WordPress redirecting to another site: what does it mean?
Redirects to strange pages, ads, casino sites or unknown domains can indicate hidden malware inside WordPress.

WordPress redirecting to another site: what does it mean?
Redirects to strange pages, ads, casino sites or unknown domains can indicate hidden malware inside WordPress.
The goal is to help site owners, agencies and companies identify WordPress infection signs, understand the risks and act safely before the problem grows.
What this problem means
The main scenario is a WordPress redirect infection that sends visitors to ads, casino pages, phishing pages or domains you do not control. Even if the website appears to work, the issue may be hidden in files, plugins, themes, uploads, database entries or server rules.
Signs worth checking
- redirects only on mobile
- redirects only for visitors coming from Google
- JavaScript injected in the theme or database
- suspicious rules in .htaccess
- fake plugins loading external scripts
- obfuscated PHP code in public_html
Why you should not clean only the visible symptom
Many attacks use persistence. Removing one visible line of code, clearing cache or disabling a plugin may hide the symptom temporarily, but it does not necessarily remove backdoors, fake users, remote scripts or malicious database entries.
What should be reviewed in WordPress
A safe review should include the public_html folder, plugins, themes, uploads, hidden files, .htaccess, administrator users, WordPress options, posts, metadata and SQL tables related to the website behavior.
How PREMA-IT helps
PREMA WordPress Security analyzes files and database content looking for malware, viruses, backdoors, redirects, obfuscated scripts, fake plugins and suspicious changes. In cleanup plans, the client receives cleaned material and a technical report.
If your WordPress shows infection signs, request analysis at prema-it.com.