new host is a recommendation, not a resale
You get a hosting recommendation matched to the site's real requirements. Nothing is sold or resold here, so the only thing behind the advice is fit — and the contract stays in your name.
The move is sized to what the site needs
Capacity gets matched to reality — enough for the site to run well, without paying premium prices out of habit or out of fear of touching anything.
The live site is never the work site
The whole move happens on a copy at the new host, tested there while your live site keeps running untouched. Nothing switches until the copy is verified.
Everything is listed before anything moves
Files, database, domain, DNS, SSL, email — each one inventoried with a plan for how it moves, switches or stays. The checklist exists before the move does.
The keys end up in your hands
Every access — hosting, domain, DNS, SSL, email — is documented and handed over in your name. The next time anyone asks where something lives, you have the answer.
It ends with one post-move checklist — every row from the inventory verified on the new hosting, in writing.
The scope
What's included in the migration
One move with a defined scope — and what deliberately stays outside it, starting with the hosting contract itself.
Included in the move
- Pre-move audit & full inventory What moves, what switches, what stays — listed first
- Complete copy of files & media Every file and upload carried over in full
- Database move with search-and-replace Content moved, URLs and paths corrected throughout
- Tested on a copy first Staging or hosts-file preview before any switch
- Domain & DNS switch At an agreed time, with records prepared in advance
- SSL set up & checked Certificate on the new host, mixed content verified
- Email handled deliberately Carried over or safely separated — agreed before the switch
- Post-move testing & checklist Caches rebuilt, every inventory row verified, in writing
Everything above — one move, one price.Inventoried at the start, verified at the end.
The process
From bad hosting to moved and verified
Four steps, one move — you see the plan, the price and the migration window before anything about your site changes.
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Your only step
Send your request
Describe the site, the current hosting and what's driving you away — plain words are enough, a link gets it started.
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The audit maps the move
The site is inventoried and the current hosting assessed. You get the findings, a hosting recommendation if you want one, the scope, the price and a migration window — before anything moves.
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The move runs on a copy
Files and database are copied to the new hosting and the site is tested there — while the live site stays up, reachable and untouched.
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You sign off
The switch, then the proof
DNS switches at the agreed time, every inventory row is verified on the new hosting, and rollback stays ready — the old hosting is not cancelled until the checklist is signed off.
The outcome
What's different once you've moved
The spec sheet is the work; this is what it's for. No uptime numbers and no hosting promises — the hosting's quality belongs to the host. What the move itself changes is this.
The old routine
You refresh the site to check it's still upYou've been meaning to move for a yearYou stay because leaving feels riskier than stayingYou don't know where your domain and email actually live
Downtime stops being background noise
Hosting that fits the site is the kind you forget about. And when something does happen, the audit already put in writing whose job it is — no more outages that are somehow always your fault.
The move finally happened — quietly
A planned window, a tested copy, one DNS switch: visitors never saw a moving box. The thing you postponed for a year turned out to be one email long on your side.
You're not a hostage to a host anymore
Once the site has moved safely once, the fear is gone for good — the inventory and checklist turn any future move into a procedure, not a leap.
Everything documented, in your name
Hosting, domain, DNS, SSL, email — each one listed, each credential handed over. The next person who works on your site starts from a map, not from archaeology.
FAQ
Questions owners ask before moving
The honest answers — including the one thing that really does get frozen during a move.
How long is my site actually offline during the move?
The site stays up on the old hosting the whole time the copy is built and tested. The switch itself is a DNS change — while it propagates, visitors land on either the old or the new copy, and both are serving the site. What does get frozen is changes: edits made during the switch window could be lost, so a short no-changes window is agreed in advance — hours, not days.
Do I have to choose the new hosting myself?
No. The audit ends with a recommendation matched to what the site needs — and because hosting isn't sold or resold here, there is nothing behind the recommendation except fit. The contract is in your name either way, so you're never tied to the person who moved you.
What happens to my email?
It gets decided before anything moves — that's why email is its own row in the inventory. If your mail runs through the old hosting, it's either carried to the new host or, often better, separated onto its own service so a hosting move never touches your inbox again. Nothing switches until the email plan is agreed.
Will my URLs or Google rankings change?
A hosting move done this way changes neither: same domain, same URLs, same content — only the server behind them is different. Redirects are only involved if something has to change, and that would be agreed with you beforehand, not discovered afterwards.
What if something turns up after the switch?
The old hosting stays intact and rollback-ready for an agreed window after the switch — nothing gets cancelled on moving day. Small issues are fixed on the new hosting as part of the job; anything serious, and DNS goes back to the old host while it's sorted out.
Anything else? Just ask — you'll get a straight answer.
Contact
Ready for hosting that behaves?
One message starts it. The audit and plan come first — you see the findings, the scope, the price and the migration window before anything about your site moves.
Send your request Step one of the process — the only one that's yours
Goes straight to the specialist — no ticket system.
Say so in the message — a site that is down right now is treated as priority work, before any planned migration.