Website Migration

Move Host, Domain, or Platform Without the Downtime

Moving to new hosting, a new domain, or off a page builder onto WordPress — planned so nothing goes offline and nothing gets lost along the way.

Quick Answer

LinkJasa's website migration service covers full content, media, and database migration, DNS and hosting cutover planned to avoid downtime, 301 redirects for any URL structure changes, and a post-migration check of SEO and site functionality — used when changing web host, domain, or platform.

Overview

The part that goes wrong is usually the DNS cutover.

Migrations rarely fail because of the content move itself — they fail at the handoff, when DNS propagates unevenly, email suddenly stops working, or a redirect gets missed and a chunk of the site starts returning 404s. This service treats that handoff as the main risk to manage, not an afterthought.

Before cutover, everything — files, database, media — is moved and tested on the new environment while the old site stays live. DNS changes are timed and sequenced to minimize the window where things could be inconsistent, and email routing is checked specifically, since that's the most common casualty of a rushed migration.

Afterward, we run a functionality and SEO check: forms still submit, redirects resolve, and nothing that used to be indexed by Google has quietly disappeared.

What's Included

  • Full content, media & database migration
  • DNS & hosting cutover, timed to avoid downtime
  • 301 redirects for any URL changes
  • Post-migration SEO & functionality check
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Who It's For

Built for changes that carry real risk.

Changing web host

Moving away from slow, unreliable, or overpriced hosting.

Moving off a page builder

Migrating from Wix, Squarespace, or similar onto WordPress.

Consolidating multiple sites

Merging several websites or domains into one.

How It Works

Old site stays live until the new one is proven.

01
Copy & test

Content and database moved to the new environment, tested privately.

02
Redirect map

Any URL changes mapped to 301 redirects before cutover.

03
Cutover

DNS switched at a planned time, with email routing checked specifically.

04
Verify

Forms, redirects, and indexing checked once the new site is live.

FAQ

Common questions.

Will my site go offline during migration?

The goal is zero meaningful downtime — the old site stays live while the new one is built and tested, with cutover timed to minimize any gap.

Will my email stop working during the move?

Email routing is checked specifically as part of the cutover plan, since it's one of the most common things to break during a DNS change.

Will I lose my Google rankings after migrating?

Not if URLs stay the same or are properly 301-redirected, which is part of the standard process for any URL structure change.

Can you migrate from any page builder to WordPress?

Most platforms, yes. Message us with your current platform and we'll confirm feasibility before quoting.

Andy S, Founder of LinkJasa

"Almost every migration problem I've seen traces back to a rushed DNS cutover — slowing down there is what prevents it." — Andy S, Founder

Planning a move?