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Plugin Conflicts & Plugin Troubleshooting

1 min read

WordPress plugin conflicts happen when a plugin, theme, or WordPress itself stops playing nicely together and causes errors, broken layouts, or even the white screen of death.​

What plugin conflicts are #

A conflict can happen between two plugins, between a plugin and your theme, or between a plugin and your current WordPress version.​Typical symptoms include specific features stopping working, layout glitches, error messages, or a completely blank white screen after installing or updating something.​

Quick checks before installing plugins #

Before installing a plugin, check that it’s actively maintained, tested with your WordPress version, and has solid ratings and recent support activity.​

Reviews and support threads often reveal known conflicts so you can avoid problem plugins before they ever touch a live site.​

Troubleshooting Plugins #

Scenario 1: Site works, one plugin doesn’tIf the site is up but one plugin misbehaves, first look for and run any available update for that plugin, then retest the site.​ If an update fixes it, the developer has already addressed the conflict; if not, you’ll likely need to replace that plugin.​


Scenario 2: One update/installation broke somethingIf you just installed or updated a single plugin and something immediately broke, deactivate that plugin right away.​ If the issue disappears, report it to the plugin’s developer and look for an alternative plugin or workaround while they address the bug.​


Scenario 3: Batch/automatic updates broke the siteWhen multiple plugins/themes updated at once and parts of the site break (but the admin is still accessible), deactivate all plugins from the WordPress dashboard.​ Then switch temporarily to a default WordPress theme to rule out theme issues before testing plugins one by one.​


Step‑by‑step isolation processAfter deactivating everything, reactivate your primary “core” plugin first (e.g., e‑commerce or membership) and confirm the site is stable.​Then activate the remaining plugins one at a time, testing after each; when the problem returns, the last one activated is your likely culprit.​

Handling the white screen of death #

If you see a white screen and can’t access wp‑admin, use your hosting control panel’s file manager or SFTP to access wp-content.​Rename the plugins folder (for example to “_plugins”) to deactivate all plugins, then log in again and follow the same isolation steps; if the white screen remains, repeat the process with the active theme folder.​

What to do once you find the culprit #

Once you identify the conflicting plugin or theme, deactivate it and open a support ticket or report the issue in the plugin’s repository.​Decide whether to wait for a fix, switch to a different plugin/theme, or drop that feature if it isn’t essential.​

How to prevent conflicts #

Keep your plugin list lean, only installing plugins you genuinely need, and update them regularly.​
Run updates one by one when possible, always ensure you have a recent backup, and ideally test new plugins and updates on a staging or local site first.

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