In this guide, we’ll walk you through the process of turning your WordPress sites multilingual. You’ll see which plugins to install, how to configure them, and how to translate your site’s content.
Before we get started, let’s clear some doubts:
Yes, you can have multiple languages in one WordPress site.
Yes, you can translate everything yourself and use automatic translation.
No, you don’t need to build separate websites for each language.
1. Install Plugins to Make Your WordPress Site Multilingual
To translate every part of your site, you need to install WPML. WPML is a modular plugin, which allows you to install the exact components that you need for different websites.
To use all the features WPML has to offer, you will need the Multilingual CMS version. Start by installing the OTGS Installer plugin. It comes with all the necessary WPML components, including WPML String Translation. Depending on what theme and plugins you use, you may need to install other WPML components, like WooCommerce Multilingual.
WPML includes an automatic installation and update mechanism. To use it, all you need to do is install and register the core plugin. Then, navigate (in the WordPress admin) to Plugins → Add new and click the Commercial tab. There, you will see the entire list of WPML components and you can choose the ones that your site requires.
2. Add Languages to WordPress
Without a multilingual plugin, WordPress allows you to choose the language of the site – but it can only be used in that one language.
With WPML, you can add as many languages as you need to the same site. In the first step of the setup wizard, you choose your site’s default language and select the languages you want to translate your site into.
You can also add, remove, or edit languages anytime by going to the WPML → Languages menu.
WPML comes pre-configured with 65 languages to choose from, but you can even add your own custom languages. This is especially useful for adding country-specific languages such as Canadian French or Swiss German.
3. Choose How Languages Appear in the URLs
WPML adds language information to all the URLs on your site. This allows translations to appear in unique URLs.
For friendly URLs and good SEO, we recommend that you use Languages in directories or A different language per domain. You can learn the full details in our guide on language URL options.
4. Add Language Switchers to Your Site
Language switchers allow visitors to choose in which language they want to read your site. WPML lets you add different kinds of language switchers, which fit into the design of any WordPress site.
From WPML → Languages, you can add language switchers to menus, as widgets, to pages and posts, and to the site’s footer.
You can also add a language switcher to menus, widgets, templates, and page or post content using the LanguageSwitcher block.
WPML’s variety of options makes sure your site’s translations match the quality you need and the budget you have available.
Automatic translation has made huge progress. Today, it can be used to render natural-sounding results between many language pairs. Please keep in mind that it’s still automatic and it still requires supervision. We recommend that you review everything that comes back from automatic translation. When needed, you can always edit and improve the translation.
WPML’s Advanced Translation Editor includes everything that you need to translate quickly and accurately. You will see the source and the translation side-by-side. When you translate a sentence, you’ll see just the texts without HTML code. To apply HTML styling, you will use safe markers. This way, your translation can never break the site’s markup.
Translation services offer superior quality with human translation and review. When you’re running business sites and you want to project the most professional image, you should definitely consider paying for high-quality professional translation.
6. Translate Taxonomies
In WordPress, a taxonomy is a way to categorize and organize content. WPML makes it easy to translate taxonomies.
When translating posts, pages, and custom post types, you don’t need to worry about translating taxonomies. WPML will include the taxonomy terms with the content that you’re translating.
If you want, you can translate taxonomies separately using WPML’s Taxonomy Translation. This screen shows you a global picture of the taxonomy terms on your site. You can translate any term to any language from one place. This is convenient to make sure that different terms are always translated in a consistent way.
You can translate menus manually and sync menus automatically. This means that whenever you edit the menu in the site’s default language, WPML can immediately update the menus in all other languages.
8. Translate Strings
Your WordPress site also has texts that are not part of any post, field, or taxonomy. These texts can come from plugins, themes, and even WordPress itself (like the site’s tagline). WPML’s String Translation allows you to find and translate all these texts.
You can see where strings are coming from, so you’ll understand what they mean
WPML can automatically register strings for translation
You can export and import string translations as PO files
You can even translate strings that are stored inside the wp_options table
Even though WPML’s String Translation is a powerful plugin, it doesn’t add any load to your site. WPML stores all its translations in MO files and does not access the database to load them.
9. SEO for Your Multilingual Content
Having a multilingual site is great, but having that site deliver traffic is even better. Fortunately, WPML takes care of all the technicalities so that your SEO work can focus mainly on strategy and content creation.
Read our full guide on multilingual SEO to learn how it works and what you need to do.
Appendix – What’s New in 2023
In 2023, WordPress is the most used content management system (CMS) in the world.
Gutenberg is a mature and rich editor for WordPress content. It proudly competes with popular page builders and is now the norm for new sites. With the Site Editor (formally known as Full Site Editing), you can now easily change the look and feel of your website.
To successfully translate WordPress sites in 2023, you need to be fully compatible with Gutenberg and its many extensions. And of course, WPML already works perfectly with both Gutenberg and Full Site Editing, also known as Site Editor.
In 2023, Google remains focused on user experience and the importance of strengthening your site’s Core Web Vitals. WPML plays nice with Google by minimizing both server load and browser resources.
In 2023, automatic translation is more capable than ever and WPML makes it easy to use correctly. For high-quality translations, WPML offers integration with quality services DeepL, Google Translate, and Microsoft Azure Translator. For DeepL, you can even choose between an informal or formal tone of voice for your translations. This makes speaking the same language as your site’s visitors convenient, cost-effective, and as simple as can be.