Backing up a WordPress website means saving a restorable copy of the site. For most WordPress sites, that copy needs both the website files and the database.
If you back up only one part, you may not be able to fully restore the site.
What a WordPress Backup Needs to Include
WordPress has two main parts.
The files include:
- WordPress core files
- Themes
- Plugins
- Uploads
- Images
- Documents
- Configuration files such as
wp-config.php - Files such as
.htaccess, depending on the server
The database includes:
- Pages
- Posts
- Menus
- Users
- Comments
- Settings
- Form entries, depending on the plugin
- Ecommerce data, depending on the setup
- Plugin and theme settings
For a normal WordPress site, you need both parts.
Backup Before You Change Things
Take a backup before:
- WordPress updates
- Plugin updates
- Theme updates
- PHP version changes
- Website migrations
- Major page edits
- New plugin installation
- Security cleanup
- Database work
- Redesign launches
Backups are most useful when they exist before the problem happens.
Choose a Backup Method
Common backup methods include:
- Hosting backups
- WordPress backup plugins
- cPanel backups
- Manual file and database backups
- Managed backup services
The best option depends on your hosting setup, comfort level, site size, budget, and how quickly you need to restore.
Do not assume a backup exists just because the site is hosted somewhere. Confirm what is included, how often it runs, where it is stored, and how restores work.
Store Backups Away From the Site
If all backups sit inside the same hosting account as the live website, they may be lost if the account is compromised, suspended, deleted, or out of storage.
A better setup stores backups somewhere separate, such as remote storage, a secure cloud storage account, or a backup service.
For business websites, keep more than one restore point. If a site was hacked last week, yesterday’s backup may contain the same problem.
Know How to Restore
A backup is only useful if it can be restored.
Confirm:
- Where the backup is stored
- What it includes
- Whether files and database are together
- Whether restores are full-site or partial
- Whether you can restore one file, one database, or the full site
- Whether ecommerce orders, bookings, or form entries may be overwritten
- Who can perform the restore
If possible, test a restore in a staging area or non-public environment.
Manual WordPress Backup Basics
A manual backup usually involves:
- Downloading website files by file manager, FTP, or SFTP
- Exporting the database through phpMyAdmin or another database tool
- Saving both parts together
- Recording the date and site URL
Manual backups require care. Downloading the WordPress folder alone usually does not back up the database.
If you are not comfortable with files or databases, use a managed backup option or ask someone experienced to handle it.
Backup Plugins
Backup plugins can make WordPress backups easier.
Before relying on one, check:
- Does it back up files and database?
- Where does it store backups?
- Can it send backups off-site?
- Does it run automatically?
- Can it restore reliably?
- Does it work with your site size?
- Does it include ecommerce or membership data?
Avoid installing multiple backup plugins that run at the same time. They can consume storage and server resources.
How to Label Backups
Use names or notes that explain what the backup is for.
Examples:
- Before WordPress update
- Before PHP update
- Before migration
- Before redesign launch
- Monthly full backup
- Before plugin cleanup
Good labels make it easier to choose the right restore point later.
After the Backup Runs
Check that:
- The backup completed
- The file size looks reasonable
- Both files and database are included
- The backup is stored away from the live site
- You know how to restore it
- You have not filled the hosting account storage
Do not leave large old backup files inside the public website folder. That can create storage and security problems.
A Practical WordPress Backup Routine
- Schedule automatic backups.
- Store copies away from the live site.
- Take manual backups before major changes.
- Keep more than one restore point.
- Test restores when possible.
- Document where backups are stored.
- Review backup success regularly.
If you want a backup option for your WordPress website, you can explore Website Backup through Tech Help Canada Hosting.

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