The Ultimate eCommerce Migration Checklist (Zero Data Loss)
Migrating your eCommerce store to a new platform is one of the riskiest — and potentially most rewarding — decisions you’ll make as a business owner. Without a clear checklist, even experienced teams lose data, tank their SEO rankings, and break customer trust. This guide gives you a battle-tested eCommerce migration checklist that ensures zero data loss and a seamless transition.
Phase 1: Pre-Migration Planning
Define Your Migration Goals
- Document current platform limitations (speed, scalability, integrations)
- Define success metrics: page speed targets, conversion rate goals, feature requirements
- Set a realistic timeline (most migrations take 3–6 months properly done)
- Assign a migration owner and cross-functional team
Platform Selection Criteria
- Total cost of ownership (licensing + hosting + apps + development)
- Native features vs. app ecosystem coverage for your use cases
- Developer availability for your chosen platform
- Scalability ceiling for your projected growth
- Compliance requirements (GDPR, PCI DSS, CCPA)
Complete Data Audit
- Export and document: products, categories, variants, images, pricing rules
- Customer records (name, email, purchase history, addresses)
- All historical orders (including statuses and fulfillment data)
- Reviews and UGC content
- Gift cards, discount codes, and loyalty points balances
- Blog posts and SEO content
Phase 2: SEO Preservation
This is where most migrations go wrong. A botched URL structure change without proper redirects can wipe out years of SEO equity overnight.
SEO Pre-Migration Tasks
- Crawl and export all current URLs using Screaming Frog or Sitebulb
- Document current organic rankings for top 50+ keywords
- Export all existing backlinks (Ahrefs/Semrush)
- Screenshot current traffic benchmarks in Google Search Console
- Map every old URL to its exact new URL destination
Redirect Strategy
- Create 301 redirects for every changed URL — no exceptions
- Maintain redirect chains of no more than 2 hops
- Test redirects before go-live using redirect checker tools
- Submit new sitemap to Google Search Console immediately post-launch
Phase 3: Technical Migration Checklist
- Set up staging environment on new platform
- Migrate product catalogue with all metadata, variants, and images
- Transfer customer accounts (with consent for password reset emails)
- Migrate order history with status mapping
- Set up payment gateway integrations and test in sandbox
- Configure shipping zones, rates, and carrier integrations
- Migrate email templates (transactional + marketing)
- Set up tax rules by region
- Configure analytics (GA4, Facebook Pixel, TikTok Pixel)
- Migrate loyalty/rewards programme data
Phase 4: Quality Assurance
| Test Area | Checklist Item |
|---|---|
| Checkout | Complete test purchase on all payment methods |
| Mobile | Full mobile UX test on iOS and Android |
| Speed | Core Web Vitals check (target LCP under 2.5s) |
| Forms | Account creation, contact, returns forms |
| Emails | All transactional emails received and rendering correctly |
| Integrations | ERP, WMS, CRM data flows tested end-to-end |
Phase 5: Go-Live & Post-Migration
- Schedule launch for lowest-traffic period (typically Tuesday–Thursday, early morning)
- Monitor Google Search Console for crawl errors daily for first 2 weeks
- Track organic traffic and rankings daily for first 30 days
- Set up uptime monitoring alerts
- Run a full site crawl on day 1 post-launch
- Keep the old platform accessible for 90 days (redirect, don’t delete)
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does an eCommerce migration take?
A proper eCommerce migration typically takes 3–6 months from planning to go-live for a mid-size store. Rushing this timeline is the number one cause of SEO drops and data loss.
Will migration hurt my SEO rankings?
A well-executed migration with proper 301 redirects and metadata preservation should not permanently hurt rankings. However, a temporary dip of 10–20% for 4–8 weeks is normal as Google re-crawls and re-indexes the site.
What is the best eCommerce platform to migrate to in 2026?
Shopify Plus is the leading choice for mid-market and enterprise stores. WooCommerce suits WordPress-native businesses needing maximum flexibility. BigCommerce is strong for B2B and complex catalogue structures.
