22 Jan 25
What Happens To Posts Or Pages Associated With A Category Or Tag That Is Deleted In WordPress?
Every now and then, you look at your WordPress site and realise—it’s getting a bit messy. You’ve got old categories that don’t make sense anymore, tags that were used once and forgotten, and now you’re wondering if it’s time for a little cleanup.
I get asked a lot: “What happens if I just delete a category or tag? Will my posts vanish? Will Google hate me? Will the site explode?” Let’s walk through it, nice and simple.
Deleting a Category or Tag — The Basics
Actually deleting a category or tag in WordPress is dead simple.
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Jump into your dashboard.
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Go to Posts > Categories or Posts > Tags.
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Pick the ones you don’t need.
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Hit delete.
Done.
But here’s where people get nervous — what happens to the posts that used to sit under those categories or tags?
What Happens to Your Posts After Deletion?
Good news: your posts aren’t going anywhere.
When you delete a category, WordPress simply shifts those posts into the default category—usually called Uncategorized. Same with tags—if you delete one, any post that had that tag will now just have… no tag.
For example:
Let’s say you delete your old “Travel” category from back when you tried travel blogging in 2017. All 23 posts under that category don’t disappear. They just slide into Uncategorized, or whatever your default is.
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Posts stay published.
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Content stays live.
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They just lose the specific category or tag label.
If you want more control (and honestly, you should), you can go back and manually reassign those posts to better, more relevant categories or tags. Keeps things neat.
The SEO Side of Things (Where It Gets a Bit Trickier)
Now here’s where you need to slow down for a second. Deleting categories and tags isn’t just about cleaning up clutter—it touches your SEO whether you realise it or not.
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Categories and tags create archive pages that search engines can index.
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Deleting them removes those archive URLs from your site.
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If Google had indexed /category/travel/, that page will now be gone. Boom—404 error.
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Broken links can mess with both your rankings and your visitors’ experience.
Example:
Last year, I had a client delete 12 tags without setting up any redirects. Within 3 weeks, we saw a small but clear dip in organic traffic. Took a bit of work with 301 redirects and sitemap updates to fix.
How to Delete Without Breaking SEO
If you’re going to delete categories or tags, do it properly. Here’s a simple checklist I follow:
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Set up 301 redirects for deleted category/tag URLs.
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Update internal links that might’ve pointed to those archive pages.
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Merge similar categories beforehand if needed (using plugins like Term Management Tools).
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Refresh your XML sitemap so Google knows what’s changed.
Small steps. Big difference.
Should You Even Delete Them?
Now comes the honest question: do you actually need to delete these categories or tags at all?
Here’s how I usually decide with clients:
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Still relevant? If the category/tag still fits your content direction, keep it.
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SEO value? If it’s ranking or has inbound links, think twice.
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User navigation? Does it help your visitors find what they want?
Sometimes it’s smarter to merge or simply rename them instead. I’ve cleaned up sites where 200+ random tags were merged down into 15 focused ones—way better for both SEO and user experience.
Quick Tools That Can Help
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Redirection plugin — for easy 301 redirects.
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Term Management Tools — for merging terms.
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Yoast SEO or Rank Math — for keeping sitemaps tidy.
Use the tools. Don’t do it all manually. Trust me on this one.
Wrapping It Up
Look—deleting categories and tags won’t wreck your WordPress site, but you’ve got to handle it with a bit of care if you want to protect your SEO and avoid confusing your readers.
If you plan ahead, redirect smartly, and tidy things up, your site stays healthy. Google stays happy. Visitors find what they need. Everyone wins.