Caching Guide Print

  • cache, caching
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You are reading this page because you are having issues viewing updated ("fresh") pages on your website, or we believe your browser is displaying a cached version of the page.

Website Caching Troubleshooting Guide

Web caching is an important part of modern website performance and helps websites load significantly faster for visitors.

Before we begin: Our servers use the legendary LiteSpeed OS together with the LiteSpeed WordPress Cache plugin (available free to all our customers), allowing extremely fast delivery of webpages.

This dramatically improves page speed, visitor engagement, SEO performance, and overall user experience. In today's modern web environment, caching is no longer optional, it is essential.

On occasion, due to the way browsers and devices work, you may encounter client-side caching. This means your local device stores a copy of the webpage and continues displaying that version instead of downloading the latest version from the server.

This is particularly common on iPhones, iPads, Safari, and some mobile browsers.

The guides below explain how to refresh or bypass caching issues.


1. Caching for End Users

An end user is someone visiting the website, such as a customer or member of the public.


2. Caching for Webmasters

A webmaster is someone who manages the website and has access to the WordPress admin area.


Important: In most cases, caching issues are local to the visitor's browser or device and do not indicate a server problem.


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