From Weebly to Wix: How and Why to Switch to a More Powerful Website Builder
If you built your website on Weebly a few years ago, you probably made the right call at the time. It was simple, affordable and got you online in an afternoon. But as your business has grown, the platform may not have kept up.
You add a new service and can’t present it the way you want. You try to install a marketing tool and discover there’s no integration. You look at modern sites built on Wix and think, “Why doesn’t my site look like that?”
This guide is for you if you’re wondering:
- Whether it’s worth switching from Weebly to Wix
- What you actually gain by moving
- How to handle the migration without breaking your SEO or your sanity
Let’s walk through the why and the how, step by step.
1. The Big Picture: Why Weebly Users Are Moving to Wix
Before you touch a single line of content, it’s worth understanding what’s going on with both platforms.
Weebly: Solid, but stagnant
Weebly was one of the original drag-and-drop site builders. After the platform was acquired by Square in 2018, development gradually shifted toward Square Online, Square’s commerce-focused builder. Weebly still works, but updates are slow, and most of the innovation and documentation now revolve around Square’s newer tools rather than the classic Weebly editor.
In practice, that means: fewer new templates and layout options, limited integrations and app growth as well as a roadmap that’s more about payments and POS than about rich websites
Wix: A full business platform, not just a website
While Weebly has coasted, Wix has become an ecosystem:
- An advanced visual editor with section-based layouts
- Hundreds of modern templates for different industries
- Built-in tools for ecommerce, bookings, email marketing, automations and basic CRM
- An app market where you can add chat widgets, reviews, analytics, and more
If you stick with Weebly, your site will keep working-but it’s unlikely to become dramatically more powerful. If you move to Wix, you’re stepping onto a platform that’s still actively evolving in your favor.
2. Signs You’ve Outgrown Weebly
You don’t have to be a developer to know you’ve hit the ceiling. Here are common “symptoms” that it’s time to move.
2.1. Your design feels dated or boxed in
You’ve tried different Weebly themes, but they all start to look the same. You can’t easily:
- Mix and match sections the way you want
- Get a clean, modern layout on mobile
- Add visual elements (testimonials, pricing grids, hero sections) without fighting the editor
In Wix, you can start from a template and then customize sections, colors, and typography with much more freedom-still without coding.
2.2. You keep saying “Weebly doesn’t support that”
Maybe you want:
- A more advanced form that sends leads to a CRM
- Booking with online payments and automated reminders
- A better blog structure for content marketing
- More flexible store options and marketing automations
If you find yourself Googling “Weebly + [tool name]” and seeing fewer answers than you’d like, that’s a sign the ecosystem is too small for where your business is headed.
2.3. You’re getting serious about SEO and content
Weebly gives you the basics: page titles, descriptions, and simple URLs. Once you start thinking about:
- Bigger blogs or resource sections
- More structured internal linking
- Systematic on-page SEO improvements
…it becomes clear you need more control. Wix won’t turn you into an SEO wizard, but it gives you a stronger foundation than Weebly for growing organic traffic.
If these points sound familiar, switching from Weebly to Wix isn’t just a cosmetic upgrade-it’s a strategic one.
3. What You Actually Gain When You Move from Weebly to Wix
Let’s turn “Wix is more powerful” into something concrete.
3.1. A modern, flexible design system
With Wix you get: industry-specific templates (for salons, coaches, photographers, agencies, restaurants, online shops, etc.), section-based layouts you can add, duplicate and rearrange in seconds as well as global control over colors and fonts.
You can rebuild your current Weebly site or use the migration as an excuse to modernize your entire brand presence.
3.2. Built-in business tools (so you don’t duct-tape everything)
Wix can gradually replace separate services you might be paying for: Wix Stores for selling products and subscriptions, Wix Bookings for appointments and classes, Wix Forms, automations and email marketing for nurturing leads as well as Wix CRM that keeps all contact and interaction data in one place.
For a lot of small businesses, this means fewer logins, fewer data silos, and a smoother workflow.
3.3. More headroom for SEO and content
Wix gives you clean control of titles, descriptions, and URL slugs, automatic XML sitemaps and easy Search Console connection, redirect tools for when you restructure pages and SEO patterns and structured meta for bigger sites.
Is it as infinitely flexible as self-hosted WordPress.org? No. But compared to Weebly, it’s a clear step up in how far you can push your site without needing a developer.
4. Before You Move: Prepare Your Weebly Site
The smoothest migrations start with preparation. Think of this as packing up your digital “house” before loading the moving truck.
4.1. Take inventory
On your Weebly site, list: all main pages (Home, About, Services, Portfolio, Blog, Contact, etc.), any landing pages you use for ads or email campaigns, all blog categories and key posts that bring in traffic and any store pages (products, categories) if you’re selling online.
You can do this manually by clicking through your navigation and blog, or by exporting what Weebly allows (like product lists and blog archives).
4.2. Note what’s working-and what isn’t
Ask yourself:
- Which pages currently generate inquiries or sales?
- Which pages consistently get traffic from Google?
- Which parts of the site feel confusing, outdated, or clunky?
These answers will guide what you preserve in the new site and what you improve during the move.
4.3. Gather your assets
Download or collect logo files (preferably in high resolution and with transparent background), brand colors and fonts, if you have them documented and original images you want to reuse (so you’re not right-click-saving from your own site). Having everything in one folder makes building on Wix much faster.
5. A 7-Step Plan for Moving from Weebly to Wix
Here’s a practical, non-technical roadmap. You can adapt it to your site’s size, but the core steps stay the same.
Step 1: Create your new Wix site (in “sandbox” mode)
- Sign up for Wix and create a new site.
- Pick a template close to your current structure or close to the future look you want.
- Don’t point your domain yet-think of this as your private staging area.
Step 2: Rebuild your structure first, not your design
- In Wix, create the same page tree you listed earlier: Home, About, Services, Blog, Contact etc.
- Set up menu navigation and any dropdowns.
- Create placeholders for important landing pages, even if they’ll be redesigned later.
This keeps the migration organized and makes redirecting URLs much easier later on.
Step 3: Move core content page by page
Start with the essentials:
- Copy the home page copy and key visuals from Weebly to Wix, improving the layout as you go.
- Move service pages next, making sure each has a clear value proposition and call to action.
- Then handle About and Contact, which are usually simpler.
Don’t worry yet if fonts and spacing are not perfect; you’ll refine this later. Focus on accuracy and completeness.
Step 4: Re-create your blog (if you have one)
For small blogs: copy and paste posts manually, preserving titles, dates (if possible), and images. Assign them to categories that match or improve your existing structure.
For larger blogs: you may want to use export/import tools or get help from a migration specialist to avoid manually copying dozens or hundreds of posts. Even with imports, plan a quick review pass to fix formatting issues.
Step 5: Rebuild your store and forms
If you sell products:
- Set up Wix Stores and configure currency, shipping, tax, and payment methods.
- Recreate product categories and products in Wix, copying descriptions and imagery.
- Test at least one sample checkout from product page to confirmation page.
For service or lead-driven businesses:
- Rebuild contact forms, lead forms, or questionnaires in Wix.
- If you use bookings, explore Wix Bookings and set up your services, durations, and availability.
Step 6: Align your URLs and set up redirects
This is the step that protects your SEO.
- Wherever possible, keep URL slugs the same (e.g., /about-us, /contact, /services/seo-consulting).
- For URLs that must change, create 301 redirects in Wix so that old Weebly addresses automatically send users and search engines to the right new page.
- Make a list of your most important pages from Weebly and verify each one successfully redirects to its new Wix version.
Step 7: Test everything, then switch the domain
Before you go live:
- Click through every menu and button to check for broken links.
- Test all forms, bookings, and checkout flows.
- View your site on mobile, tablet and desktop.
- Ask a friend or colleague to do a quick “fresh eyes” review.
Once you’re confident:
- Update your domain’s DNS settings so it points to Wix.
- Keep your Weebly account for a short overlap period in case you need to check something, then cancel when you’re sure everything is stable.
6. Common Fears About Moving from Weebly to Wix (And Why They’re Overblown)
“I’ll lose all my SEO.”
If you keep your structure similar, match key URLs where possible, and set up proper 301 redirects, search engines will follow your site to its new home. A short period of fluctuation is normal, but long-term, a better-optimized Wix site can improve your visibility.
“It’ll take forever.”
Yes, migration takes some work-especially the first time you do it. But for most small to mid-size sites, it’s a matter of days, not months. And you only have to do it once to reap years of benefit.
“I’m not technical enough.”
Wix is built for non-coders. If you could build a Weebly site, you can absolutely rebuild it in Wix. And if you get stuck, you can bring in a freelancer just for the tricky parts (store, blog imports, or complex redirects).
7. Is Switching from Weebly to Wix Really Worth It?
Ask yourself a simple question: “If I were starting from scratch today, would I choose Weebly or Wix?”
For most businesses in 2025, the honest answer is Wix-because:
- It looks more modern and professional out of the box
- It gives you more tools for selling, booking and marketing
- It has a larger ecosystem and a clearer product future
If you wouldn’t choose Weebly today, staying there just because you’re already on it is a form of technical debt. Migrating to Wix is how you pay that off and stop fighting your platform.
And if you’re still unsure, you can always look up independent, side-by-side comparisons of the two platforms to evaluate their features directly. The conclusion is almost always the same: Wix clearly beats Weebly on almost every front.
Final Thoughts: Treat Migration as an Upgrade, Not a Chore
Moving from Weebly to Wix isn’t just a technical task. It’s a chance to rethink your site’s structure and messaging, clean out stale content that no longer fits and present your business in a way that matches how you work now, not how you worked when you first signed up for Weebly.
Approach the switch with a plan-inventory, rebuild, migrate, redirect-and it becomes a controlled upgrade instead of a stressful leap.
Once you’ve settled into Wix, you’ll likely find yourself asking a different question: “Why didn’t I make this move sooner?”
