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Come spostare facilmente il vostro blog da WordPress.com a WordPress.org

Il passaggio del blog da WordPress.com a WordPress.org offre maggiore flessibilità e controllo. Molti principianti iniziano con WordPress.com ma presto si scontrano con i suoi limiti e cercano caratteristiche più avanzate.

Passando alla piattaforma WordPress.org, ospitata all’esterno, si ha accesso a una gamma più ampia di temi, plugin e opzioni personalizzate che non sono disponibili su WordPress.com.

Noi di WPBeginner abbiamo oltre 15 anni di esperienza nell’utilizzo di WordPress.org. Quindi, potete essere certi che abbiamo una profonda conoscenza di questa transizione. Inoltre, se volete avere un maggiore controllo sul vostro sito WordPress, sappiamo che vale la pena passare a questo sistema.

In questa guida passo passo, vi mostreremo come spostare correttamente il vostro blog da WordPress.com a WordPress.org, assicurandovi una transizione fluida e senza interruzioni.

Moving WordPress.com to WordPress.org

Perché passare da WordPress.com a WordPress.org?

WordPress.com permette a chiunque di aprire un blog creando un account gratuito. Questo rende facile per i principianti iniziare a bloggare rapidamente senza dover affrontare alcun problema tecnico.

Tuttavia, molti utenti si rendono conto che il loro blog gratuito su WordPress.com ha alcune limitazioni. Tra queste, la limitata capacità di monetizzare, l’impossibilità di installare plugin, gli annunci di terze parti visualizzati dagli utenti e altro ancora.

Per questo motivo gli utenti passano spesso alla più potente e popolare piattaforma WordPress.org, ospitata in esterno. In alternativa, potete passare a un piano WordPress.com a pagamento.

Abbiamo confrontato a fondo WordPress.com e WordPress.org. Questa analisi a fianco spiega le differenze, i vantaggi e gli svantaggi di entrambe le piattaforme.

Vi consigliamo di utilizzare WordPress.org perché vi dà la completa proprietà del vostro sito web e la libertà di controllarne tutte le caratteristiche. Per approfondire tutte queste caratteristiche, consultate la nostra recensione completa di WordPress con i pro e i contro.

Detto questo, vediamo come migrare correttamente il vostro blog da WordPress.com a WordPress.org.

Cose necessarie prima di iniziare

Per iniziare con WordPress.org in hosting esterno, avrete bisogno di un account di hosting WordPress e di un dominio.

Raccomandiamo Bluehost perché è una delle più grandi società di hosting al mondo e un fornitore di hosting WordPress ufficialmente raccomandato.

Offrono inoltre agli utenti di WPBeginner un dominio gratuito e un enorme sconto sull’hosting web. È possibile iniziare per 1,99 dollari al mese (e questo include anche un SSL gratuito).

Avrete comunque bisogno di un hosting web se il vostro sito WordPress ha un dominio personalizzato. Procedete con l’iscrizione a Bluehost e, alla voce dominio, aggiungete il dominio del vostro blog.

Nei passi successivi, vi mostreremo come mantenere lo stesso dominio durante il trasferimento da WordPress.com a WordPress.org senza perdere le posizioni di ricerca.

Oltre all’account di hosting, dovrete anche accedere al vostro account WordPress.com per trasferire facilmente i vostri post, pagine, immagini, commenti e altri dati al vostro sito WordPress ospitato in esterno.

Offerta gratuita: Poiché molti di voi ce lo hanno chiesto, ora offriamo un servizio gratuito di migrazione da WordPress.com a WordPress.org come parte del nostro servizio gratuito di configurazione di blog WordPress. Durante questo trasferimento guidato, uno dei membri del nostro team di esperti eseguirà l’intera migrazione per voi (100% gratuita). Questo significa che potete passare da WordPress.com a WordPress.org senza alcun rischio.

Tuttavia, se vi piace imparare e fare le cose da soli, potete seguire la nostra guida passo-passo qui sotto.

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Se preferite le istruzioni scritte, continuate a leggere.

Passo 1: Esportazione dei dati da WordPress.com

Per prima cosa, dovete accedere al vostro sito WordPress.com e andare alla Bacheca del vostro account.

Da qui, è necessario passare alla visualizzazione WP Admin per il blog o il sito web che si desidera migrare. Basta fare clic sul menu a tre puntini accanto al nome del sito e selezionare WP Admin.

Switch to admin view

In questo modo si accede alla tradizionale schermata di amministrazione di WordPress.

Dalla colonna di sinistra, è necessario cliccare sul menu Strumenti ” Esportazione e poi fare clic sul pulsante ‘Esporta tutto’.

Export all content from WordPress.com

Questo permette di esportare il sito WordPress. Una volta che il file di esportazione è pronto, sarà visibile un collega per il download. Fate clic per scaricare il file zip sul vostro computer.

WordPress.com invierà il collega anche al vostro indirizzo email.

Downloading WordPress.com export file

Una volta scaricato il file sul computer, è necessario decomprimerlo.

Al suo interno troverete un file XML con tutti gli articoli, le pagine, le immagini, i commenti, i campi personalizzati, le categorie, i tag, i menu di navigazione e altri dati.

Fase 2: impostazione di WordPress

Dopo aver esportato i dati di WordPress.com, è necessario procedere all’impostazione di una nuova installazione di WordPress sul vostro hosting web.

WordPress è molto facile da installare e richiede solo pochi clic. Se vi siete iscritti a Bluehost, come abbiamo detto sopra, WordPress verrà installato automaticamente per voi.

In alternativa, se scegliete un altro servizio di hosting, potete seguire il nostro tutorial passo-passo su come installare WordPress in 5 minuti.

Una volta installato WordPress, è il momento di importare i contenuti nel nuovo sito web WordPress ospitato.

Passo 3: Importare il contenuto in un sito WordPress ospitato all’esterno

Per importare i contenuti del vecchio sito WordPress.com nel nuovo sito WordPress.org, è necessario accedere all’area di amministrazione del sito web WordPress appena installato.

Da qui, è necessario visitare la pagina Strumenti ” Importazione e fare clic sul pulsante “Installa ora” sotto WordPress.

Install WordPress importer

WordPress installerà ora l’importatore di WordPress per voi.

Una volta terminato, fai clic sul collega “Esegui importatore” per continuare.

Run importer

Si aprirà uno schermo in cui vi verrà chiesto di effettuare l’uploader del file XML di WordPress.com che avete scaricato al punto 1 di questa guida.

Fare clic sul pulsante “Scegli file” per selezionare il file, quindi fare clic sul pulsante “Uploader file e importa”.

Upload import file

Nota: se le dimensioni del file sono superiori a 2 MB, avete due opzioni. Una è quella di chiedere alla società di hosting web di aumentare temporaneamente il limite in modo da poter procedere con il processo. L’altra opzione è quella di dividere il file utilizzando uno splitter WXR.

Quando si avvia l’importazione, è possibile assegnare i contenuti importati a un utente esistente o creare un nuovo utente.

È inoltre disponibile l’opzione per importare file allegati. È necessario selezionare questa casella per importare correttamente i file immagine.

Import options

Passo 4: Importare i colleghi del blogroll

Se avete utilizzato la caratteristica Links sul vostro blog WordPress.com per memorizzare il blogroll o altri collegamenti, dovete seguire queste istruzioni per importarli. Gli utenti che non hanno utilizzato questa caratteristica possono passare al passaggio 5.

WordPress non supporta in modo nativo la caratteristica del blogroll. Se non avete troppi colleghi nel vostro blogroll, consultate la nostra guida su come add-on i link del blogroll in WordPress senza usare un plugin.

Tuttavia, se avete troppi colleghi o volete mantenere la funzionalità del blogroll, continuate a leggere.

I link del blogroll vengono esportati in formato OPML. Si tratta di un formato XML che permette di esportare e importare i link e le categorie di link. I vostri colleghi di WordPress.com hanno un file OPML che si trova a un indirizzo come questo:

http://example.wordpress.com/wp-links-opml.php

Sostituite l’esempio con il sottodominio del vostro blog WordPress.com.

Se si utilizza un dominio personalizzato con il proprio sito web WordPress.com, è possibile accedere al file OPML visitando un URL come questo:

http://www.example.com/wp-links-opml.php

Il file OPML si aprirà nella finestra del browser e dovrà essere salvato sul desktop. Premere CTRL+S (Command+S su Mac) per salvare il file sul computer.

Blogroll export file

Ora che avete un backup dei vostri colleghi di WordPress.com, il passo successivo è importarli in WordPress. Tuttavia, WordPress ospitato all’esterno non ha un gestore di link abilitato di default.

È necessario installare e attivare il plugin Link Manager. La pagina del plugin dice che non viene aggiornato da molti anni. Questo perché non ha avuto bisogno di aggiornamenti e potete installare questo plugin con fiducia.

Dopo l’attivazione, il plugin aggiunge alla barra di amministrazione di WordPress una nuova voce di menu con l’etichetta ‘Links’.

Link manager enabled in WordPress

Successivamente, è necessario installare e attivare il plugin OPML Importer. Questo plugin abilita un nuovo strumento di importazione che permette di importare i link del blogroll.

Dopo l’attivazione, è necessario visitare la pagina Strumenti ” Importazione e fare clic sul collega “Esegui importatore” sotto l’importatore di blogroll.

Blogroll importer

Nella pagina di importazione del blogroll, è necessario effettuare l’upload del file OPML salvato in precedenza.

Fare clic sul pulsante “Scegli file” per selezionare il file, quindi fare clic sul pulsante “Importa file OPML” per continuare.

Importing blogroll

WordPress importerà ora i link e le categorie di colleghi dal file OPML.

Sarà possibile vedere l’avanzamento e, al completamento, verrà visualizzato il messaggio di successo.

Successful completion of blogroll link import

Fase 5: impostazione del blog WordPress.com come privato

Ora, se non volete reindirizzare i vecchi utenti al nuovo sito, questo sarà il passo finale.

Per prima cosa, visitate la dashboard di WordPress.com del vostro vecchio blog. Dal menu di sinistra, fate clic su Impostazioni “ Menu Generale e scendete fino alla sezione “Privacy”.

Set WordPress,.com blog to Private

Da qui, è necessario selezionare l’opzione “Privato” e poi fare clic sul pulsante “Salva impostazioni”.

In questo modo il vostro vecchio blog WordPress.com diventerà privato e sarà visibile solo a voi o ad altri utenti connessi da voi approvati.

Attenzione: Se scrivete da tempo e avete un pubblico fedele, non ha senso lasciarlo in sospeso.

Inoltre, se il vostro blog è in circolazione da tempo, è probabile che sia indicizzato da Google e da altri motori di ricerca.

È possibile mantenere tutte le posizioni nei motori di ricerca e reindirizzare facilmente i vecchi utenti al nuovo blog seguendo il passaggio 6 (altamente consigliato se il sito è già consolidato).

Passo 6: reindirizzare i visitatori e preservare la SEO

La reindirizzazione degli utenti alla nuova posizione con l’header 301 è una soluzione standard per mantenere le classifiche di ricerca durante lo spostamento di un sito da un luogo all’altro.

Poiché non avete accesso al file .htaccess su WordPress.com, non potete apportare alcuna modifica per mantenere il posizionamento sui motori di ricerca.

Tuttavia, WordPress.com offre una caratteristica di aggiornamento a pagamento chiamata “Reindirizza sito”, che fornisce questa funzionalità.

Basta andare alla pagina Reindirizza sito. Se avete più siti su WordPress.com, vi verrà chiesto quale desiderate reindirizzare.

Select blog to redirect

Nello schermo successivo, vi verrà chiesto di fornire il nome del dominio a cui volete reindirizzare i visitatori. Inserite il dominio del vostro nuovo sito WordPress.org e fate clic sul pulsante Vai.

Nota: Reindirizza sito è un aggiornamento a pagamento e costa 13 dollari all’anno. Aggiunge un reindirizzamento 301, che reindirizza i visitatori del vostro blog WordPress.com e i motori di ricerca al vostro nuovo sito.

Purchase site redirect from WordPress.com to WordPress.org

Alcuni di voi si chiederanno: per quanto tempo devo continuare a pagare per questa caratteristica di reindirizzamento fuori sede?

La risposta è: per tutto il tempo che volete. Tuttavia, due anni sono sufficienti per permettere ai vecchi utenti di memorizzare il nuovo dominio.

Se state cambiando dominio, un’altra cosa da fare è aggiornare tutti gli URL degli articoli. Se i vostri articoli sono stati collegati tra loro, questi collegamenti devono essere aggiornati. Potete utilizzare il nostro articolo su come aggiornare gli URL quando si sposta il sito WordPress.

Se avete un dominio personalizzato su WordPress.com, non dovete preoccuparvi. È sufficiente modificare il record DNS del vostro host per mantenere tutti i vantaggi SEO.

Domande frequenti (FAQ)

Abbiamo scritto la prima versione di questo articolo nel gennaio 2013. Da allora, abbiamo ricevuto tonnellate di domande fantastiche. Abbiamo risposto a molte di esse via email o nei commenti, quindi abbiamo pensato che sarebbe stato bello raccogliere quelle più popolari in un unico posto dove tutti possono vederle.

Cosa succede ai miei abbonati a WordPress.com?

Fortunatamente, WordPress.com consente di migrare gli abbonati a una condizione. Dovete usare il loro plugin Jetpack, che aggiunge la stessa funzionalità di abbonamento che avevate su WordPress.com.

Una volta installato e attivato il plugin Jetpack, dovrete contattare il team di WordPress.com e chiedere di migrare gli abbonati per voi. Ci auguriamo che nelle versioni successive di Jetpack questa operazione diventi più semplice e che gli utenti siano in grado di farlo da soli.

Potete aiutarmi a passare da WordPress.com a WordPress.org in modo gratuito?

Assolutamente sì. Offriamo la migrazione da WordPress.com come parte del nostro servizio gratuito di configurazione di blog WordPress. Se avete bisogno della nostra assistenza, iscrivetevi. È gratuito :)

Quali sono i costi del passaggio a WordPress.org?

WordPress è gratuito. Tuttavia, ci sono alcuni costi minimi per l’hosting web. Vi consigliamo di leggere questo articolo su: Perché WordPress è gratuito? Quali sono i costi e quali sono le fregature?

Ho già pagato WordPress.com. Posso ottenere un rimborso?

Sì, è possibile. Se avete recentemente acquistato un dominio personalizzato o un piano a pagamento da WordPress.com, potete chiedere un rimborso completo.

Nota: le registrazioni di dominio possono essere annullate entro 48 ore dalla registrazione, mentre i piani e gli altri acquisti possono essere annullati entro 30 giorni dall’acquisto.

Le mie immagini si romperanno?

No, non è così. Quando si trasferisce utilizzando il file di importazione, tutte le immagini allegate vengono scaricate e il collega viene aggiornato.

Tuttavia, abbiamo notato un’avvertenza. Se l’URL delle immagini inizia con files.wordpress.com, le immagini non verranno convertite. Se notate che l’URL delle immagini non è stato modificato e punta ancora a WordPress.com, vi consigliamo di utilizzare il plugin Importa immagini esterne, che se ne occuperà.

Ho registrato il mio dominio tramite WordPress.com. Posso ancora spostarmi?

Sì, è possibile. WordPress crede nella possibilità di dare agli utenti il controllo completo dei loro contenuti. Se avete già un dominio su WordPress.com, tutto ciò che vi serve è un account di hosting web.

Vi consigliamo di effettuare l’impostazione con Bluehost o con uno di questi altri fornitori di hosting WordPress. Durante la fase di registrazione, vi verrà chiesto se avete un dominio o se volete registrarne uno nuovo.

È sufficiente selezionare l’opzione “Ho un nome di dominio” e inserire il dominio registrato su WordPress.com.

La prossima cosa da fare è cambiare i nameserver in modo che puntino al fornitore di hosting. Possiamo assistervi in questa operazione nell’ambito del nostro servizio gratuito di configurazione. Potete anche chiedere assistenza al vostro fornitore di hosting.

Il mio sito web va giù quando cambio?

Se lo fate correttamente, allora NO. Il metodo che vi abbiamo suggerito sopra garantirà che il vostro sito web non vada mai giù. Se siete preoccupati, sappiate che siamo qui per aiutarvi. Potete utilizzare il nostro servizio di configurazione gratuito in qualsiasi momento.

Posso aggiungere un negozio online al mio sito web WordPress.org?

Sì, potete aggiungere facilmente un negozio online al vostro sito web WordPress.org ospitato in esterno senza costi aggiuntivi. Dato che Bluehost e altri host web popolari offrono certificati SSL gratuiti, è sufficiente installare un plugin per WordPress e-commerce per aggiungere un negozio online.

Quali sono i plugin WordPress indispensabili che consigliate?

Ora che siete passati a WordPress.org esterno, potete installare tutti i plugin che volete.

Ecco la nostra scelta consigliata:

  • AIOSEO – per migliorare il posizionamento SEO del vostro sito web (utilizzato da 3 milioni di siti).
  • WPForms – per add-on un modulo di contatto intelligente sul vostro sito web (utilizzato da 6 milioni di siti).
  • SeedProd – per personalizzare facilmente le landing page con il builder trascina e rilascia – funziona con tutti i temi di WordPress.
  • MonsterInsights – per vedere come le persone trovano e utilizzano il vostro sito web. È un must per blogger e piccoli imprenditori.
  • PushEngage – per connettersi con i visitatori dopo che hanno lasciato il sito web.
  • Duplicatore – per creare backup giornalieri del vostro nuovo sito web in caso di emergenza.
  • OptinMonster – per aiutarvi a ottenere più iscritti alle email e ad avere successo nel vostro percorso di blog.

Oltre a questi, vi consigliamo di dare un’occhiata alla nostra selezione di esperti dei plugin WordPress indispensabili e degli strumenti di blogging utili per gestire e far crescere il vostro blog.

È possibile installare tutti questi plugin dall’interno della propria Bacheca di WordPress. Abbiamo creato una guida passo-passo sull’installazione di un plugin di WordPress.

Voglio cambiare il tema di WordPress del mio sito, posso farlo?

Sì, potete cambiare il vostro tema WordPress in qualsiasi momento. Un altro grande vantaggio del passaggio a WordPress.org è che si ottengono ulteriori opzioni personalizzate e una più ampia collezione di temi tra cui scegliere.

Nella barra laterale dell’amministrazione di WordPress, fate clic sul menu a discesa Aspetto e selezionate “Temi” per installare un tema.

Abbiamo selezionato alcuni dei migliori temi per aiutare gli utenti a evitare la paralisi della scelta. Consultate la nostra guida sui migliori temi gratuiti per blog e sui migliori temi multiuso per WordPress.

Si consiglia di consultare anche la nostra guida su come cambiare correttamente un tema di WordPress.

Speriamo che questo articolo vi abbia aiutato a spostare correttamente il vostro blog da WordPress.com a WordPress.org. Potreste anche consultare la nostra lista di controllo delle cose più importanti da fare dopo l’installazione di WordPress e la nostra guida definitiva su come aumentare il traffico del vostro blog.

Se questo articolo vi è piaciuto, iscrivetevi al nostro canale YouTube per le esercitazioni video su WordPress. Potete trovarci anche su Twitter e Facebook.

Divulgazione: I nostri contenuti sono sostenuti dai lettori. Ciò significa che se cliccate su alcuni dei nostri link, potremmo guadagnare una commissione. Vedi come WPBeginner è finanziato , perché è importante e come puoi sostenerci. Ecco il nostro processo editoriale .

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Editorial Staff at WPBeginner is a team of WordPress experts led by Syed Balkhi with over 16 years of experience in WordPress, Web Hosting, eCommerce, SEO, and Marketing. Started in 2009, WPBeginner is now the largest free WordPress resource site in the industry and is often referred to as the Wikipedia for WordPress.

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Reader Interactions

1.231 commentiLascia una risposta

  1. Marlene

    Thanks for this post!

    I have a question which I didn’t see covered (if it was, sorry for the repeat!).

    I have a blog that is currently on WordPress.com, but I registered a domain THROUGH WordPress.com. Now that my blog is growing, I want to switch to WordPress.org. But I want to keep the name “jadeandfern.com”. Since the domain was purchased through wp.com, how do I keep it when switching over?

    • Editorial Staff

      Marlene,

      You would need to purchase hosting through Bluehost or another provider. During the process choose the option to use an existing domain (which would be your domain). Once setup, go to WordPress.com domain management and change the nameservers to point to the hosting provider. Alternatively, you can also transfer the domain out.

      Admin

      • Piotr Pluta

        Did just that, i.e. got a Bluehost account and used the ‘existing domain’ option. Where do I find the name Bluehost name servers?

        Thanks

        • Editorial Staff

          It is in your email receipt. Usually looks like: ns1.bluehost.com and ns2.bluehost.com

      • Monica

        Hi!

        I have done just what this person has done, I have a nameserver in my receipt, but I am not finding where I input that in the domain menu on WordPress. Help! :)

        Thanks in advance,
        Monica

        • Editorial Staff

          Store > Domain (scroll to the bottom). You should see an option to create a new password along with the customer ID. Create the new password. Then use the customer ID and the new password to login to the domain panel using the link that is also on that page.

          Then you will see a Godaddy style domain manager where you would need to click on the domain, and then edit the nameservers.

  2. Holly

    I’m wanting to move to self-hosted (from wordpress.com) and I’m considering the Free WP Blog Setup. I figured there would be less frustration for me.
    I’m wondering what the downtime would be for my site. Also, is there a catch?

    • Editorial Staff

      There is no downtime. The way we do setup, we migrate all the data first, so when you switch the user will either see the new site or the old site (which are both identical). The only thing you have to do is stop publication for 24 hour period :)

      Admin

      • Holly

        Thanks! I think it is almost done. The transfer was easy for me and it sounds like it save me a ton of headache that others have experienced. It took me a while to figure out how to change the nameserver but that is done now.

  3. Liz @ I Heart Vegetables

    I’m so excited about this! You guys have made it so simple! I’m just SO scared of accidentally erasing my blog! When I install wordpress.org, to my domain name, is it going to erase everything from my old domain? Or would I still be able to access it at example.wordpress.com just in case something goes wrong? I’m SO scared of losing all my content!

    • Editorial Staff

      You would still be able to access everything on example.wordpress.com. You are not deleting any old content, so you can revert back at anytime.

      Admin

  4. Alexis Girault

    Hey all,

    Thanks for your article, I think it will be very usefull.

    Before I start transfering my website, I wanted to know if the theme I am using right now, the designs, and the customizations I made will be saved and transfered too? And if not, if you know any way to do it?

    Thanks a lot.

    • Editorial Staff

      No the themes do not transfer over. You would have to find the theme and install it separately. You would have to re-add the widgets and such as well.

      Admin

      • Alesis Girault

        Ok thanks, but if the design was free on wordpress.com, is it available too on wordpress.org?

      • Alexis Girault

        Thank you for your answer.

        Can I install the same theme I was using on wordpress.com if it was a free theme? What I mean is, are those themes&designs also available on wordpress.org?

        Thank you.

  5. Michael

    Hii. Of all the posts i have read on migration to .org, this is certainly the best by all standards.
    I have a similar challenge like Stacey. Firstly what is a nameserver?

    Secondly, i have a ….wordpress.com blog. I do not plan on changing anything. I just want to move my contents to .org. In this case, do i have to do any redirect?

    Lastly, will my new url end with “.com or .org?

    I would really appreciate it if you can help me with these 3 questions the way you have helped other readers of your awesome post.

    • Bill

      A nameserver is what is used to point a domain to a hosting account. They generally come in pairs and look like this:
      ns1.example.com
      ns2.example.com

      If you have a .com blog you want to host on WordPress.org, you will need a hosting account which means you will need a domain name for hosting. It can end in whatever you wish it to end in. Whether it is whatever.com or whatever.org You have almost total freedom over what domain you register.

      The only real redirect you would need to do is to point you domain to your hosting account at the host. Most hosting companies, will do this for you if you register your domain through them.

      As far as moving the site, a good web hosting company can move the site for you for free within the first 30 or so days of the account.

  6. Eugenio

    Hi,

    Your blog is great! Thanks indeed for your services. So, yesterday I decided to make an affiliations with amazon for my blog http://semanto.me It turned out that you cannot doing untill you’re on WP.COM ; so after looking through the web I finally found your guide. It took 5 hours to start completing successfully the shifting to WP.ORG

    -The blog was hosted on wp.com first level domain with a (.me)
    – I decided to move the blog on wp.org
    – I followed your guide
    – I changed the host-name to bluehost (using your cookie)
    – the WP.ORG site is on when I digit semanto.me
    – this morning I woke up and going to .me site but it redirected me to the old wp.com blog
    – so i thought it was about transfering, then I start to do the steps for transfering
    – I realized that my . me domain is not supported by bluehost, so I couldn’t transfer the domain to it, but just redirect it
    – but now again semanto.me now redirect me again (but slowly) to the new wp.org blog on bluehost

    QUESTION:

    1 Do I have to make the redirect 301 through wp.com, or change other settings on wp.com ? Like now it’s public, should I turn it back on private through the wp.com dashboard or do other stuff?

    2 Also, what I have to do to have a faster access to the contents? (I’ve already put supercache)

    3 If bluehost doesn’t allow the transfer of the domain .me; should I keep my domain with wp.com or should I change host ? (consider that I’ve already payed a 3 year subscription with bluehost, so I cannot move to another host again and keep all in the same place)

    4 What is the best plugin to manage Amazon affiliations (I’d like to change the link if my visitor is from EU (UK; IT; SP; FR; DE) – or in US)

    Thanks for your support!

    Best,
    Eugenio

    • Editorial Staff

      The best way to do this would be to change the nameservers and point that to Bluehost. It’s upto you to leave the domain at WP.com or move to another more affordable registrar like NameCheap or Godaddy.

      Admin

      • Eugenio

        Thanks, I’ll do it before the expiring date….

        I know it’s OT, but:

        – what I have to do to have a faster access to the contents? (I’ve already put supercache)
        – What is the best plugin to manage Amazon affiliations (I’d like to change the link if my visitor is from EU (UK; IT; SP; FR; DE) – or in US)

        Best,
        Eugenio

        • Editorial Staff

          Speed optimization is a very broad subject. It has to do with the plugins, themes, and the server. All 3 can have an impact on your performance. As for amazon plugins, we can’t recommend any that changes links for each country.

  7. Raj

    I have already moved my wordpress.com blog to self hosted domain. But I am unable to add plugins and other stuufs.

    Shall I move my original blog from wordpress.com to wordpress.org?

    OR what should I do?

    • Editorial Staff

      Custom domain upgrade doesn’t enable plugins. You have to move to a self-hosted WordPress site which requires following this process.

      Admin

  8. Barbara Hughes

    Hello!

    I just successfully moved a rather massive blog from wordpress.com to my own domain on Hostgator. It turns out that I couldn’t do it without Hostgator’s advice, through numerous emails with their Migration expert.

    The problem I encountered was that the blog is darn large, so that it didn’t get imported in one try. I tried twice and still nothing changed on the new blog, except that I did notice images getting imported. They just weren’t attached to any posts.

    Unlike your instructions, which say that the maximum file size is 2MB, when I went to import, Wordpress told me my maximum file size is 64MB. Since my XML file was only 5.8 MB, I figured I was good to go.

    But when it didn’t work, I panicked and tried to get help from Hostgator. They told me the best thing to do would be to have them import the file for me. Also, unlike your instructions, they do NOT offer temporary lifting of their size restrictions on shared servers. They do that only for dedicated servers.

    When they got to my ticket and offered to import the file, they told me that they’d also have to install a fresh version of WordPress… but I had just done that! Not only that, I had already begun to modify the new theme. So that wasn’t an option. Then the expert told me something. She said, “The upload max filesize is 64MB. However this doesn’t mean that the size of the import file was not a factor when it did not import correctly. Sometimes an import needs to be attempted multiple times before all data is successfully imported. This has more to do with the PHP memory limit, which is 256MB on shared plans. When an import has succeeded, WordPress will print, “All done. Have fun!” If this output never occurs then the import needs to be re-attempted.

    I ended up doing the import myself, and I lost track of how many times I tried after 10+. It took maybe 15 attempts to reimport the whole blog. Each time, I could see that new data was being added (in this case, a massive number of images) as the importer did its thing, so I could tell that progress was being made and I just needed to persevere.

    So I think that you’d really be doing your readers a service if you addressed the issue of very large blogs. You should emphasize that it may take many multiples of attempts to import, and might have more to do with the PHP MEMORY LIMIT on shared hosting, rather than on any file size limits. You should also alert people to the fact that the message “All done. Have fun!” is output when the process is complete. Because I didn’t know these things in advance, I panicked unnecessarily. Your instructions make it sound like this is just a one-two click and you’re done process. It IS simple, but make sure people know what to expect in terms of how many times they’ll have to keep doing it, and there’s nothing wrong if they do!

    Additionally, I would suspect that more hosts than just Hostgator will refuse to temporarily lift any size restrictions on shared hosting.

    Thanks for listening!

    • Paul Brodie

      Thank you for this comment Barbara!

      I followed these instructions and after I clicked import it sat for a while and then the main screen in the dashboard went blank. The toolbar remained, so I assumed it was done importing. I started clicking around and customizing things and found that only my first two months of archived posts came over to display, but all of my posts and pages were accessible through the dashboard. I reread the instructions here and then the comments. Your comment comforted my fears.

      I reran the import, and as my xml file isn’t very large (just under 2MB) it took on the second try.

      Thank you very much, you saved me a lot of hassle!

      • Barbara Hughes

        I’m glad at least one person was helped by my comment, Paul!

        It would be great if they changed their instructions here on this page, because obviously this is iimportant enough to include… but they haven’t done it yet, so I hope others find this. It’s a simple enough problem to solve, but if you don’t know enough to expect it, you’ll go through a ton of hassle like I did!

  9. Barbara Hughes

    OK… I need to know what’s going on. I have followed every instruction to the letter. I set up a new installation of WordPress on my domain, I exported from wordpress.com and imported to my new domain. I chose to export ALL CONTENT and all attachments. The XML file that was created took almost no time to download, and the file size is 5,981 KB. This is for posts that go all the way back to August 2010.

    The result of importing is that I have 339 images that are unattached, and no posts, no categories, no nothing. The importing took about 5 minutes. The dialog box I was shown said my maximum file size was 64 MB, not 2 MB.

    I don’t understand. I followed each step so carefully. Where is everything?

    • Editorial Staff

      Did you get the error before that sais unable to import author? Usually this happens when the export file is corrupted in WordPress.com. Out of all the users we have helped, 3 have had this issue. For one user, we were able to import the content by importing one post type at a time. So we import only posts, then only pages, etc.

      For another user, we turned on Jetpack, and the importer magically worked fine.

      For the third user, we were unable to get it to work. We sent an email to WordPress.com, and never heard back.

      WPBeginner is an unofficial resource site, and we are not connected to WordPress.com (automattic). We hope that one of the tricks above works for you. IF not, then try getting in touch with support folks at WordPress.com

      Admin

      • Barbara Hughes

        Hello!

        I did not see this message prior to writing my message above, which resolved my problems. I do feel that you need to modify your instructions slightly to account for situations like mine.

        Thank you for posting these instructions!

  10. John McAndrew

    Can I have more than 1 wp.org site I have 1 wp.org website, and 1 wp.com blog can I move the blog to an additional wp.org website both have self hosted domains. I also have purchased a third address which I would like one of the sites to link to. Am I expecting too much?

  11. Dwayne

    I am planning to learn WordPress this summer and thought it would be a good opportunity to start blogging and basically chronicle my adventure. The next step i think would be to create my portfolio with WordPress and migrate to that site instead of WordPress.com. The thought came of how i would migrate those blog postings to the new site when the time came. I went googling for answers and found your post. Thanks for the info and i shall now be adding this link to Delicious :)

  12. Theresa Frederick

    I recently changed from host gator to a new company which i thought was a hosting company. At hostgator i was using Joomla which i paid someone to set up for me. At this new company i got word press and it is much easier to use. The problem is that it is set up as a blogging site and i want a website with blogging facilities which is different.

    I want static pages etc but the new hosting company says it is not just a hosting company but it offers other services which i accept but in my site some of the things have been disable e.g. i cannot import plugins, export anything, background and header are removed, you cannot change or customize themes, there is no colour wheel to name a few.

    This is what i am looking for – a theme that will allow me to have widgets on some pages and not others so i can run it as a website, someone to help me transfer my website to this new theme and web hosting. i do not understand the conversation with .org or com but i was concerned in that some one of them said you were not allowed plugings- i need to be able to download plugins that i require. can you recommend something for me.

    • Editorial Staff

      Hey Theresa,

      Which hosting company did you switch to? Yes, you need to have WordPress.org to get everything that you are looking for.

      You would also have to use Widget Logic or another plugin of that sort to control which widget shows up where.

      Admin

  13. Mellers

    quick question:
    I have a custom domain name with my wp.com account, so would I still need a re-direct method if I’m not changing it?

    • Editorial Staff

      No you don’t need the redirect option. You would simply change the nameservers on your domain.

      Admin

  14. maaike

    great post! it helped me to make the desicion to finally move ;-).

    and the move went very well! Exactly as you described and so easy!!

    Thanks!

    Only thing I am not sure about is how to move my existing followers…

      • maaike

        Thanks.
        It worked perfectly that way!
        :-))

  15. Viney Dhiman

    thanks for the tutorial, but I’m looking for tutorial about How to import and make 301 redirection from one Wordpress blog to another without loosing any ranking

    if you have anytutorial on that please share with me a link :(

  16. Saima

    I’ve done all of the above for my blog LDNshopaholic.com – apart from the make this private – is this a must?

    I can’t figure out how being self-hosted has made a difference, my admin login just takes me to wordpress.com and logs me in as it did before I did any of this.

    Any help would be much appreciated!

    Thanks :-)

    • Editorial Staff

      Hey Saima,

      While your admin panel will look similar, it is definitely different. You should be seeing a new menu like Plugins. You should also see more features under other menus as well. As for making it private, it is not necessary. However if you care about SEO, then it is. The best solution is to get offsite redirect from WP.com unless you were using the same domain. If you were using the same domain, then you are good to go.

      Admin

  17. Fifi

    Hi guys, thanks for the tutorials. I’m in the process too and need a little clarification.

    When I purchased a subdomain update (premium) for my blog, I got offered a free .com site. What I need is a .com site that allows me to upload and use wordpress plugins. Should I go ahead and accept this and then point this new .com site to the old one?

    1. Will doing this change my address to mysitename.com automatically or is there more I need to do?

    2. Will I be able to use plugins with this new mysitename.com?

    Thanks in advance

    • Editorial Staff

      Even if you get the .com upgrade from WordPress.com, you still will NOT be able to use plugins.

      Admin

  18. Rachel

    Hello. Great tutorial! If I sign up with Bluehost with you, you will transfer for me for FREE? Can I use a theme of my choice if I choose to have you transfer? Thanks!

  19. Bill

    What about themes? Is there any way to move the theme over if I bought one that I am using on wp.com?

    • Editorial Staff

      Unfortunately that is not possible. However most paid themes that are available on WordPress.com are usually available to purchase for WordPress.org as well. You would have to repurchase the theme.

      Admin

  20. Stacey

    Thank you – this is the most helpful tutorial I’ve read. I have one important question before I go through with it though. My current blog is hosted on Wordpress.com. I understand one option is to redirect, but instead can I move my blog to Wordpress.org and keep the same domain name/URL? (In other words, I have http://www.staceyalevine.com – can I keep that and move it to wordpress.org?) Thank you!

    • Editorial Staff

      Yes you can keep that same domain. All you have to do is change the nameservers to the new host.

      Admin

  21. Erin

    Thanks for a great tutorial! I had been putting off a transfer thinking it would take a long time, but it was pretty straight forward.

    I had my own domain and just transferred the name servers over. I’m still waiting for the changes to propogate, but I had a question on my images. I had all my images hosted through wordpress.com previously. I chose to export then import into my new wordpress.org hosted site – what happens if someone was linking to my images from the wordpress site or they were indexed in google images. Would these show up as broken images. Do I need to do the redirect service so this won’t happen?

    Thanks!

    • Editorial Staff

      During the export/import, all images are migrated. Since you are using the same domain, nothing will break.

      Admin

  22. Candace Jo

    Help! I have my own domain name and host through blue host. Transferring my blog from wordpress.com to wordpress.org I am all set to complete the process but I do not know what to do to shut down the .com ? I am confused! Please help! Thank you!

    • Editorial Staff

      The best course of action is to do a off-site redirect to preserve the SEO rankings.

      Admin

  23. Brandi Domin

    Hello, I have a couple of questions. I just purchased Bluehost account. I currently already have a Wordpress blog thehealthyflavor.com. I want to change my theme and just simply transfer everything currently to the new design/theme which is a Wordpress upgraded theme. Do I do this before I do the whole Wordpress install transfer thing to self-hosting? Or do I do it all after I transfer?
    Also, I’m no longer going to use thehealthyflavor.com but instead TheVegan8.com which I just got today when I purchased a Bluehost account…I selected purchase a new domain.
    How do I transfer a new theme and new domain name without messing everything up…basically what order do I do this in? Thank you so much!

    • Editorial Staff

      You would follow the same steps. In the last steps, simply point the old domain to the new one.

      Admin

  24. Steve Scroggs

    What if you first downloaded wordpress.org and then later connected with free wordpress.com?
    do i have to go through all of the same steps to put is all back under the .org?
    Thanks for your insight.

  25. Shirsha

    Great tutorial. Helped me immensely with my move from wordpress.com to wordpress.org.

    I do have a couple of questions though – I purchased the site redirect package and now if you type in the old blog name, it redirects you to the new site, which is fine. However, I still get emails saying “XYZ subscribed to the [Old Blog Name]”. Is that normal? Shouldn’t the messages be reading as “XYZ subscribed to the [New Blog Name]?

    Also, since I have purchased the site redirect package, should I be making my wp.com blog private or even opting for search engines to not index the site?

    • Editorial Staff

      The redirect upgrade takes care of everything. If you connect your new site with Jetpack, you can ask the WordPress.com staff to move your subscribers to the new site.

      Admin

  26. Julio Moreno

    This is what I did:
    I signed up for Dreamhost and clicked that I already owned a domain (so I didn’t get a new domain). I have already purchased (travelworldheritage.com) from wordpress.com.
    Then I did a wordpress.org install. When it asked what domain, I picked the one I already owned. [Currently, I am still updating and working on the site through wordpress.com.]
    I got a link through my email that the installation was successful, but when I click on that link, it directs me to my old subdomained site (http://juliosworldmarvels.wordpress.com/wp-admin/install.php) website which isn’t even the one I use now since I bought a domain. It also says “oops that page cannot be found.”

    I am super confused.
    1) I can still update my site through wordpress.com. But my dreamhost account says that the site is not “fully hosted.” Which site really is hosting my site right now?
    2) Why don’t the links that dreamhost sent me work? Did I miss something?

    • Editorial Staff

      You cannot work and update the site from WordPress.com. The moment you decide to switch, you have to stop all updates. Download the export file. Point the DNS of your domain to your hosting provider in this case (Dreamhost). Then install WordPress and import everything. Once done, your site is ready to use.

      From this point on, you will login to your site to manage and do updates (not WordPress.com).

      Admin

  27. Ann

    Thank you, thank you, thank you so much for this! My current webhost is Namecheap. I would love to switch over to Bluehost because I keep hearing such great things about it. Is there an easy way to do that?

    Thanks again for your time!

  28. ke wang

    hi, thanks for your tutorial!
    i have couple questions.
    1, i ow a domain of my old wordpress.com site. how can i transfer it to my new wordpress.org site? i got the domain from godaddy.
    2. i paid $99 for that wordpress.com site. can i get it back?
    thanks for you help.

    • Editorial Staff

      Hey,

      1. All you have to do is point the nameservers on your Godaddy account to your new host (Bluehost, or whichever one you decide to go with). They will be able to assist you with that.

      2. You can ask them to see if they would refund you, but we cannot make any guarantees.

      Admin

  29. Allie

    So right now I have a wordpress.com site (www.lovexcess.net) & as you can see, I’ve purchased a custom domain from wordpress.com. I’m now wondering… doesn’t that make wordpress.com my host? or do I need an additional host? I’m confused. I want to transfer for more customization of my website. I want the same domain name also.

    • Editorial Staff

      Yes that makes WordPress.com your host, but as a host they have restrictions. They are not like other web hosts that give you full control. If you want more customization, then you would have to find a new host. Yes, you can use the same domain on the new host like Bluehost.

      Admin

  30. Eliz

    Hello, great tutorial. Very clear. Thank you.

    Question: I was confused about one thing. Do I have to use the Offsite redirect feature if I am transferring the exact domain name like http://www.blogsite.com from WordPress.com to Wordpress.org. Also, would I still need to set my site on wordpress.com to private if I am using the same domain?

    I haven’t even started my blog yet, I’m just doing all my research first. Deciding on wordpress.com or wordpress.org.

    Thank you!

    • Editorial Staff

      You don’t need the offsite redirect if you are transferring custom domain like yoursite.com.

      Admin

    • Lucila

      Hello
      Tks a lot for the tutorial. I have transfer my blog to .org and everything seems to be ok, unless the “likes” and “twitts” i had on every post (the number of them) had all gone :( And i had posts with more than a 100 likes. Is it possible to transfer also this to .org?

      • Editorial Staff

        Hey Lucila,

        If you were using the subdomain and have switched to your own domain now, then yes you will lose the tweets. If you are on the same domain, then you shouldn’t lose them. As for Likes, you would need to use the Jetpack plugin, and contact the WordPress.com staff to see if they would be able to move all your subscribers and likes from the .com account to .org account that is using Jetpack.

        Admin

        • Lucila

          Tks a lot for ur answer.

  31. daisy

    Hello,
    Thank you for the post.
    There is something I’m not sure I understand though:
    If I want a custom design (editing CSS or changing theme to a theme that isn’t on the Wordpress.com site) I will have to pay anyway ?

    I mean, if I stay on wp.com, I’ll have to pay for tweaking my code.
    Besides, if I go to wp.org, I’ll have to pay for a hosting.

    So basically I’ll have to pay any way.

    Sorry this is confusing I’m still young and english is not my native language so I may have done some mistakes :P

    • Editorial Staff

      Hey Daisy,

      With WordPress.com, you are limited to the themes that they have made available. With WordPress.org, you can get many other free themes. If you get commercial themes, then yes you have to pay. However, you don’t have to pay anything to modify an existing theme. You can also modify much more than just CSS.

      Just to modify an existing theme’s CSS, you have to pay WordPress.com for that upgrade.

      Yes, you will have to pay for hosting. But for most small sites, a simple $3.95 / month plan of Bluehost would work. Let’s say you use WordPress.com, buy their custom domain ($17 per year), pay for ad-free option ($29.97 per year), and get custom design upgrade ($30 per year). That total is $76.97, and you are still not in full control.

      For WordPress.org, you can use Bluehost (officially recommended by WordPress) which costs $3.95 per month so $47.4 per year, and it includes a free domain name.

      You are also free to place all type of advertisement on your site and earn money.

      Admin

      • Amy

        But what if you bought your domain name for the 18 or $26 a year? Do you still have to pay that after transferring to wordpress.org?? Or do you only have to pay the Bluehost fee? I just don’t understand the domain transfer, how do I do it with Bluehost?? Thanks!! -Amy

        • Editorial Staff

          I believe there is a transfer fee. You can ask the Bluehost folks to confirm it.
          -Syed

  32. vecoya

    Do the stats (blog hits) transfer when you export your blog from wordpress.com to wordpress.org?

      • vecoya

        Okay thanks. I may wait and pay for the guided transfer. While I was waiting on your reply, I found under the WP Guided Transfer FAQ that the stats do transfer. I also asked BlueHost if the stats transfer and they indicated that they do. I wonder what’s the difference between the stats transferring and not transferring …… maybe it’s if you take the export route.

  33. Pete

    Hi guys,

    Just wondering if you do the transfer to wpengine – because I can’t find that option in the drop down menu when selecting the web host? Cheers

  34. Paul Mountney

    I have a question about the sign up process with BlueHost.com. I’ve got a domain name for my website, but i haven’t purchased it yet. I’m on the page where you pay for the service, and it has the line that shows the $3.95 charge for the monthly fee, plus 4 other, what i would call options, that you can pay for. It works out to about $85-90 a year, which isn’t that much, considering all they offer. I’m nervous about signing up for something like this that i’m not too sure about.

    OK, my question is: do i absolutely need all those other things to make my website active online, or can i go without them and get them later?

    • Editorial Staff

      Hey Paul,

      You don’t need any of the upsells. You simply need the hosting and that’s it.

      Admin

  35. Sandy

    Great tutorial. I think I did it right. The question I have right now (and there may be more), will the Wordpress.com blog “go away?” Right now, when I try to go to my new Wordpress.org site, it just takes me to the old .com one. Did I do something wrong, or do I just need to wait a while for everything to get into place. I just did the transfer, using BlueHost, half an hour ago.

    Thank you,
    Sandy

    • Editorial Staff

      Hey Sandy,

      Did you change the DNS (name server) of your domain? That can take from few hours upto 48 hours to propagate.

      Admin

      • Sandy

        No, I kept the same custom domain name that I had (purchased a few months ago) at Wordpress.com. Maybe I should give it a day or two?

        Thanks for your reply,
        Sandy

      • Sandy

        Okay, I knew I should have let you all do the moving of my blog from WP.com to WP.org. I think I’ve really messed it up.

        It still takes me to the old .com blog when I type in the URL (somewhereinthesand.com), and it’s now a day later. Also, the posts do not show on the Home page of the new site (they did yesterday), and some of the other things I did yesterday are not showing.

        I would really appreciate any help I can get. I’m sorry to be such a pain.

        Thank you so much,
        Sandy

  36. MArk

    Hi, I am fairly new to all this, but confused about one point. I currently have a blog running on wordpress.com http://serenephotographyblog.wordpress.com I never know of the differences between .com and .org until a few days ago. I managed to download wampserver and wordpress.org and have it all set up, with a new database but not sure if it is live online or even the http.
    I get the export thing from .com to .org but you mentioned hosting.
    I am not sure about this and would really need a bit of help.
    1 I dont know if my wordpress.com site already has a custom domain name. All i did was sign up with log in details, I have not bought anything from .com
    2 is wampserver a hosting company, for I have it installed on localhost (hope im making sense here, sorry) and database set up for new wordpress.org, but it is different files from my .com

    Basically I have installed wordpress through wampserver looking to transfer my .com to .org but not sure if i have a custom domain name or if I have a hosting company?

    Sorry if this all sounds foolish, but its genuine confusion on my part.

    Many thanks
    Mark

    • Editorial Staff

      Hey Mark,

      First of all no question is a stupid one. All of your concerns are fairly common and others have them too.

      1. No, you do not have a custom domain name. A custom domain name looks like wpbeginner.com. What you have is called a subdomain which looks like xyz.wordpress.com

      2. Yes, you will need a web hosting company. WAMP is a local server (i.e not connected to the internet). So only you can see your site. With web hosting, anyone in the world with internet access can see your site. Developers use WAMP or other local servers for testing and development purposes.

      https://www.wpbeginner.com/wordpress-hosting/ << Here is an article that will explain more about hosting. https://www.wpbeginner.com/how-to-install-wordpress/ << Here is an article on how to easily install WordPress

      Admin

      • Mark

        Hi Guys, many thanks for you reply. That has clarified a lot for me. Have signed up with bluehost and got domain, so the fun probably begins here!!

        Take care and your site is amazing, thank you again

  37. Jared

    Hi, I read that if you currently have private domain registration and you plan to transfer your blog and domain to wordpress.org, then you need to take your registration off private before you transfer your blog/domain?

  38. Pete

    Thankyou for this article. I have a custom domain from wordpress.com, so just to double-check… does your free setup service from wordpress.com to wordpress.org transfer this domain to the new wordpress.org site? I also want to keep my SEO and search ranking so do I need to purchase the site redirect or is that part of the setup service as well? Cheers

      • Pete

        Cheers, I’ve noticed that you recommend WPEngine as a Host provider, but it’s not actually an option in the drop-down menu for ‘Which host did you sign up with?’

  39. Zane

    Thank you for the useful article. I have 2 beginner questions concerning themes. If I have a free wordpress.com site that I move to self hosted site with wordpress.org, would the wordpress.com ad still be displayed at the bottom of the page?

    Also, if I am using a wordpress.com theme, won’t that theme still have its customization limitations that are imposed by wordpress.com’s free service? Or would I have to pick a new theme altogether? It doesn’t appear that the library of available themes is the same with wp.com and wp.org.

    • Editorial Staff

      Hey Zane,

      1. When you switch, the WordPress.com ads will no longer be there. You would be free to add your own ads if you choose to.

      2. If that theme is available on .org, then you would be able to use/customize it in any way you want. If it is not available for .org, then you would have to find another theme.

      Admin

  40. erricgunawan

    One other thing bothering when moving from WordPress.com to self-hosted WordPress is replacing the old URLs in the post content to the new URL domain.

    Here’s some tricks to overcome that:
    http://www.wikihow.com/Move-a-Wordpress-Blog-From-One-Domain-and-Host-to-Another
    http://gabrielharper.com/blog/2012/10/replace-changed-url-in-wordpress-posts/

    Or these plugins also could be useful:
    – Search & Replace
    – Velvet Blues Update URLs

    *Hope this won’t end in spam since I’ve posted some links :mrgreen:

    • Editorial Staff

      Updated the article :) Can’t believe we didn’t interlink one of our older articles that covered this :)

      Admin

  41. War Julian

    Thank you so much for this post!

    I’m a newbie yet I did it all perfectly because of your tutorial!

  42. Michael

    I’m confused. I successfully made this whole switch thing so I could (eventually) monetize my site. But I didn’t go from wordless.com to wordpress.org

    i went from

    talespinsbooks.wordpress.com to talespinsbooks.com (The latter has a web

    Is this the same thing? Thanks!

    • Michael

      sorry – typo!

      “But I didn’t go from wordpress.com to wordpress.org … “

  43. Danasia Fantastic

    Once you transfer your wordpress.com blog to your wordpress.org blog is the wordpress.com posts automatically published or can you pick and choose what to put up?

    • Editorial Staff

      All of your posts will be transferred over as they were on WordPress.com. So if they were published, then they will be transferred over as a published post (with the right published on date, comments, images, and everything).

      Admin

  44. Muhammed Abdullahi Tosin

    Thanks for this post. As you advised, if the Offsite Redirect is terminated after 2 years, the site viewers should have noted the new URL. But what happens to the pagerank?

    • Editorial Staff

      Google too would have transferred all the URL juice by then. But again, if you are worried, then you can keep it for as long as you want.

      Admin

  45. Asif Billah

    I have allso moved a wordpress this way. Only thing you have to remember is, that images dont allways gets exported.

    • Barbara

      Hmmm… Moderator, can you comment on this please? Under what circumstances would images not get exported? Thank you!

      • Editorial Staff

        All images gets imported from what we see unless you are linking to external images (i.e flickr image) because those external images stay on their respective sites.

        Admin

  46. Ryan Naylor

    Excellent tutorial. Good deal on the bluehost service too…they were the first hosting company I chose years ago and still prefer them over others because of their support staff.

  47. M Asif Rahman

    Nice and neat guide, nothing could go wrong for a new WP user now.

  48. zimbrul

    Moving WordPress site is a difficult business. I always relied on manual handling rather than on plugins. But to move a site with everything and preserve its functionality looks to me like a hit and miss thing.
    I think would be very interesting to have a series of articles about moving WordPress blof form local server to a live server, moving WordPress from one server to another server preserving the domain and moving to another domain and another server, etc.
    What I find tricky is the part with the database: renaming database and stuff and disabling and enabling cache plugins.

    • Editorial Staff

      Moving from WordPress.com to self-hosted is not that hard. The tutorial above shows you exactly how to do it. The sites you are talking about are not simple like WP.com sites which is why it can be tricky.

      Admin

  49. zack

    I have had problems in the past with importing large amounts of images. On several different hosts, and with upload limits changed accordingly, the import would hang aftef a few hundred images. I solved this by installing a local wordpress installation and iimporting my images to it.

    • Editorial Staff

      Thank you for sharing your experience because it will be handy for those who run into that issue. From our experience when we have migrated blogs from WordPress.com, we simply ask the host to temporarily increase the upload limit. This takes care of most problems.

      Admin

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