Introduction: How to Delete a Wordpress Plugin Using FTP

About: A technology enthusiast that loves Wordpress reviews, themes, plugins and SEO. I have 7 years experience as SEO and blogger for both free and paid. I am trying to understand the trends of successful plugins an…

WordPress is undeniably the leading or the best CMS out there. Like blogger WordPress lets you change themes of your choice and add widgets that are relevant to your needs.

WordPress is no longer solely from blogging anymore, it has various plugins that enables you to do ask much as you want on the web from building a magazine, e-commerce, booking system, directories and much more. Some WordPress plugins lets you optimize your website with its functionality and performance such examples are lazy-loading of images, optimization plugins for search engines, security plugins, and many more.

Modern webmasters are overwhelmed with many useful plugins they can put on their site. Sometimes downloading and installing of these plugins from various developers would cause errors that could compromise the whole website due to incompatibility. These incompatibilities might be through codes, databases and performing the same functionality. When I say compromised, this would mean that your whole website will be offline from a couple of hours to days. This error may cause you to loose money and customers.

Now to prevent this status of being "offline", if your installed plugins suffer from incompatibilities then you should decide on that very moment which of them should be retained and one should be deactivated. Let's say for example your site has been down already for a significant time, and you can't login to your website to uninstall that plugin that caused the error. This tut will let you deactivate or delete a WordPress plugin not from the using the administration board but through your FTP.

On the first screen shot tells us to login to your hosting provider and access our FTP, specifically on the file manager. On your file manager you have to go to the directory where you installed WordPress. Look for the folder named "wp-content". Access the folder the go to the next step.

Step 1: Inside the WP-Content Folder

If you are inside the WP-Content folder, look for another folder named "plugins".

Step 2: Deleting a Plugin Inside the "plugins" Directory

Inside the "plugins" folder you can see many folders, those folders represents the plugins that you installed or downloaded on your website.

Look for the folder name that represents your incompatible plugin then you can uninstall it through renaming and deleting the folder on your current directory.

Now the advantage of just renaming the folder name instead of deleting it enables you to still access stored data from that plugin for usage.

That's pretty much it and thanks for reading! Leave your feedback and share your own experiences.

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Author: Baloydi Lloydi, founder of asknoypi.com a blog the shares about Wordpress reviews on themes and plugins, SEO and technology topics.