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WooCommerce store owners discover their backups are inadequate the moment they need to restore one. By then, orders are missing, customer accounts are gone, or the restore itself wipes the last few hours of sales. The best WordPress backup plugins turns that disaster into a non-event.
For a WooCommerce store, backups aren’t optional insurance. They’re the difference between a bad day and going out of business. And most stores don’t realize theirs are inadequate until it’s too late.
Here’s how the top five WordPress backup plugins compare for WooCommerce stores. We’ll also walk through a backup strategy that actually works when disaster hits. If hardening your store is on your radar more broadly, our WooCommerce security checklist covers the rest of the stack.
A blog needs occasional backups. A WooCommerce store needs something more aggressive. Every minute, your store might be processing orders, updating inventory, creating customer accounts, and receiving payments. A backup from six hours ago loses six hours of that.

What makes WooCommerce backups different:
🔍️ One pattern we see often: stores rely on their managed hosting’s daily backups without checking what those backups actually contain. Then a restore is needed, and the only available snapshot is 18 hours old. Restoring it wipes every order since. Pair hosting backups with a dedicated backup plugin running hourly database snapshots.
Here’s the short version of pricing and key features:
| Plugin | Starting Price | Real-Time Backups | One-Click Restore | Staging Included |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UpdraftPlus | Free / $70 yr Personal Premium | Yes (Premium) | Yes | Yes (Premium) |
| BlogVault | $99 yr Personal / $499 yr WooCommerce plan | Yes (WooCommerce plan) | Yes | Yes |
| Jetpack VaultPress | $4.95 mo intro / $9.95 mo renewal | Yes | Yes | No (separate plan) |
| Solid Backups (BackupBuddy) | $99 yr | No | Yes | No |
| WPVivid | Free / $49 yr Pro | No (scheduled only) | Yes | Limited |
Pricing reflects publicly listed rates as of early 2026. Check each plugin’s site for current numbers.
UpdraftPlus is the most popular WordPress backup plugin, and the popularity is earned. The free version handles scheduled backups to most cloud storage providers. Premium adds incremental backups, staging, and component-level restore. The Personal tier costs $70 per year for up to two sites.
What we’ve noticed in practice:
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: stores that want flexible cloud storage and don’t mind a slightly dated admin UI.
BlogVault is one of the strongest backup options for WooCommerce stores specifically. Backups run on BlogVault’s servers, not yours, so backup processes never slow your store down.
What we’ve noticed in practice:
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: serious WooCommerce stores that need zero-overhead backups and fastest-possible restoration.
VaultPress, now packaged as Jetpack Backup, is Automattic’s backup product. It’s built on the same infrastructure that powers WordPress.com and integrates deeply with Jetpack’s activity log and other features.
What we’ve noticed in practice:
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: stores already using Jetpack for other features and wanting deep WordPress.com integration.
BackupBuddy, now rebranded as Solid Backups by SolidWP, is one of the oldest WordPress backup plugins. It’s a scheduled backup system rather than real-time, which limits usefulness for active WooCommerce stores. Pricing starts at $99 per year for a single site.
What we’ve noticed in practice:
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: stores migrating hosting providers, or stores that don’t need real-time backups.
WPVivid is a solid budget option. The free version includes manual and scheduled backups with cloud storage integration. Pro adds incremental backups and staging at $49 per year for two domains.
What we’ve noticed in practice:
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: small stores or those on tight budgets that don’t yet need real-time backups.
Most managed WooCommerce hosting (Kinsta, WP Engine, SiteGround) includes daily backups. Are those enough?
Short answer: no, not for serious stores.

Managed hosting backups are a useful safety net, but they have limitations:
The right approach is to use both. Treat hosting backups as the safety net. Add a dedicated backup plugin with hourly database snapshots for more granular control.
A backup plugin is only as good as the strategy behind it. Here’s what we recommend for most WooCommerce stores:

Yes. Hosting backups are daily and often lack granular restore. A dedicated backup plugin with hourly database snapshots protects against the kind of data loss that hurts most.
Database backups every hour, full site backups daily. Stores with high order volume should consider real-time backups via BlogVault or UpdraftPlus Premium.
Off-site. Use cloud storage (Dropbox, Google Drive, Amazon S3, Backblaze B2) so backups survive hosting failures. Never rely on backups stored on the same server as your live site.
Most good backup plugins support granular restore. UpdraftPlus, BlogVault, and Jetpack Backup all let you restore database only, files only, or specific tables.
Roughly two to five times your database size for compressed database backups. File backups need space equal to your wp-content folder. A medium store needs about 5 to 10 GB of total backup storage.
No. Modern backup plugins run in the background without pausing your store. BlogVault runs backups entirely off-server, so there’s no impact on your live site.
The best WordPress backup plugin for a serious WooCommerce store is BlogVault or UpdraftPlus Premium. BlogVault wins on zero-overhead real-time backups. UpdraftPlus Premium offers flexibility at lower cost. Free options like WPVivid work for small stores, but they leave you exposed as order volume grows.
Here’s what to do next:
If you’re setting up backups today, install BlogVault or UpdraftPlus Premium. Configure hourly database backups to off-site cloud storage. Then test a restore within 30 days. The goal isn’t to have backups. It’s to have backups you’ve actually verified will work.
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