WHM Transfer Tool can move WordPress safely when it matches the source, destination, and risk level. This method is best for moving multiple cPanel accounts or server-to-server WordPress hosting accounts under admin control.
Audience: server owners, web hosts, resellers, and admins migrating cPanel accounts between servers. 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
- Audit account size, package limits, dedicated IPs, SSL state, email accounts, and DNS ownership.
- Check source and destination cPanel versions and available disk space.
- Schedule the transfer during a quiet window for stores and busy membership sites.
- Tell customers when final sync and DNS changes will happen.
Migration steps
- Open WHM Transfer Tool on the destination server.
- Authenticate to the source server with the supported access method.
- Select the WordPress cPanel accounts to transfer.
- Review package, DNS, IP, reseller, and account options.
- Run the transfer and review transfer logs for warnings.
- Perform final testing before changing authoritative DNS or A records.
Post-migration verification
Validate every transferred WordPress site, database connection, PHP version, SSL, email, cron, DNS zone, and account package. Re-run a final sync or content freeze if needed.
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
- Large accounts may transfer slowly or time out.
- Old DNS zones can follow the account unless reviewed.
- Email can split during cutover if MX and mail routing are not planned.
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 WHM Transfer Tool 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.
Related Fix I.T. Phill Guides
- How to Migrate WordPress: Complete Hosting Move Guide
- How to Migrate WordPress by cPanel Full Account Backup
- How to Migrate WordPress by Plesk Migrator
- How to Migrate WordPress by Plesk WP Toolkit Clone
- How to Migrate WordPress by Softaculous Clone or Import
- How to Migrate WordPress by Installatron Clone or Import
- How to Migrate WordPress by DirectAdmin Backup and Restore
- How to Migrate WordPress by JetBackup Restore Point
- How to Back Up WordPress: Complete Methods Guide
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- How to Test a WordPress Backup Restore Before an Emergency


