Duplicator can restore WordPress safely when you understand what it will overwrite. This method is best for moving or restoring a complete site from a known package.
Audience: site owners, developers, and agencies using package-based WordPress restore or migration. Use this with the matching backup method whenever possible. If you did not create the backup yourself, verify the backup date, scope, and site path before restoring production.
Before restore
- Confirm the package belongs to the site and date you intend to restore.
- Prepare the destination database and credentials.
- Make sure the destination folder is clean or intentionally being overwritten.
Restore steps
- Upload the Duplicator package and installer to the destination.
- Run the installer through the documented restore flow.
- Enter database details and review URL/path settings.
- Complete the restore.
- Remove installer files and package leftovers.
- Log in and resave permalinks if needed.
Post-restore verification
Check site URLs, media, login, forms, cache, SSL, search results, and any hard-coded paths after restore.
Also check server and application logs, cache layers, CDN behavior, SSL, redirects, and whether scheduled tasks still run. A restore is not complete just because the home page loads.
Restore risks
- Leaving installer files public.
- Overwriting an existing site accidentally.
- Restoring an old database over newer business data.
- Missing PHP limits needed for large packages.
Rollback planning
Before restoring, keep the current state long enough to recover anything the restore might erase. For stores and membership sites, that means orders, subscriptions, users, payments, form submissions, bookings, and logs. For agencies and hosts, it also means customer communication and a timestamped maintenance note.
Fix I.T. Phill recommendation
Use Duplicator when it matches how the backup was created. If the restore tool is not available, fall back to files plus database restore, but test on staging first. After restore, update the backup plan so the next recovery is easier.
Related Fix I.T. Phill Guides
- How to Restore WordPress: Complete Recovery Methods Guide
- How to Restore WordPress by cPanel Backup Wizard
- How to Restore WordPress by File Manager and phpMyAdmin
- How to Restore WordPress by WHM Full Account Restore
- How to Restore WordPress by cPanel WP Toolkit
- How to Restore WordPress by Plesk WP Toolkit
- How to Restore WordPress by Plesk Backup Manager
- How to Back Up WordPress: Complete Methods Guide
- How to Back Up WooCommerce Without Losing Orders
- How to Test a WordPress Backup Restore Before an Emergency
- Disable WordPress plugins with phpMyAdmin when wp-admin is broken


