Website & Strategy

Automatic WordPress Backup: Never Lose Your Data Again

Sleep soundly with an effective backup strategy. The best tools to automate your external WordPress backups.

A WordPress site can disappear in a matter of seconds. A poorly executed plugin update, a malware injection attack, human error during a database change, a server failure at your host: the scenarios are many, and no site is completely safe from them. What distinguishes professionals who recover quickly from those who lose weeks of work is one thing only: the existence of a recent, complete, off-site backup.

Automatic WordPress backups are the ultimate safety net for your online presence. As part of a rigorous WordPress security strategy 2026, they complement firewall and SSL certificate protection by covering the residual risk that these tools cannot eliminate: data loss. At 3DH Studio, no site we deliver goes live without an operational off-site automatic backup system.

This guide explains how to structure a reliable backup strategy, which tools to choose, and how to test that your backups really work when you need them.


Why a local backup is not enough

The first mistake made by the majority of WordPress site owners is assuming that the backup provided by their host is sufficient. It is not, for several reasons:

  • It is stored on the same server as your site. In the event of hardware failure or an attack targeting the host's infrastructure, your backup disappears at the same time as your site

  • It is not under your direct control. Its frequency, retention period, and ease of restoration depend on your host's terms and conditions, which can change

  • It can be compromised by the same intrusion as your main site if the malware spreads to the entire hosting account

A professional backup strategy is based on the 3-2-1 rule: three copies of your data, on two different media, including one off-site copy. Applied to WordPress, that means: your live site, a backup at your host, and an off-site backup to an independent cloud service.


What a WordPress backup must cover

A complete WordPress backup includes two inseparable components:

Site files

  • The entire wp-content directory: themes, plugins, uploaded media

  • The wp-config.php file, which contains the database connection settings

  • The .htaccess file, which manages URL rewriting rules and redirects

  • Any custom configuration files added at the root

The database

  • All WordPress tables: posts, pages, comments, options, users

  • Tables added by your plugins (WooCommerce, forms, SEO extensions, etc.)

  • Customization and configuration data stored in the wp_options table

Back up only the files without the database, or the reverse, and restoration becomes impossible. Both components are essential.


The best WordPress backup tools in 2026

UpdraftPlus

UpdraftPlus is the gold standard for WordPress backups. With more than three million active installations, it is the most tested and best-documented tool in the ecosystem.

What it does:

  • Automatic backup of files and database on a customizable schedule

  • Direct sending to Google Drive, Dropbox, Amazon S3, OneDrive, remote FTP, and a dozen other destinations

  • One-click restoration from the WordPress admin interface

  • Database encryption before sending (Premium version)

Recommended configuration:

  • Database backup: daily, with 30-day retention

  • File backup: weekly, with 4-week retention

  • Destination: Google Drive or Amazon S3 (account separate from your host)

BackWPup

BackWPup is a solid alternative to UpdraftPlus, particularly appreciated for its configuration flexibility and advanced export options.

Strengths:

  • Database export in standard SQL format, easily importable into any environment

  • Archive integrity check after creation

  • Email notifications in the event of backup failure

  • Completely free in its basic version

Jetpack VaultPress Backup

The premium solution from the WordPress.com ecosystem, offered in Jetpack subscriptions.

Strengths:

  • Real-time backup: every change is saved instantly, not just on a schedule

  • Restoration from any point in time via an intuitive visual interface

  • Off-site storage on Automattic's servers, independent of your host

  • Particularly well suited to high-volume WooCommerce e-commerce sites

ManageWP and MainWP

For agencies and owners of multiple WordPress sites, ManageWP and MainWP make it possible to centralize backup management for the entire portfolio in a single dashboard.


Determining the right backup frequency

The ideal frequency depends on how often your site changes:

Site type

Database

Files

Blog with weekly posts

Daily

Weekly

Static brochure site

Weekly

Monthly

Active e-commerce store

Hourly or real-time

Daily

Site with forms and leads

Daily

Weekly

The principle is simple: the backup frequency must be shorter than the amount of time you can afford to lose in the event of an incident. If you publish content every day, a weekly backup means potentially seven days of lost work.


Testing your backups

This is the most important and least respected rule: an untested backup is an unreliable backup. Archive files can be corrupted, incomplete, or incompatible with your restore environment, without your knowing it until you need them.

Here is the recommended test procedure:

  • Monthly: restore your backup to a staging environment (a test site separate from production) and verify that the site displays and works correctly

  • After every major update: verify that the pre-update backup is available and can be restored

  • After every structural change: theme redesign, host change, domain migration

This test takes less than an hour and can save you several days of reconstruction work.


Backups and security: an essential complementarity

Backups do not replace other security measures. They complement them. A secure site without backups remains vulnerable to data loss. A site with backups but no security will be compromised regularly, forcing you to restore it constantly.

The optimal protection architecture combines:

  • An active SSL certificate: as we detailed in our article on the importance of SSL for SEO, HTTPS protects data in transit

  • An application firewall (Wordfence or Sucuri) to block intrusion attempts

  • Two-factor authentication on all administrator accounts

  • Regular updates to WordPress, themes, and plugins

  • An off-site automatic backup, tested regularly

Each of these layers protects against a different type of risk. Together, they form true defense in depth.


What your host must guarantee regarding backups

Even if you manage your own off-site backups, your host must provide a minimum safety net:

  • Daily automatic backups included in the plan

  • Retention of at least 7 days (30 days for premium plans)

  • Restoration accessible from the admin panel, at no extra cost

  • Backups stored on infrastructure separate from the main server

If your current host does not offer these guarantees, migrating to suitable infrastructure is one of the top recommendations during a technical site audit.


To go further

Backups are the last line of defense in a coherent security strategy. To build this strategy completely:


Conclusion

Automatic, off-site WordPress backups are not an option reserved for large companies. They are an absolute necessity for any professional whose business depends on their online presence. The cost of a tool like UpdraftPlus Premium is negligible compared with the human and business cost of unrecoverable data loss. Put your backup strategy in place today, test it, and sleep well.


FAQ

What is the difference between a full backup and an incremental backup? A full backup copies all files and the entire database each time it runs. An incremental backup copies only the items modified since the last backup, which significantly reduces execution time and required storage space. For WordPress sites with a high volume of content or orders, real-time incremental backup (like the one offered by Jetpack VaultPress) is the most suitable solution.

Are my backups GDPR-compliant if they contain customer data? Yes, provided certain rules are followed. Backups containing personal data must be encrypted, stored in secure locations, and subject to the same retention rules as production data. If you use a cloud service like Google Drive or Amazon S3, check that the server location is compatible with GDPR requirements (ideally in the European Union).

Why entrust backup management to an agency rather than manage it yourself? Managing your own backups is possible, but it requires constant rigor: checking execution logs, testing restorations, adapting frequency to site changes, and responding quickly in the event of a failure. An agency like 3DH Studio builds this monitoring into its maintenance contracts: we check every backup, alert you in the event of an anomaly, and guarantee rapid restoration in the event of an incident, so you can focus on your business.

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