Migration is a business infrastructure decision, not just a data transfer.
Locked
Legacy / SaaS CMS
Owned
Payload CMS + Next.js
Decision Framework
Is now the right time to move?
Migration is a significant investment of both capital and engineering time. It shouldn't be done for the sake of following a trend. It should be done because your current system has become a bottleneck to your business operations.
Signals a migration is the right move:
WordPress Plugin Debt
You spend more time patching security vulnerabilities and fighting plugin conflicts than building new features.
Contentful API Scaling
Your monthly SaaS bill is increasing faster than your traffic, and you're hitting "API record" limits that force architectural compromises.
AI Integration Barriers
You need to implement custom AI agents, SEO automation, or RAG systems, but your current CMS's closed ecosystem makes integration fragile or impossible.
Multi-tenant Requirements
You are managing multiple brands or markets and need a single, unified backend that doesn't charge per "space" or "site."
Signals that you should wait:
No Internal Developers
Payload is a code-first CMS. If you don't have a developer team or a long-term partner, a "no-code" builder might serve you better.
Simple Marketing Needs
If your site is 5 static pages that rarely change and has no complex data relationships, the ROI on migration isn't there.
Budget Constraints
Professional Payload CMS engagements start from $1,500 for content-only migrations. Full platform rebuilds start from $15k.
The Process
What a Payload CMS Migration Plan Looks Like
A CMS migration plan has five phases. I treat each one as an infrastructure project — the kind where skipping a phase creates compounding problems later.
Phase 1: Audit and Content Inventory
Before a single line of code is written, we catalog every content type, field, and asset. We identify "dead weight" content that shouldn't be migrated and map existing relationships to a cleaner, typed schema.
! Deciding what NOT to migrate.
Phase 2: Content Model Mapping
We translate your current CMS schema into Payload Collections and Globals. This is where we fix the technical debt of your old system—turning messy HTML blobs into structured Lexical blocks or typed fields.
! Reversing poor modeling decisions from the past.
Phase 3: Data Transformation & Scripting
Using custom Node.js scripts and Payload’s Local API, we extract data from your source (REST/GraphQL/SQL), transform it to match the new schema, and programmatically import it. This ensures 100% data integrity that manual entry can't match.
! Handling edge cases, nested relationships, and malformed source data.
Phase 4: SEO & URL Preservation
The biggest risk in migration is losing search rankings. We map every old URL to its new equivalent, implement automated 301 redirects, and ensure that metadata and schema.org markup are preserved or improved.
! Ensuring 1:1 URL mapping for 10,000+ page datasets.
Phase 5: Cutover & Stabilization
We run the new Payload system in parallel with your old CMS for a "freeze period" to verify data. Once validated, we switch the DNS.
! Orchestrating the final delta-import without business interruption.
Source-Specific Guides
Moving from your current platform.
WordPress to Payload CMS
Difficulty: Medium to HighUnwinding years of plugin-dependent data, cleaning up ACF sprawl, and mapping Gutenberg or Classic Editor HTML into structured Payload fields and Lexical blocks.
Eliminating plugin debt, improving performance, and moving to a typed system your developers can actually extend.
Recent WordPress Migrations
Ad Art Sign Co. to Payload CMS
314+ pages migrated from WordPress into a typed Payload setup. The result supports multi-tenant brand architecture, an AI chatbot with RAG, a vendor portal, and a content model rebuilt from accumulated plugin debt.
View adart.comMaking Light to Payload CMS
Migrated from WordPress to Payload CMS with content extraction and a full Next.js frontend rebuild. The migration replaced a legacy editing workflow with a structured content system that is easier to maintain.
View making-light.com3-CMS Consolidation to Single Payload Infrastructure
Merged WordPress, ProcessWire, and Ghost into one multi-tenant Payload backend. Three admin panels, three databases, and three credential sets were consolidated into one typed system with shared operational logic.
Difficulty: Medium
Contentful to Payload CMS
Challenge: Converting Contentful’s Rich Text JSON format into Payload’s Lexical format and managing asset references.
Benefit: Massive cost savings on API usage and regaining control over your backend code.
Compare Contentful vs Payload CMS
Difficulty: Low to Medium
Sanity to Payload CMS
Challenge: Replacing the GROQ query layer with Payload’s standard REST/GraphQL and migrating Portable Text.
Benefit: Moving to a more standard TypeScript-first environment without the "hidden" complexity of GROQ.
Compare Sanity vs Payload CMS
Difficulty: Low
Strapi to Payload CMS
Challenge: While structurally similar, it still requires a full rebuild of the admin UI and a data-load script to handle relationship differences.
Benefit: Better TypeScript integration and a far superior developer experience for custom admin extensions.
Compare Strapi vs Payload CMS
Difficulty: Medium
Drupal to Payload CMS
Challenge: Drupal's content model is powerful but complex — nodes, fields, taxonomies, and Views queries all need to be remapped to Payload collections and relationship fields.
Benefit: A modern TypeScript stack with a clean REST/GraphQL API that doesn't require a PhD in Drupal architecture to maintain.
Migration Guides
Step-by-Step Migration Guides
If your team is handling the migration in-house, these technical guides cover each platform in depth.
How to Plan a CMS Migration: The Complete Checklist
Read the guide
How to Migrate from WordPress to Payload CMS
Read the guide
How to Migrate from Contentful to Payload CMS
Read the guide
How to Migrate from Sanity to Payload CMS
Read the guide
How we engage
How we engage.
Every option here ends on Payload CMS. This is not a generic migration service. The difference is how much of the surrounding platform we rebuild around the migration.
| Engagement Type | Starting Point |
|---|---|
| Payload CMS Migration | From $1,500 |
| Migration + Next.js Integration | From $5,000 |
| Full Payload CMS Platform Rebuild | From $15,000 |
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a Payload CMS migration take?
Will we lose SEO rankings when we migrate?
Can we migrate without rebuilding the frontend?
What happens to our existing content during migration?
Ready to move to a system you actually own?
Stop fighting your CMS and start building on business infrastructure. Let's discuss your current setup and whether a migration to Payload CMS is the right strategic move for your team.
Book a Migration Audit