How to Remove The Post Dates from Your WordPress Blog

Posted on May 3, 2010

If you’ve ever wanted to create an “evergreen” WordPress blog by removing post dates, here’s how to do it.

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15 Responses to “How to Remove The Post Dates from Your WordPress Blog”

  1. Removing the dates is fine if your content is evergreen; but if your content isn’t, this tactic is a bit deceptive.


  2. Stoney McGee
    May 03, 2010
    Reply

    Great! One less thing I have to figure out on my own. Thanks, Laura!


  3. I find it’s easier to do with CSS. But that’s just me. This is a great tactic for any blogger to consider. It’s not for everyone of course, but I prefer no dates on my own blog as well. I can’t imagine it being perceived as *deceptive* though :-)


  4. I’m glad to know this trick, Laura. It may make good sense for my blog since my topics are, for the most part, not at all date sensitive.

    For anyone writing about technical issues or products, however, I hope they would not delete their dates. When doing research for an article, I’ve been frustrated many times when there was not date on a post or article so I could determine if the content was timely or not.


  5. LaVonne Ellis
    May 07, 2010
    Reply

    Great tutorial, thanks. I noticed that a lot of ‘A-listers’ are doing this, and started doing it myself but sometimes when you’re reading a blog, you want to know when a post was published. The best way to find out is to look in the comments. Those are usually dated.


  6. Cesar Ramirez
    May 09, 2010
    Reply

    Laura, how would this affect search engines? I understood that search engines search for the latest content by date. PHP coding is fun :-) . Thanks for sharing the nugget.


  7. jackie hall
    May 16, 2010
    Reply

    Thanks so much! I was wanting to find out how to do this!
    Jackie


  8. Vicki Berry
    May 18, 2010
    Reply

    Hi Laura!

    Thanks for the tip – my content is really evergreen as well so I like the idea of removing dates but I have the same question as Casar – wouldn’t this affect your SEO?

    Thanks again!
    Vicki


  9. Duane Storey
    May 19, 2010
    Reply

    It won’t change the SEO results at all. The date is just a text output in the post for the reader’s benefit. The actual publication date in the RSS feed will stay the same, and Google is smart enough to know when it’s published based upon when it first shows up on the Internet.


  10. Samir Balwani
    May 19, 2010
    Reply

    The best thing to do is to create a “Living URL” – Michael Gray gives a good tutorial here:
    http://www.wolf-howl.com/seo/wordpress-living-urls/


  11. Erica Douglass
    May 19, 2010
    Reply

    Strong SEO relies on link velocity (how fast your page gets backlinks and how high-quality those backlinks are). Publishing or not publishing the date itself won’t matter, but as the post gets older, its link velocity slows down, so it will fall in the ranks as other posts with a higher link velocity overtake it.

    I moved the dates in my posts to the bottom of the post several months ago and didn’t notice any change in my SE rankings.

    -Erica


  12. Steve
    Jun 22, 2010
    Reply

    I’m currently using the free DateExclusion plugin but it doesn’t remove the dates from comments or archives. Does your method remove dates from comments and archives too?


    • Laura
      Jun 22, 2010
      Reply

      Steve – yes. If you search through every template file as I show in the video and comment out every instance you’ll remove all the dates from the archives. As far as the comment dates, you’ll need to find the piece of codes that inserts the comment date comment that out.


  13. Steve
    Jun 23, 2010
    Reply

    Thank you Laura! Your post here saved me some major grief.

    In case you or someone didn’t already mention this…

    I did everything you said but my site was still showing the date for the comments. So I searched the comments.php page, I found that (for my theme – Kubrick) the code to search for is this…

    Thanks again! ;-)

    Stephen


  14. Steve
    Jun 23, 2010
    Reply

    I see now that it wouldn’t let me show the php code when I submitted my previous reply, but the thing to look for on the comments.php page for the Kubrick Theme is…

    comment_date

    …and there you will see that the rest of the code is the same as what you originally showed: (‘F jS, Y’) etc.



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