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I am working on Wordpress and I completed my project locally. I then moved it to my live server and did not change anything, I just made changes in the config file (database name, username and password).

Now my site is working fine on the front-end but I can't get access to the admin panel as every time it gives me the error message:

You do not have sufficient permissions to access this page.

Google searches indicate that most of the errors occurred due to a change in the prefix but in my case its the same as on local. Also, the permissions of my directories are 755 and that of files is 644 but still am facing the same issue.

How might I go about fixing this?

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  • There is another solution for this: stackoverflow.com/questions/4224084/… Jan 24, 2014 at 16:20
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    Another solution - If your table prefix is not wp,but i.e. blabla, then in blabla_usermeta table, find user id, and set blabla_capabilities (instead of wp_capabilities ) value to a:1:{s:13:"administrator";b:1;} and blabla_user_level value to 10
    – T.Todua
    Oct 10, 2014 at 20:37
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    Great question; useful best answer. Far better than the incoherent threads on wordpress.org: Suggest moving this question to wordpress.stackexchange.com where it can have a better life.
    – artlung
    Mar 21, 2016 at 20:41

2 Answers 2

93

Have you changed the prefix of your database tables? I'm 90% sure, that this is your problem.

The thing is that WordPress uses the $table_prefix variable for forming the option and usermeta keys names, where it's storing the roles and capabilities information. So once you change the prefix, but don't update your db, you get this error. Here's how to fix it - execute this SQL command through phpMyAdmin, or a different interface for interacting with your DB(you can do it with PHP as well):

UPDATE `{%TABLE_PREFIX%}usermeta` SET `meta_key` = replace(`meta_key`, '{%OLD_TABLE_PREFIX%}', '{%NEW_TABLE_PREFIX%}');
UPDATE `{%TABLE_PREFIX%}options` SET `option_name` = replace(`option_name`, '{%OLD_TABLE_PREFIX%}', '{%NEW_TABLE_PREFIX%}');

Where:

  • {%TABLE_PREFIX%} is your current $table_prefix(as set in wp-config.php)
  • {%OLD_TABLE_PREFIX%} is your previous $table_prefix
  • {%NEW_TABLE_PREFIX%} is your new(current) $table_prefix - it will most-likely be the same as your {%TABLE_PREFIX%}.

So if your old $table_prefix was wp_test_ and your new one is wp_, you would do this query:

UPDATE `wp_usermeta` SET `meta_key` = replace(`meta_key`, 'wp_test_', 'wp_');
UPDATE `wp_options` SET `option_name` = replace(`option_name`, 'wp_test_', 'wp_');

EDIT: As @Francisco Corrales noted, if you are having troubles accessing an admin page that you created(if you don't write PHP, this is not your case), you can check out this link: Wordpress Error while developing a plugin -"You do not have sufficient permissions to access this page."


EDIT 2: As @Kasper Souren noted, you might want to add a WHERE clause to the options UPDATE query. Like so(don't remove the % after the last %}):

UPDATE `{%TABLE_PREFIX%}options` SET `option_name` = replace(`option_name`, '{%OLD_TABLE_PREFIX%}', '{%NEW_TABLE_PREFIX%}') WHERE option_name like '{%OLD_TABLE_PREFIX%}%';
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    Can you look in your DB and check the following tables: {$table_prefix}options - look for an entry with option_name similar to {$table_prefix}roles. Then look in {$table_prefix}usermeta and look for entry with meta_key similar to {$table_prefix}capabilities. $table_prefix is what you have in your wp-config.php. If you can't find those entries, or they have the wrong option_name or meta_key - then fix them and try again. If you find them, paste the content here. Dec 11, 2012 at 13:45
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    i reached to the solution thanx for your help. infact the problem was that after updating, one row was not effected which remaind the old prefix, strange but true so i manually changed it and i got my result. salut and thanx Dec 12, 2012 at 6:28
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    It could be good to add WHERE option_name like 'wp_%' in case of the prefix occurs in the options.
    – the
    Apr 26, 2014 at 10:09
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    Many many thanks. It's work great!!!
    – csehasib
    Mar 1, 2016 at 11:01
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    Please fix your first update query instead of adding an EDIT2... if people execute the first query without reading all the answer they could already be in trouble.
    – iBobo
    Mar 20, 2020 at 12:26
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Your problem is not with permission on directories. The fact that you see a "You do not have sufficient permissions to access this page" message means three things :

  1. you are trying to access an admin page directly but not through wp-admin (so please indicate which admin page you are trying to access),

  2. you are already logged in (otherwise you would be redirected to /wp-admin) and

  3. the area you are trying to access is reserved for a higher level of user (so you might be connecting with an editor account whereas the area is only accessible to administrators).

Can you tell us if your local database and the online database are the same? Can you log in properly before you see this message?

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  • i am logging properly by enter username and password but when i click the login button it goes to profile.php page and the display me the message that i mentioned above and also i am the top level admin Dec 11, 2012 at 7:56
  • Using WordPress MU (multisite)? did you use the same wp-config.php and changed the credentials or did you use another wp-config.php?
    – barakadam
    Dec 11, 2012 at 8:02

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