FAQ WooHelpDesk Latest Questions

Mark Miller
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Log in to your WordPress dashboard. Go to Users → Add New. Enter the user’s email and choose a role like Administrator, Editor, Author, Contributor, or Subscriber. Click Add New User. WordPress sends a login email. The user’s permissions depend on the role you selected.

Log in to your WordPress dashboard. Go to Users → Add New. Enter the user’s email and choose a role like Administrator, Editor, Author, Contributor, or Subscriber. Click Add New User. WordPress sends a login email. The user’s permissions depend on the role you selected.

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Mark Miller
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In a WordPress Multisite setup, only Super Admins can manage the network. Log in as an existing Super Admin. Go to My Sites → Network Admin → Users. Add a new user or edit an existing one. Click Edit under the user’s name and check Grant this user Super Admin privileges. Save changes. The user now has full network-level access across all sites.

In a WordPress Multisite setup, only Super Admins can manage the network. Log in as an existing Super Admin. Go to My Sites → Network Admin → Users. Add a new user or edit an existing one. Click Edit under the user’s name and check Grant this user Super Admin privileges. Save changes. The user now has full network-level access across all sites.

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Mark Miller
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To fix a WooCommerce plugin error, first note the exact error message. Update WordPress, WooCommerce, and the plugin, then clear any cache. If the issue started after an update, roll back the plugin version. Disable all plugins except WooCommerce to check for conflicts, then re-enable one by one. Switch to a default theme (Storefront) to test theme conflicts. Check WooCommerce → Status → Logs and enable WordPress debug log to see the real cause. If needed, increase PHP memory and contact the plugin developer with the error log.

To fix a WooCommerce plugin error, first note the exact error message. Update WordPress, WooCommerce, and the plugin, then clear any cache. If the issue started after an update, roll back the plugin version. Disable all plugins except WooCommerce to check for conflicts, then re-enable one by one. Switch to a default theme (Storefront) to test theme conflicts. Check WooCommerce → Status → Logs and enable WordPress debug log to see the real cause. If needed, increase PHP memory and contact the plugin developer with the error log.

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Mark Miller
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To set up subscriptions in WooCommerce, install a subscriptions plugin (commonly WooCommerce Subscriptions) and activate it. Next, go to WooCommerce → Settings → Payments and enable a gateway that supports recurring payments (like Stripe or WooPayments). Then create a new product and choose Simple subscription or Variable subscription. Set the price, billing interval (monthly/yearly), and optional sign-up fee or free trial. Publish the product, place a test order in sandbox/test mode, and confirm renewal orders generate correctly.

To set up subscriptions in WooCommerce, install a subscriptions plugin (commonly WooCommerce Subscriptions) and activate it. Next, go to WooCommerce → Settings → Payments and enable a gateway that supports recurring payments (like Stripe or WooPayments). Then create a new product and choose Simple subscription or Variable subscription. Set the price, billing interval (monthly/yearly), and optional sign-up fee or free trial. Publish the product, place a test order in sandbox/test mode, and confirm renewal orders generate correctly.

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Mark Miller
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WooCommerce subscriptions work by charging customers on a recurring schedule, like weekly, monthly, or yearly. You create a subscription product, set the billing period, price, and optional trial or sign-up fee. When a customer buys it, an order is created and a subscription record is saved in WooCommerce. The payment gateway then processes automatic renewals on each billing date. WooCommerce updates the subscription status (active, on-hold, cancelled) and generates renewal orders. Customers can manage renewals and cancel from their account page, based on your settings.

WooCommerce subscriptions work by charging customers on a recurring schedule, like weekly, monthly, or yearly. You create a subscription product, set the billing period, price, and optional trial or sign-up fee. When a customer buys it, an order is created and a subscription record is saved in WooCommerce. The payment gateway then processes automatic renewals on each billing date. WooCommerce updates the subscription status (active, on-hold, cancelled) and generates renewal orders. Customers can manage renewals and cancel from their account page, based on your settings.

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Mark Miller
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Yes. WooCommerce supports subscriptions, but it is not included in the free core plugin by default. You can add subscription features using the WooCommerce Subscriptions extension (paid) or another subscriptions plugin. With subscriptions, you can sell products or services with recurring payments like monthly or yearly billing. It also supports renewals, proration (in many setups), free trials, sign-up fees, and automatic renewal reminders, depending on the plugin and payment gateway you use.

Yes. WooCommerce supports subscriptions, but it is not included in the free core plugin by default. You can add subscription features using the WooCommerce Subscriptions extension (paid) or another subscriptions plugin. With subscriptions, you can sell products or services with recurring payments like monthly or yearly billing. It also supports renewals, proration (in many setups), free trials, sign-up fees, and automatic renewal reminders, depending on the plugin and payment gateway you use.

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Mark Miller
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To create a membership in WooCommerce, install a membership plugin (commonly WooCommerce Memberships) and activate it. Then go to WooCommerce → Memberships → Membership Plans and create a new plan. Set rules to restrict content, products, pages, or discounts for members only. Next, create a product that grants access (one-time or subscription) and link it to the plan. Publish the plan, test by purchasing the product, and confirm the member can access restricted pages and pricing. You can manage members from the Memberships menu anytime.

To create a membership in WooCommerce, install a membership plugin (commonly WooCommerce Memberships) and activate it. Then go to WooCommerce → Memberships → Membership Plans and create a new plan. Set rules to restrict content, products, pages, or discounts for members only. Next, create a product that grants access (one-time or subscription) and link it to the plan. Publish the plan, test by purchasing the product, and confirm the member can access restricted pages and pricing. You can manage members from the Memberships menu anytime.

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Mark Miller
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A WooCommerce membership can cost $0 to thousands, depending on what you mean. If you mean the plugin cost, WooCommerce Memberships is a paid extension, and the price depends on the license plan and renewal. If you mean the membership you sell to customers, you set the price yourself, like ₹499/month, $29/month, or $199/year. Your total cost may also include hosting, a theme, and payment gateway fees (Stripe/PayPal). For recurring billing, you may also need a subscriptions plugin.

A WooCommerce membership can cost $0 to thousands, depending on what you mean. If you mean the plugin cost, WooCommerce Memberships is a paid extension, and the price depends on the license plan and renewal. If you mean the membership you sell to customers, you set the price yourself, like ₹499/month, $29/month, or $199/year. Your total cost may also include hosting, a theme, and payment gateway fees (Stripe/PayPal). For recurring billing, you may also need a subscriptions plugin.

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Mark Miller
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WooCommerce memberships are a way to sell restricted access on your site. You can create membership plans that let customers view special pages, download files, read premium content, or get member-only pricing and products. Memberships can be sold as a one-time purchase or tied to a subscription for recurring payments. Many stores use memberships for online courses, private communities, wholesale pricing, VIP discounts, or service portals. In WooCommerce, this is usually done with a memberships plugin that controls who can access what based on their plan.

WooCommerce memberships are a way to sell restricted access on your site. You can create membership plans that let customers view special pages, download files, read premium content, or get member-only pricing and products. Memberships can be sold as a one-time purchase or tied to a subscription for recurring payments. Many stores use memberships for online courses, private communities, wholesale pricing, VIP discounts, or service portals. In WooCommerce, this is usually done with a memberships plugin that controls who can access what based on their plan.

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Mark Miller
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Install WooCommerce first if you sell products. Then install and activate the WooCommerce Square plugin. Go to WooCommerce → Settings → Payments and enable Square. Click Manage and connect your Square account. Select your Square location, confirm currency, and save settings. Enable test mode first, place a test order, then switch to live mode. If you do not use WooCommerce, create a Square Payment Link and add it as a button on your WordPress page.

Install WooCommerce first if you sell products. Then install and activate the WooCommerce Square plugin. Go to WooCommerce → Settings → Payments and enable Square. Click Manage and connect your Square account. Select your Square location, confirm currency, and save settings. Enable test mode first, place a test order, then switch to live mode. If you do not use WooCommerce, create a Square Payment Link and add it as a button on your WordPress page.

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