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Know your limit: If you're not comfortable performing these steps, we suggest that you don't. Some of these steps are more advanced and can cause some major issues if not followed properly. If something goes wrong, we'll be unable to assist in resolving the problem.
If unable to access the WordPress dashboard
Disable the Cache plugin from WP Toolkit by following the steps here.
If you are getting an error 500 on your page or the page is loading blank, this may be due to a corrupted or incompatible plugin. You may be able to resolve it by deactivating the plugin.
If the problem persists, multiple plugins may be involved. Visit our help page here for more information on identifying plugins that are producing errors.
If unable to access WordPress dashboard
Disable the problem plugin from WP Toolkit by following the steps here.
If your website won't load or loops, the URL WordPress expects to find the blog may be out of sync with where it is installed. You can resolve it by re-syncing the URL.
Note: If the button is greyed out, the URLs are in sync. Other reasons for the loading/looping issues will need to be explored.
If unable to access the blog in the WordPress Toolkit (advanced troubleshooting)
After updating a theme, and you can't view your site or access the WordPress dashboard, you'll want to switch the theme.
If a different theme works, then the selected theme is either incompatible, corrupted, or out of date. For more information on updating a theme, go here.
If you've just reactivated and the links to pages aren't working, you'll need to reset the permalinks setting.
Note: If the Customizable Permalinks plugin is enabled, disable it.
For more information on troubleshooting permalinks, read the Why aren't my permalinks working? help page.
Looking to export your database? Read the Export database and tables in phpMyAdmin help page.
WordPress has a debugging mode. When this is set, WordPress will display more detailed error messages in the browser when errors occur. Along with checking the error logs, enabling debugging may help isolate the cause of issues.
Important: When Debugging mode is on in WordPress, it will display all PHP errors, warnings, and notices. This will include messages for code that is functional but does not fully align with PHP conventions. If you're not comfortable reviewing the messages displayed to locate the meaningful errors, we don't recommend using it.
Not finding what you need? Check out the WordPress Codex for additional troubleshooting information.