Wix website migration service
Move off Wix without throwing away what already works.
I rebuild focused Wix marketing sites without treating the old site like a pile of disposable pages. Useful URLs, copy, images, forms, search history, domain records, and business email all need a plan before anything moves.
The practical version
A Wix migration is usually a controlled revamp, not a file transfer.
There is no magic export button that turns a Wix site into clean, portable code. I use the current site as the reference, figure out what has real business value, and rebuild the pages worth keeping.
The finished site uses standard code, keeps the important search and customer paths intact, and leaves the owner with fewer moving parts.
Keep the value
Preserve useful URLs, copy, titles, headings, images, reviews, forms, analytics, and Search Console history.
Remove the drag
Replace cluttered templates, vague pages, unnecessary apps, and weak mobile paths with a simpler build.
Launch carefully
Protect DNS and email records, test redirects and forms, publish the sitemap, and monitor the important URLs.
Included work
What the migration service covers.
Before the build
Current-site crawl and value map
Inventory public URLs, page titles, useful copy, images, forms, downloads, ranking pages, lead paths, DNS records, and email dependencies.
Structure
Page and redirect plan
Decide which URLs stay, which pages combine, and which changed URLs need one-to-one 301 redirects.
Revamp
Cleaner pages and lead paths
Rebuild the important pages with specific service language, mobile calls to action, real proof, working forms, and answers buyers can actually use.
Search protection
On-page SEO carryover
Preserve or improve useful titles, descriptions, headings, internal links, canonicals, schema, sitemap entries, and indexability.
Infrastructure
Domain, email, and hosting checks
Document DNS, MX, SPF, DKIM, DMARC, verification, analytics, and third-party records before the launch changes.
Launch
Testing and handoff
Test forms, phone links, redirects, status codes, sitemap, Search Console, and the owner-controlled code and hosting path.
Operator proof
I work on sites that have to keep working after launch.
I run Bat Digest, where a large library of product and review pages depends on stable URLs, useful internal links, and a publishing system that does not create a mess every time the site grows.
I also work on Beyond Blue Logbooks. That site has a narrower job: explain an aviation logbook product, make the workflow understandable, and give the right visitor a clear next step. They are different businesses, but both keep me honest about the same thing: a website has to do a job, not just survive a redesign.
The current site gets a vote.
Before I recommend a move, I look at what the Wix site already does: rankings, pages, forms, bookings, products, integrations, editing needs, and actual lead value. If moving would create more problems than it solves, I will say so.
Migration process
Nothing moves until the risk is mapped.
Teardown
Review the current Wix site, public URLs, forms, search visibility, platform features, and obvious risks.
Map
Agree on the page plan, preserved URLs, redirects, content, functionality, ownership, price, and launch responsibilities.
Rebuild
Build the new site, improve the important pages, connect forms and analytics, and review everything before DNS changes.
Launch and watch
Apply redirects, protect email, point the domain, submit the sitemap, test conversions, and monitor Search Console.
Fit and price
Plain answers before you move.
How much does a Wix migration cost?
Lean 1-4 page marketing-site revamps start at $1,000. Additional standard pages are $200 each. Larger blogs, ecommerce, bookings, memberships, CMS collections, and custom applications are scoped separately.
Will rankings stay exactly the same?
No honest provider can guarantee that. The work reduces avoidable risk by preserving useful URLs and content, mapping redirects, carrying over search signals, and monitoring Search Console after launch.
Can I keep my domain and business email?
Usually yes. The domain can stay registered at Wix or move later. The critical step is documenting DNS and email records before changing nameservers or canceling anything.
What Wix sites are not a simple fit?
Large stores, memberships, bookings, multilingual sites, large CMS collections, and custom Wix applications need a closer functionality review before a static revamp is recommended.
Start with the current site