The Events Calendar Site Management
Managing your website’s performance and data structure ensures that your calendar runs smoothly and stays secure over time. Setting up proper license keys, system configurations, and routine database maintenance helps prevent conflicts during major core updates. When you keep your installation optimized, you protect your data and provide a fast, reliable browsing experience for your visitors.
This collection provides straightforward guides to help you manage the backend settings of your calendar plugin. You will learn how to activate product licenses, clear temporary site data, export your event files, and handle bulk item removal safely. Use these resources to maintain a clean administrative environment and keep your entire events platform running efficiently.
The Events Calendar Site Management articles
Explore the following guides to learn how to manage licenses, optimize performance, and maintain your calendar data.
Configuring User Roles and Permissions with The Events Calendar
Read more: Configuring User Roles and Permissions with The Events CalendarWith WordPress, you can define the roles and permissions assigned to your users in order to give them certain capabilities. These roles and permissions also apply to The Events Calendar and Events Calendar Pro, so as the site owner you can control what users can and cannot do with your events using WordPress’s built-in user…
Making a Members-Only Calendar
Read more: Making a Members-Only CalendarWe are sometimes asked if The Events Calendar allows for the creation of “members-only” or “internal” calendar—a calendar whose events can only be seen by logged-in users. Currently there is no “out of the box” way to make this sort of calendar—no plugin setting, plugin filter, etc. But with a bit of custom coding, you…
Scaling and Performance for The Events Calendar
Read more: Scaling and Performance for The Events CalendarThe Events Calendar and its associated plugins can handle large numbers of events and work well even on very high-traffic websites. However, performance is dependent on many environmental factors that the plugin itself is often unable to manage automatically. This article covers the full picture: proactive settings and best practices for keeping your calendar fast,…
SEO and Search Engine Indexing in The Events Calendar
Read more: SEO and Search Engine Indexing in The Events CalendarImproving SEO with The Events Calendar Within The Events Calendar, there are many links that impact SEO positively. Being a calendar, however, there can be situations where links and even whole pages should not be indexed—an example being month view, which has the ability to paginate nearly infinitely. To improve SEO, The Events Calendar implements…
Site Health and Uptime Monitoring for The Events Calendar
Read more: Site Health and Uptime Monitoring for The Events CalendarKeeping your events platform reliable means catching issues before they affect your users. This guide outlines how to set up monitoring and alerting for The Events Calendar to detect failures early, improve uptime, and maintain system health across all event-related operations. Why Monitoring Matters Even a well-optimized site can experience intermittent issues such as: By…
System Requirements
Read more: System RequirementsEach of our plugins has its own system requirements but in general, this is what they expect: WordPress.org has some great info about the system requirements for WordPress Core, which you can read here. Was this article helpful? Yes No Thank you for your input. Thank you for your feedback.
The Events Calendar System Requirements
Read more: The Events Calendar System RequirementsEach of our plugins has its own system requirements but in general, this is what they expect: WordPress.org has some great info about the system requirements for WordPress Core, which you can read here. Was this article helpful? Yes No Thank you for your input. Thank you for your feedback.
Understanding Caching with The Events Calendar
Read more: Understanding Caching with The Events CalendarWhen a visitor comes to your site they are generally seeking one thing: information! One of the goals of web applications like WordPress (and those systems that run on top of it, such as our own plugins) is to deliver this information as quickly as possible. Often, though, interaction with the sources of this information…