How to Easily Check Which WordPress Version You are Using

How to Find Out WordPress Version of Almost Any Website

In some cases you may not be able to see the version information in WordPress admin area.

  • Your developer may have disabled version information in admin area.
  • You may not have Administrator access to admin area
  • You are simply trying to find out WordPress version of a site you don’t own or control.

We are assuming that you do not have FTP access to a website, and you cannot log in WordPress admin area.

Please note that these methods may not work on many websites. Some security conscious site owners hide this information to protect their website against common threats.

Having said that, here are some of the methods that you can try to find out the WordPress version of a website.

Method 1: Looking for Generator Tag in Source Code

Simply visit the website in a browser window. Right click on any empty area on the screen and select View Page Source from browser menu.

This will load the site’s source code in the browser window. Press CTRL+F and then search for ‘generator’.

If it is a WordPress site, and if the site owner hasn’t disabled version information, then you will be able to see a tag like this:

<meta name="generator" content="WordPress 4.4.2" />

This meta tag is used by WordPress to show that a site is created using WordPress. Many site owners remove WordPress version number, so this tag may not show up on some WordPress sites.

Method 2: Viewing readme.html File

Each WordPress installation adds a readme.html file in the website’s root folder. Unless the site owner has disabled access to this file, you can access it by adding readme.html at the end of the site’s URL.

http://www.example.com/readme.html

The readme file will show you the WordPress version on top.

This method may not work if a site is protected by Sucuri firewall.

Method 3: Viewing Source Code of WordPress Login Screen

WordPress login screen also contains information in the source code that would reveal the WordPress version of a website.

However, this method would only work if the WordPress site owner hasn’t disabled access to login page or admin area via .htaccess.

Simply add wp-login.php to a WordPress site’s URL.

http://www.example.com/wp-login.php

When the page loads, right click on any empty area on the screen. Select View Page Source from the browser menu.

This will open the login screen’s source code. Press CTRL+F and search for ‘ver=’. You will be able to notice the version parameter added to stylesheets. It would look like this:

Tables can't be imported directly. Please insert an image of your table which can be found here.

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Find out Which Plugin Version You are Using

The easiest way to find out which plugin version you are using is by visiting the plugins page in WordPress admin area.

There you will be able to see the plugin version below the plugin name for each plugin installed on your WordPress site.

However, if you don’t have access to the admin area, then chances of finding out a plugin’s version information are slim.

Some plugins like Yoast SEO automatically add version information in a site’s source code. You can visit a website, right click in an empty area and then select View page source from browser menu.

The tag added by Yoast would look like this:

Other plugins load CSS or JavaScript files and sometimes they use plugin’s version number appended to script or stylesheet URLs like this:

This is not a reliable method to find out a plugin’s version number. For example, the version number could be the version number of jQuery script a plugin is loading.

Another sneaky way to find out plugin version is by visiting the plugin’s readme file on a website. If you know what plugin’s directory name would be then you can try accessing the readme.txt file.

For example, if a site has the free version of WPForms installed, then you can access its readme file like this:

http://www.example.com/wp-content/plugins/wpforms-lite/readme.txt

This method may not work if a site is protected by Sucuri firewall.

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