How to duplicate a post in WordPress, plus 4 reasons why!

If you write content in WordPress, duplicating a post can come in quite handy. It can save you a lot of valuable time to clone a post and adjust the content, instead of starting from scratch with every post you write. Fortunately, cloning a post becomes very easy with the Yoast Duplicate post plugin. In this article, you can read how to use it and we’ll discuss 4 everyday situations in which you might want to use it.

How to duplicate a post in WordPress

One of the newest additions to our Yoast stable is the Yoast Duplicate Post plugin. This simple but effective plugin helps you duplicate or clone a post in a few simple steps:

  1. Install the Yoast Duplicate Post plugin

    If you don’t have the plugin yet, simply go to Plugins in the backend of your WordPress site and install Yoast Duplicate Post. Not sure how to do this? This article explains how to install a plugin.

    step 1: installing the yoast duplicate post plugin

  2. Click on Posts

    After you’ve installed and activated the Yoast Duplicate Post plugin, you’re good to go. When you want to duplicate a post, go to your post overview where you’ll see all your posts listed. Find the post you want to clone:

    step 2: go to your post overview

  3. Hover over the post you’d like to clone

    If you hover your mouse over the post you’d like to clone, you’ll see some options appear under the post title:
    step 3: hover over the post you want to clone

  4. Click on Clone post

    When you want to duplicate your post, simply click “Clone” or “New Draft”. Both functions will clone your post. If you click on “New Draft” the clone will open directly so you can start working in it immediately. If you click “Clone” a duplicate of your post will appear as a draft post in the list:

    step 4: clone your post to copy it to a draft

  5. Rename the clone

    To prevent confusion, it’s best to rename your duplicate post right away. You can do this by clicking on the post and editing the title there. Or you can click on “Quick Edit” in the post overview and edit the title in this input field:

    step 5: rename the clone to avoid confusion

The new Rewrite & Republish feature

Before we go into the reasons to duplicate or clone a post, we’d like to mention the newest feature of Yoast Duplicate Post: Rewrite & Republish. As you can see in the screenshot in step 3, this option is also available when you want to clone or duplicate your post. What does it do? And how is it different from the option to clone your post?

The Rewrite & Republish feature creates a clone of your post, but with a specific purpose. One of the reasons that lots of people use Yoast Duplicate Post is to update existing posts without these changes going live right away. This new feature is created for those users. For example, when you want the changes to go live at a later date or if you want to save these changes to continue your work at a later moment. This was always possible, but creating a clone or duplicate the normal way did mean that you had to manually copy the rewritten content to the original post when the changes could go live. Plus you had to manually delete the draft or clone you made.

The new Rewrite & Republish feature makes a duplicate draft of your original post which you can edit in your own time. Then once you’re done, hit the Republish button to have the plugin automatically merge your updated post into the original one. It also automatically cleans up the draft for you! You can also schedule those updates to go live at a later date or moment.

Read more: How to rewrite and republish content with Yoast Duplicate Post »

4 reasons to duplicate or clone a post

There are several reasons why you’d want to create a clone of an existing post. There may be more than 4 reasons, but here we’d like to highlight the reasons that are recognizable for most of us. Of course, you don’t want to publish the exact same or very similar content as that might confuse search engines. So, in what situations should you use it?

1. Reusing a format

Especially in eCommerce, you might have a certain format for a product page. But also, for a series of posts on your blog, help pages on your site, or events, you might like to stick to a certain format. If you’re using a format you’re happy with, you can use the clone function to duplicate the page with the right format. Delete the content you shouldn’t keep and just fill the post with the content about other products, help info, or events. It’s as easy as that, and a huge time saver.

2. Extensive updates on existing posts and pages

Keeping your content fresh and up to date is a sensible thing to do. You don’t want to show visitors outdated or incorrect information. Also, search engines prefer to serve users content that is regularly updated and accurate. Sometimes, updating is just a matter of changing a sentence here and there or fixing a typo, which you can easily do in an existing post. But if it needs more work, for instance, a complete rewrite of multiple paragraphs, you might want to work on this in a Rewrite & Republish clone.

Working in a Rewrite & Republish clone has a couple of advantages:

  • it allows you to adjust what’s needed, save it, re-read it, and correct it if necessary before your changes go live;
  • you can preview your post and see exactly what it looks like;
  • you can share the preview with others before you publish the changes.

When you’re sure the updated post is ready for publication, click ‘Republish’ at the top of your draft and the plugin will automatically publish the rewritten content over the old one. It will also trash the old draft, making sure you won’t publish that one by accident. The Rewrite & Republish feature helps you update your content without too much hassle.

3. Scheduled updates

In some cases, you don’t want to publish changes right away. You’ll have to wait until, for instance, a product is launched or an event took place. In this case, you can also use the Rewrite & Republish option to perfectly prepare the changes and simply schedule your update for publication. You can do this by clicking on the republish date in the Post settings and picking the date you want the updated version to go live. Until that moment your original post will stay as it is and the plugin will automatically update this post to your updated version at the moment of your choice. This will save you a lot of last-minute work and editing.

4. Merges of multiple posts

Large sites often have lots of content. Inevitably, the content you publish might become more alike over time. We notice this ourselves as we write a lot about content optimization. Before you know it, you’ll have multiple posts on how to optimize a blog post. Is this a bad thing? Well, it might be, if you start competing with yourself in the search engines. We call this keyword cannibalization. We have a complete article on how to find and fix cannibilization in a smart way. 

If you have posts that are very similar and compete for a top ranking in the search results, you’re better off merging them into one complete and high-quality post. In order to do so, you can check how these similar posts are doing, which one gets the most traffic and ranks highest. This is the preferred post or URL to keep. 

When you take a closer look at the other post you might find interesting stuff in there that your high-performing post is missing. Then, of course, add it! This might be quite a puzzle though, and that’s where duplicating your post comes in. You can choose to use the Rewrite & Republish option to update the best performing post by adding the information from the other post(s). Or you can create a new clone to take a good look at both posts, take the best out of both of them and merge them into one awesome and complete post. With the latter, you can copy the content from the clone into the best-performing URL and update it. But whether you choose to use Rewrite & Republish or a clone, don’t forget to redirect the post you’re not keeping! 

What do you use it for?

Do you already use the Yoast Duplicate Post plugin? We’d like to know what situations you use it in! As we’re continuously improving the plugin, we love to hear how you use it and what features could be useful to add or improve. So please share your thoughts here!

Keep reading: about the Yoast Duplicate Post plugin »

Coming up next!


10 Responses to How to duplicate a post in WordPress, plus 4 reasons why!

  1. Jassim
    Jassim  • 4 years ago

    After i download the plugin, if i do have duplicates would the app recognize them to fix?

    • Camille Cunningham
      Camille Cunningham  • 4 years ago

      Hi there, Jassim! This plugin is meant to easily duplicate one of your posts so you don’t have to start from scratch with every new post. It does not have the functionality to detect duplicates, unfortunately!

      If you want to detect and fix duplicate content on your site, this article can help you: https://yoast.com/duplicate-content/

      Hope this answers your question :)

  2. Devang
    Devang  • 4 years ago

    I haven’t tried Post clone Feature yet but definitely this can help me combine my 2-3 short posts that are closely related to each other and convert them into a lengthy Piller post which is easier to rank on the SERPs. This makes my data easier to manage.
    Definitely, going to utilize the Clone Post feature, today onwards.

    • Edwin Toonen
      Edwin Toonen  • 4 years ago

      Try it, Devang! It’s a really cool tool that helps us a lot.

  3. Debora
    Debora  • 4 years ago

    não conhecia.. Gostei e vou experimentar.

    • Camille Cunningham
      Camille Cunningham  • 4 years ago

      Boa sorte, Debora!

  4. Ukeme umoh
    Ukeme umoh  • 4 years ago

    Great information, I’ll definitely try it!

    • Camille Cunningham
      Camille Cunningham  • 4 years ago

      Hi Ukeme, that’s great to hear! Let us know what you think!

  5. Carol@BlueskyatHome
    Carol@BlueskyatHome  • 4 years ago

    I love the Duplicate/Clone Post feature. I use it specially for a weekly link party that I co-host. I duplicate last week’s link party post (number 64, for example), then I update the title with the new week’s number, 65, and update any other text that contains the new number. Next, I replace images with the current week’s features and links. I edit the weekly introduction. Static information (hostess image and social media links, link party rules, etc.) I don’t touch. I save draft, preview and then schedule. The previous week’s post stays the same. This saves me so much time every week. I hope that I’m doing this correctly. It seems to work great.

    • Willemien Hallebeek

      Hi Carol, thanks for sharing this! It sounds like you’re saving a lot of time indeed. Good luck with your link party!