Migrating platforms feels risky because it is — if you skip the SEO work. The stores that lose traffic after a move almost always made the same avoidable mistakes. Here's how to move from WooCommerce to Shopify and keep both your sales and your rankings.
1. Map every URL before you touch anything
Export your full list of live URLs — products, collections, blog posts, and key pages. This map is the backbone of your migration.
2. Plan your redirects
Shopify uses a different URL structure (e.g. `/products/`, `/collections/`). Every old URL needs a 301 redirect to its new equivalent. Skip this and you lose the rankings you spent years building.
3. Migrate your data cleanly
- Products, variants, and images
- Customers and order history
- Reviews (via an app or export)
- Blog content and metadata
Don't just dump data — clean it as you go.
4. Preserve on-page SEO
Carry over your title tags, meta descriptions, and heading structure. Match or improve them; don't lose them.
5. Rebuild internal links
Update navigation, collection links, and in-content links to the new URLs so you're not routing users and crawlers through redirects unnecessarily.
6. Test before launch
On a password-protected store, check:
- Redirects resolve correctly
- Checkout works with local payments in Luxembourg
- Analytics and pixels fire
- Mobile experience is clean
7. Launch, then watch closely
After go-live, submit your new sitemap, monitor Google Search Console for crawl errors, and keep an eye on rankings for two to four weeks.
The result
Done properly, a migration is invisible to Google and to your customers — except your store is now faster, easier to run, and cheaper to maintain.
We've migrated 500+ stores to Shopify with zero ranking loss. If you're weighing a move in Luxembourg, book a free migration audit and we'll flag the risks specific to your store.