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How to Remove Numbers From WordPress URLs

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Do you want to know how to get rid of numbers from WordPress blog posts and landing page URLs?

WordPress offers different URL structures for your website, including post ID numbers, year, day, and post title. Having numeric URLs is not SEO-friendly and provides a bad user experience.

In this article, we will show you how to get rid of numbers from WordPress URLs.

How to remove numbers from WordPress URLs

Why Remove Numbers From WordPress URLs?

When it comes to setting up your WordPress website URLs, it’s important that they are SEO-friendly and help explain your article to visitors.

Adding numbers to a URL doesn’t hurt your WordPress SEO or keyword rankings. However, it makes it more difficult for search engines to understand the post. Similarly, your users can also have a hard time finding the right content if it only contains numbers.

Here’s an example of an SEO-friendly URL that doesn’t have any numbers:

https://www.wpbeginner.com/start-a-wordpress-blog/

On the other hand, here’s what your URL would look if it only had numbers, like a post ID:

https://www.wpbeginner.com/?p=11245

As you can see, links with a keyword or a phrase are much easier to understand and easier to find than numbered URLs.

Another benefit of removing numbers from URLs is that you don’t have to redirect a blog post whenever the content is updated. For instance, it’s an SEO best practice to remove numbers like the year, day, or the total number of items in a list post from the URL.

That said, let’s see how to remove numbers from a WordPress URL.

Video Tutorial

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If you’d prefer written instructions, then just keep reading.

Removing Numbers From WordPress Permalink URLs

WordPress has built-in support for SEO-friendly URL structures.

All you need to do is open the Settings » Permalinks page in the WordPress admin area and choose a URL structure for your site.

You’ll see different options for your permalinks. These include a Plain structure where your URL contains the post ID, a day and name structure, a month and name structure, a numeric structure, and a post name structure.

Update permalinks

We recommend choosing the ‘Post name’ structure that shows your post title in the URL because it is SEO-friendly and will help others discover your site in search engines.

Once you have set up permalinks, you just need to save your changes.

WordPress will now automatically change URLs for all your previous posts as well. Don’t worry if you have posted the older URLs somewhere because WordPress will automatically redirect those users to new URLs.

Removing Numbers From a Post or Page Slug

Even though you are using permalinks now, you may still want to get rid of numbers in your blog post URL. The most common reason for this is when you publish a post with no title or the title contains a number like a year.

Remember, WordPress chooses the text to display in the URL from your post’s title, so if your post does not have a title or contains a year, then WordPress will use it in the URL. Instead of the post number, you can manually tell WordPress what to use in the URL.

Remove Numbers from URL Slug in the WordPress Block Editor

To edit the URL of any content on your site, you need to edit your blog post or page.

Once you are in the WordPress block editor, you can click on the gear icon in the top right corner and open the settings panel.

Next, simply scroll down to the Permalink section in the settings panel and edit the URL Slug. When you don’t have a title for a blog post, it will show the post ID by default.

Change slug in block editor

In the screenshot above, WordPress is using the current post ID 45 as the URL slug.

You can edit that or simply enter a title for your blog post, and your URL slug will automatically change to your post title.

Post title as slug

When you are done, don’t forget to Publish or Update your blog post.

Remove Numbers from URL Slug in the WordPress Classic Editor

If you are using the WordPress classic editor, then you also edit your post permalink and remove numbers.

First, add a new blog post or edit an existing page.

When you are in the classic editor, you will see your post’s URL with an ‘Edit’ button just below the post title.

Clicking on the ‘Edit’ button will make the URL editable. This editable part is called the post slug. You can enter the text you want to use as a post slug in the URL and remove the numbers.

Edit post slug in classic editor

What About Numbers in Duplicate Posts and Pages?

Sometimes even when you edit the custom slug, the -2 continues to be added to your URLs. For example, you create a new About page, and your URL looks like this:

https://yoursite.com/about-2/

Now wouldn’t you want to get rid of that -2, and simply have /about/? This problem occurs when you have the same slug being used already.

Check all your posts and pages to see that none has the same slug, such as /about/. If you find one, then you need to delete it unless you are using it. More often than not, you won’t find an active page with the same slug.

This is when you need to look in the Trash folder. When you trash a WordPress post or page, it is not entirely deleted. It sits in the Trash for 30 days before it gets permanently deleted. This is done to give you the option to restore trashed items if you accidentally deleted them.

The slug cannot be reused as long as the post or page stays in the Trash. So if you want to reuse the /about/ slug, then you must delete the About page sitting in the Trash folder.

Once you do that, you should be able to edit your slug, like the method shown above, and get rid of the -2.

This technique works for categories and tags as well.

Bonus: Setting Up 301 Redirects When Changing URLs

Whenever you edit a URL slug of existing content, WordPress will create a new page or post. This will lead to duplicate content on your website with different slugs.

You don’t want that because it’s bad for WordPress SEO. That’s because search engines won’t know which content to rank, and the existing link authority won’t be passed through to the newly changed URL.

A simple solution is to set up redirection whenever you change the URL.

All in One SEO (AIOSEO) is the best SEO plugin for WordPress and has over 3 million users. It offers a powerful redirection manager that helps set up 301 redirects and catch broken links on your website.

Note: The redirection manager is available in the AIOSEO Pro license. There’s also a free version of AIOSEO you can use to get started.

All you have to do is enter the slug that you want to redirect (Source URL) and add the new changed URL (Target URL). From here, you need to select ‘301 Moved Permanently’ as your Redirect Type.

Set up redirection in AIOSEO

Please see our guide to creating 301 redirects in WordPress for more details.

Expert Guides on WordPress URLs

Now that you know how to remove numbers from URLs in WordPress, you may like to see some other guides related to WordPress URLs.

We hope this article helped you learn how to remove numbers from WordPress URLs. You may also want to see our guide on how to start an online store and our expert pick of the best virtual phone number apps for small businesses.

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Editorial Staff

Editorial Staff at WPBeginner is a team of WordPress experts led by Syed Balkhi with over 16 years of experience in WordPress, Web Hosting, eCommerce, SEO, and Marketing. Started in 2009, WPBeginner is now the largest free WordPress resource site in the industry and is often referred to as the Wikipedia for WordPress.

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Reader Interactions

53 CommentsLeave a Reply

  1. Syed Balkhi says

    Hey WPBeginner readers,
    Did you know you can win exciting prizes by commenting on WPBeginner?
    Every month, our top blog commenters will win HUGE rewards, including premium WordPress plugin licenses and cash prizes.
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  2. LorriAnne says

    Looking at these screenshots and then looking at what I have in my WP, I believe someone’s pulling my leg with some really good photoshopped images. This tutorial is not valid.

    • WPBeginner Support says

      Our guide is using the current block editor. If you do not see the same interface there are three likely culprits. If you are using a page builder plugin that would override the default editor with some, if you are using the classic editor plugin you would see the old classic editor interface, or if you are using WordPress.com then you would see their interface instead as our articles are for WordPress.org sites.

      Admin

    • WPBeginner Support says

      Your site’s content would be safe when updating your domain for this tutorial.

      Admin

  3. Thomas says

    Hi,

    Thank you for a very informative video / article.

    I have the same issue that you talk about, where the “-2” appears on one of my sites, however, I have nothing in my trash?

    Currently, this issue arises on my local server and I would love to get it fixed before I take this live. Could you help me?

    • WPBeginner Support says

      You would want to try to visit the URL without the -2 in it to see if it directs you to a page in which case you should be able to click the edit option in the admin bar at the top of your site. :)

      Admin

  4. Tamás says

    Hello!

    I like to get WP to start the numbering on repeating slugs from 8 digits.

    E.g. sample-post, then sample-post-0000001

    Any idea? I don’t find anything related and would be extremeley important.

    Thx!

    Best
    Tamas

  5. Ajay says

    Dear Editor,
    I have a question about how to remove tag from wordpress url?

    old url: site.com/tag/movies

    New Url : site.com/movies

    How do I do that in wordpress? And how do I make the url direct from the old url?

  6. Bilal says

    Today, when I working on Login page to place Password recover form short code, I Turn of Social media Login. After that I Logout Admin and checked that, two changes observed, one is Login form shwing very small size, second is all pages showing IDs when open in browser

    Now what I do to set it, in settings, Permalinks seting are ok like previous, what thing changed, which showing IDs after url.

    Any solution.

    • WPBeginner Support says

      You would want to let the social media login plugin know what happened to the login form after disabling and they should be able to assist. If it is a ? followed by a number then you are likely using an ecommerce plugin that is tracking sessions so it can save the cart for the user.

      Admin

  7. Bita Gh says

    I have a problem in my wordpress website. my old website has been linked to my new website though an URL which I can not find. I want to delet or disable that link especially in google search. because that is linked to my old shop and old prices and people keep calling about the differences in prices. please help!

  8. Janice Sullivan says

    My links are ok but on the top bar I see “All Posts | “my link name”. ‘All post’ is not part of the name of the page/blog posts or in the link? I can’t figure out how to remove it…any help out there?

  9. Sarah X says

    Hello. I did what all the steps you did but the 2 continues to show up in the url. I dont know what to do . i deleted and add like 3 times the same page and that number still there … :s
    Whats wrong ? can you help me pls

    Appreciate the attention
    Sarah. from Portugal

    • WPBeginner Support says

      Hi Sarah,

      When you delete a post or page in WordPress, it goes into the trash. You need to delete that page from Trash as well. Go to Pages » All Pages and you will see a row of links to sort pages according to their status (Published, Draft, Scheduled, Trash). Click on the trash to view the pages that you have deleted earlier. Once you are there you will see a link ‘Delete Permanently’ below each article clicking on it will delete the page permanently and you will be able to use that slug for your new page.

      Admin

      • Kat Zimmer says

        Hi there,
        I’ve combed through our site and taken all the actions you’ve suggested (permanently delete everything in the trash and ensure there is no photo/media file with that slug) and it’s STILL naming my slug with a -2 at the end. Please help!!

    • Peter says

      How can I produce a list of permalinks that have “-2” at their end, so I can correct them? I have 291 posts, 48 pages, and around 50 product pages.

      In addition, I have two ecommerce stores, one for Australia (/shop/bookname) and one USA (/books/bookname), and all products have permalinks. Doesn’t permalinks take notice of the rest of the URL?

      Thanks,
      Peter

    • Shaikh says

      I didn’t have any pages still in trash. I didn’t have a category with the same name as my page. I didn’t have another page with the same name. So I did something crazy. WP was trying to name my page as page-2, so I went to mywebsite.com/page to see what happened.

      A page with a single photo popped up. I had a PHOTO with the same name as the page, and WP media manager gives photos permalinks based on the file name! Fix was to rename the photo (still keeping SEO in mind), and using the permalink editor for the page. TAH DAH! Like magic, it worked

      • Chrissy says

        Ah, I was pulling my hair out with this and what you’ve found out has solved my issue. Thanks for posting your findings, very helpful…

  10. Janssen says

    is there any way to also hide the url link? for example, mysite/mypost/ instead of 192.168.0.1:8080/mypost/

  11. Christa says

    I found your post because I do wonder about the following number behind all the pages and posts I have on my website which then looks like this: example.com/?v=b9610cde4c4c.
    If I check the number only with google there comes my site with two pages and another very strange facebook website kind of….
    I saw that someone commenting did find out about a plugin – so I deactivated all social plugins, I haven’t got hers on my site. The Permalinks are checked and correct and I didn’t find anything to change or this number, in my php. Do you have any Idea, what this could be or must I worry…?

      • Christa says

        Hello, thanks for your reply and yes, I will check it at sucuri – good idea! I don’t understand what you mean by “if the URL’s are getting indedexed in search…” what do you mean by that?
        Thank You!

  12. Richard says

    I Once Had The Problem Of Seeing the -2 slug being shown for duplicate pages left in trash. However with a New Site I was Editing I was Still Having the -2 show up in title but there was not anything in my Trash For Pages. I Finally Searched My domain with the correct title I wanted and Up Popped one Of the images in my IMAGE Library that had the same name of the page I kept trying to correct. So Images with Names the same as your titles will cause this Behavior too. Just My Experience with the problem.

    • WPBeginner Support says

      Images are also stored as attachment which is a built in WordPress post type. Like all other post types attachments also have slugs. So yes if you have an attachment with slug my-first-bike and then you try to add an article with the same slug, then WordPress will add a number to the slug.

      Admin

  13. trey says

    Had the same problem on a page. Deactivated all plugins, quick edit of page url. and bingo it now works, tried everything to no avail before!

  14. Paul Sadler says

    Unfortunately, this article is a bit simplistic as that is not always what causes the -2 to be added. While it will do it if there is already an “about” and you are adding another page or post called “about”, but it also has problems with numbers as the titles of pages.

    I am creating a gallery and some of the layout is a bit manual for organization, partly as I am wrapping text around the intro and conclusion. So I called one of the pages 2015, another 2010, another 2016. Doesn’t matter what I call it, there is nothing in my trash by that name, it is entirely “new”, but WP will NOT allow it. Why? Because it knows it looks like a year and it doesn’t like numbers only in the structure.

    So I can’t have “2015 / January” as my structure, it will have to have some other letter in there for the year plus of course I can’t have the “January” page every year, leaving me with a URL that will look like Y2015 / 2015-January…not very elegant I’m afraid, but seems to be the only solution other than running a custom plugin that overwrites the slugs and risks breaking all of the WP install.

    Paul

  15. Chirag Gupta says

    how can i remove category or tag from url…
    example.com/category/mobile >>> example.com/mobile

  16. andrew says

    I seem to no longer be able to add a permalink with just four digits (ie “http://example.com/1223”)
    You used to be allowed to do this for posts but not pages, now you can’t do it at all and it is really messing up one of my clients sites.

  17. WPBeginner Staff says

    This is unusual behavior. Please deactivate all your WordPress plugins and switch to a default theme like twenty thirteen or twenty fourteen. See if your posts still have links like this. If they do then it is likely that your WordPress security is compromised.

  18. Karon Warren says

    I have permalinks set up on my site with “post name” as the default setting. And that does work. However, when you actually click on the live post, it initially comes up with the permalink, but after fully loading, it has a series of numbers/letters attached to the permalink, like this: #.VB2dTCtdVW0
    How do I get rid of those numbers from the actual permalink?

    • Janet Bauske says

      Karon, I had the same problem. I found the culprit was the AddThis social bookmarking widget. To remove it, go to the Plugin settings under Settings > AddThis Share > Advanced Tab and turn off the Address Bar Shares Tracking.

  19. Steve says

    I have the same problem (-2 at the end). I have cleared my trash, etc but I’m still having the same problem. I have an about-2 page, but no sign of an about page. Any ideas?

  20. Rugby says

    Really helpful – had problem with -2 being added to my posts page and emptied trash and hey presto gone! Thanks

  21. Theresa says

    sometimes the littlest things can feel like a stalemate. thanks for providing all these great tips

    • Michael Monday says

      Splendid !!! You just said it all !!! Thanks a lot for this long-sought solution to the “urgly” url I have had to deal with for months. Now my posts url looks good. Thanks a lot My Balkhi and your team :)

  22. John says

    This is all great information! I would like to know if I can use some of what I find here to post on my site, or include in email campaigns. Specifically, referring to the badge in this post for removing numbers from urls in WP, but also would like to know if there are others available, within the confines of best practices of course.
    thanks,
    jag

  23. Keith Davis says

    Hi Guys
    I’ve got pretty permalinks set so I’ve had no problems with that but I have had the 2 appear in a couple of posts.

    The first time I trashed a post and started again not realising that trashing is not enough: you have to delete it.

    The second time I trashed and deleted the post but still got the dreaded 2 at the end.

    No idea why that would happen.

  24. Gretchen Louise says

    Is the automatic redirection of permalink styles a new feature? I still use custom .htaccess code but have had issues with it eliminating my date-based archives, too.

  25. patty jones says

    WordPress automatically redirects to the new permalinks? I have wanted to change the permalink structure of my site for a long time but worried how it would affect links that are already out there.

    Our site has over 4000 posts and I figured it would kill our page rank. What are you thoughts on that many redirects?

  26. jayism says

    This is an interesting post, but it does not cover how to remove the site.com/category-2/sub-category/heres-a-post.php – I have this problem, and read it happens when you create a category called software, then delete it, and create it again further down the track – the original ‘software’ remains in the DB for ‘categories’ – therefore it is forced to name the category with a -2 so the Database doesn’t have a duplicate….

    The only ways I’ve read to fix this in numerous posts is going into myPHPAdmin and deleting the original ‘software’ manually! Your post has shed some light on the situation, and may have another way to get rid of the -2 fro actual categories?

    Thanks,
    @jaycameron of ‘Crowd-Sourced Development Initiative’ -> @Code_Collective

  27. Karen says

    How excellent! That hint about the trash is a gem. And go ahead and laugh – but – I knew what pretty permalinks were – but was confused if that was what acheived with clicking the Post Name option. I’d been confused because I used to do my Pretty Permalinks using the custom option – until this new button was added. So thanks for solving that tiny mystery for me!

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