Slow, broken or neglected WordPress site?
I'll diagnose it, sort it out, and if you'd like, keep maintaining it afterwards.

You don't need to know exactly what's causing the problem. Describe what you're seeing — I'll review the most important functional, technical and visual issues, prioritise them, then use the available time on the highest-impact fixes.
Three reasons it's easy to get started
You don't have to phrase it like a developer
Just describe what you see: it's slow, it's broken, it falls apart on mobile, the form doesn't work, the emails don't arrive, or you're afraid to update.
We start with an issue list and priorities
We make it clear what's critical, what's important, what can be fixed now, and what needs a separate decision.
You're not left alone after the fix
If the site reaches a sustainable state, monthly maintenance is available with updates, backups and smaller technical support.
It's rarely a single bug. Often the whole site needs attention.
Most WordPress problems aren't caused by a single obvious thing. Usually small issues pile up: old plugins, missed updates, slowdown, mobile bugs, form problems, technical SEO issues, security gaps or shaky hosting setup. In that case priorities have to be set so the work goes to what matters most.
Several smaller issues piled up
Misaligned elements, mobile display issues, broken buttons, odd admin errors, form problems or smaller functional glitches.
The site is slow or outdated
Hosting, cache, image sizes, theme, plugins, database or external scripts can all cause slowdown. The first step is understanding what's safe to touch.
You're afraid to update
If nothing has been updated in months or years, blindly updating everything at once is a bad idea. Theme, plugin and hosting risks need to be reviewed first.
Something important doesn't work
Form, email delivery, menu, search, mobile view, admin panel, cart, checkout or order email can all break.
Not sure whether to fix or start over
A new site isn't always the answer, but endlessly patching the old one isn't either. The fix-up helps decide what's worth fixing now, and what would be a separate project.
You don't have to name the exact bug.
Describe what you see and what bothers you. At the start of the work I'll help put things in order.
Review, focused fixes and a clear next step in one package.
The goal is that during the fix-up the most important issues come first: anything affecting functionality, security, contact, orders, mobile usability, search visibility or customer acquisition.
How it works
I review the important parts of the site
I look at the site with a developer's eye: how it works, its technical state, mobile display, basic SEO situation, security and backup foundations, and visible bugs.
You get an issue list with priorities
You get a short, plain-language list of what I found. I mark each item by importance: critical, important, useful polish, or something that needs a separate decision or project.
After alignment, I fix things
You tell me which area matters most. Then, within the available time and in priority order, I fix what fits safely and proportionately.
You get a short summary at the end
I briefly describe what improved, what's left, what needs a separate quote, and whether ongoing monthly maintenance makes sense.
I review several important areas, but the highest-impact tasks always come first.
Functional bugs
Form, email delivery, admin errors, plugin conflicts, post-update problems, menus, buttons, links, search and smaller feature bugs.
Mobile and visuals
Misaligned elements on mobile, broken layout, bad spacing, overflowing text, broken buttons, responsive fixes, smaller design polish and basic usability notes.
Speed and technical basics
Oversized images, basic cache setup, unnecessary loads, slow admin, basic performance issues, broken or bloated plugins, console errors.
SEO basics
Indexing issues, noindex or robots errors, sitemap check, basic meta problems, broken redirects, 404s, basic heading structure check.
Security, backup and hosting
Backup check or basic setup, basic security settings, update risks, SSL, PHP version, error logs, SMTP and email delivery basics.
WooCommerce basics
Cart, checkout, order emails, admin behaviour, visible shop bugs and smaller, safely fixable WooCommerce problems.
WordPress Fix-up
Fixed-price fix-up service for existing WordPress and WooCommerce sites.
What's included?
- Developer-level review of the WordPress base state
- Mapping of visible bugs, mobile issues and functional problems
- Basic check of technical SEO foundations and indexing issues
- Overview of performance, security, backup and update risks
- Review of hosting, PHP environment, error logs and email delivery basics, if access is needed and available
- Review of HTML / CSS / JavaScript errors, console errors and basic usability issues, if relevant
- For WooCommerce: review of smaller shop bugs and visible functional issues
- Plain-language issue list, priority order and an agreed fix-up focus
- Up to one working day of total professional effort, including review, alignment, fixing, checking and a short summary
- Short written summary of what was fixed, what's left, and the recommended next step
Important boundary
The goal is for as many important issues as possible to be solved safely and proportionately within the available time.
The package doesn't promise that nothing will be left to do. It promises that the state of the site will become clearer, more of the most important fixable items will be addressed, and you'll see exactly what's left.
Full SEO strategy, full accessibility audit, full redesign, building a new website, larger custom development, serious malware cleanup, fixing external API or invoicing integrations, and 24/7 on-call are not automatically included.
For WooCommerce, full review of payment gateways, checkout flow, shipping logic, invoicing integration, stock management or external systems may need a separate quote.
First we get the picture, together we set priorities, then we fix what matters most.
You describe the issue
You give the site URL and briefly describe what you're experiencing. For example: it's slow, the form is broken, it falls apart on mobile, you're afraid to update, the shop doesn't work, or it's not visible in Google.
I reply about the starting point
I read the description and let you know whether the WordPress Fix-up looks like a good starting point, or whether the situation already suggests a different kind of work.
I review and set priorities
Any access needed for the actual review is agreed separately, over a secure channel. I review the important areas with a developer's eye, then you get a short issue list.
After alignment, I fix things
Within the available time and in priority order, I fix what fits safely and proportionately.
You get a summary
At the end I briefly describe what improved, what's left, what needs a separate quote, and whether monthly maintenance makes sense.
Once the site is in order, monthly maintenance is also available.
A WordPress site isn't done the moment we fix it once. Updates, backups, plugins, hosting changes, security risks and smaller modifications keep coming.
If the site is in a sustainable state after the fix-up, I can take it into monthly maintenance so it doesn't drift back into the same neglected state.
The exact scope depends on the state of the site and your needs. An unknown or poor-state site needs to be reviewed or fixed up first.
Fix up my site firstI don't ask for passwords in the form, and I don't do blind fixes.
With WordPress issues, more harm is often done when someone touches a live site without a backup, approval or prior review. The first message only needs the site URL and a short description. Any access needed for the actual review or fix is agreed separately, over a secure channel.
Before any riskier change, a backup, restore point or test environment may be required. No major change is made on a live site without explicit agreement.

I run WP Mentő as a solo web developer with over 10 years of professional experience and 150+ projects delivered. My main areas: WordPress, WooCommerce, frontend, PHP-based development, performance work, debugging, API integrations and longer-term maintenance.
You don't go through support tiers or outsourced developers — you work directly with the person who reviews and fixes the site.
The most important questions, briefly
Describe what's wrong with the site. I'll tell you the next safe step.
For the first message, the site URL, the main issue and when it started are enough. Don't send passwords, admin logins or hosting access in the form.


