How to Migrate WordPress by cPanel Full Account Backup

Move a WordPress site with a cPanel full account backup while protecting email, DNS, databases, SSL, and newer site data.
How to Migrate WordPress by cPanel Full Account Backup migration tutorial showing backup, transfer, verification, and DNS cutover checks

cPanel full account backup can move WordPress safely when it matches the source, destination, and risk level. This method is best for moving a complete cPanel account when the destination host can restore the account or import the backup.

Audience: small businesses, agencies, and admins moving a cPanel account from one host to another. Before using this path, decide whether the move changes hosts, domains, DNS, email, PHP versions, database versions, cache layers, or business data. Those details matter more than the migration button itself.

Before migration

  • Confirm the destination host can restore full cPanel backups.
  • Lower DNS TTL before the move if you control DNS.
  • Export or preserve fresh orders, forms, bookings, and email that arrive after the backup.
  • Check PHP, MySQL or MariaDB, SSL, and disk-space compatibility on the new server.

Migration steps

  1. Create or request a fresh cPanel full account backup.
  2. Download the backup or give the destination host the safe transfer path they request.
  3. Restore the account on the destination server.
  4. Match PHP version, PHP extensions, database service, cron jobs, SSL, and redirects.
  5. Preview the site with a temporary URL, hosts-file entry, or staging hostname.
  6. Cut DNS only after the new copy passes validation.

Post-migration verification

Check the home page, wp-admin, important landing pages, media, forms, checkout, cron jobs, email routing, SSL, redirects, and server error logs before declaring the migration complete.

Also check server logs, PHP errors, WordPress Site Health, cache behavior, CDN routing, redirects, robots/indexing state, cron jobs, and whether a new backup job exists on the destination.

Migration risks

  • A full account backup can include old DNS, mailboxes, FTP users, and unrelated add-on domains.
  • The destination host may reject very large backups or incompatible account data.
  • Orders and form entries can split between old and new servers during DNS propagation.

Rollback and cutover planning

Keep the old site online until the new site is proven. For stores, memberships, bookings, LMS sites, directories, and lead-generation sites, plan a final data freeze or sync so records do not split between servers. Keep DNS rollback notes, old-host access, and a verified backup until traffic and logs are stable.

Fix I.T. Phill recommendation

Use cPanel full account backup when it gives you the cleanest preview and rollback path. If the site makes money or stores customer records, treat the final cutover as a maintenance window, not a casual copy job.

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