Title: Simple History – Track, Log, and Audit WordPress Changes
Author: Pär Thernström
Published: <strong>July 8, 2010</strong>
Last modified: May 19, 2026

---

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# Simple History – Track, Log, and Audit WordPress Changes

 By [Pär Thernström](https://profiles.wordpress.org/eskapism/)

[Download](https://downloads.wordpress.org/plugin/simple-history.5.28.0.zip)

[Live Preview](https://vec.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/?preview=1)

 * [Details](https://vec.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/#description)
 * [Reviews](https://vec.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/#reviews)
 * [Development](https://vec.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/#developers)

 [Support](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/simple-history/)

## Description

Trusted by 300,000+ WordPress sites, rated 4.9 stars with [430+ five-star reviews](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/simple-history/reviews/?filter=5),
actively developed for 10+ years, and translated into 15+ languages.

Simple History is the complete audit log for WordPress. It tracks every meaningful
change — content edits, user logins, plugin updates, security events, and more —
so site owners, teams, agencies, and developers always know who did what and when.
Just install and activate; no configuration required.

### 🔍 How Simple History Helps in Real Situations

**Track what’s happening on your site**
 _“Has anyone done anything today? Ah, Sarah
uploaded the new press release and created an article for it. Great — now I don’t
have to do that.”_

**Identify issues and debug faster**
 _“The site feels slow since yesterday. Has
anyone done anything special? … Ah, Steven activated ‘naughty-plugin-x’, that must
be it.”_

**Keep freelancers & agencies accountable**
 _“I hired a developer to optimize my
site. But did they actually do anything? A quick glance at Simple History shows 
me exactly what they worked on.”_

**Spot suspicious activity early**
 _“I see three failed logins from an unfamiliar
IP address overnight. Let me click the IP to check all activity from that address—
just those attempts, nothing else. Good to know.”_

### ✨ What Simple History Tracks

#### Security & Monitoring

 * Failed user logins with IP tracking and filtering by type (wrong password vs.
   non-existent username)
 * Core file integrity checks against official checksums
 * Forced security auto-updates from WordPress.org
 * Site Health status changes
 * Admin page access denied events

#### Content & Users

 * Posts, pages, and custom post types — create, edit, delete, and homepage assignment
 * Attachments with image edit details (crop, rotate, flip, scale) and thumbnail
   previews
 * Taxonomies with detailed diffs of name, slug, description, and parent
 * Comments, menus (with item-level detail), and widgets
 * User profiles, logins, logouts, and role changes
 * Notes — the collaboration feature in WordPress 6.9

#### System & Updates

 * Plugin lifecycle: install, update, activate, deactivate, delete, and auto-update
   toggle
 * Theme install, update, activate, switch, and delete
 * WordPress core updates (manual and automatic)
 * Translation and language pack updates
 * Available update notifications
 * Settings and option screen changes

#### Privacy & Compliance

 * Privacy data export and user data erasure requests
 * Privacy page changes
 * IP addresses anonymized by default — no cookies, no external fonts

### 🔌 Built-in Third-Party Plugin Support

Simple History includes built-in logging for:

 * **Jetpack** – Module activations and deactivations
 * **Advanced Custom Fields (ACF)** – Field group and field changes
 * **User Switching** – User switch events
 * **WP Crontrol** – Cron event and schedule changes
 * **Enable Media Replace** – File replacement details
 * **Limit Login Attempts** – Login attempts, lockouts, and config changes
 * **Redirection** – Redirect and group changes, global settings
 * **Duplicate Post** – Post and page cloning
 * **Beaver Builder** – Layout, template, and settings saves

Is your plugin missing? Plugin authors can add support using the [logging API](https://simple-history.com/docs/logging-api/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_logging_api).

### 💬 What Users Say

[430+ five-star reviews](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/simple-history/reviews/?filter=5)
on WordPress.org:

 * _“So far the best and most comprehensive logging plugin”_ – [@herrschuessler](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/so-far-the-best-and-most-comprehensive-logging-plugin/)
 * _“The best history plugin I’ve found”_ – [Rich Mehta](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/the-best-history-plugin-ive-found/)
 * _“Fantastic plugin I use on all sites”_ – [Duncan Michael-MacGregor](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/fantastic-plugin-i-use-on-all-sites/)
 * _“It is a standard plugin for all of our sites”_ – [Mr Tibbs](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/it-is-a-standard-plugin-for-all-of-our-sites/)

### 🚀 View Your Log Everywhere

Simple History starts tracking instantly after activation — no setup needed. It 
even imports recent activity so your log isn’t empty on day one. Access your log
from:

 * **Dashboard widget** – Activity stats summary and recent events
 * **Admin bar quick view** – Dropdown with latest events on any admin page
 * **Command palette** – Type “Simple History” to jump to the log for the current
   post
 * **Dedicated admin page** – Full log with search, filters, and insights sidebar
 * **Email reports** – Weekly summary delivered to your inbox
 * **RSS feed** – Password-protected feed for your favorite reader
 * **WP-CLI** – Command-line access for automation and scripting
 * **REST API** – Programmatic access for custom integrations

### 📧 Weekly Email Reports – Stay Informed Without Logging In

[Weekly email reports](https://simple-history.com/features/email-reports-weekly/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_email_reports)
deliver a summary of your site’s activity every Monday morning — total activity,
daily breakdown, key metrics (logins, content updates, plugin changes), and direct
links to the full log.

Perfect for site owners, agencies managing client sites, and teams who need regular
updates without logging in. Enable it in settings and [see what the email looks like](https://simple-history.com/features/email-reports-weekly/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_email_reports#example)
before turning it on.

### 🛠️ For Developers & Power Users

 * **WP-CLI** – [List, search, and export events](https://simple-history.com/features/wp-cli-commands/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_wp_cli_commands)
   from the command line — perfect for automation and managing multiple sites
 * **REST API** – Full programmatic access to query the log and add custom events.
   See the [documentation](https://simple-history.com/docs/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_overview)
 * **Logging API** – [Log your own events](https://simple-history.com/docs/logging-api/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_logging_api)
   from themes and plugins with a single line of code
 * **RSS feed** – Subscribe to changes using any feed reader
 * **AI & agent-friendly** – The REST API and RSS feed make Simple History accessible
   to AI agents and automated workflows like Claude Code
 * **Stealth Mode** – Run Simple History completely hidden from the admin interface
   via code; [Premium](https://simple-history.com/add-ons/premium?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_stealth_mode)
   adds a GUI. Ideal for agencies and client sites

### 🔆 Extend with Add-ons

#### 󠀁[Simple History Premium](https://simple-history.com/add-ons/premium?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_premium)󠁿

**Alerts & Notifications** – Get notified instantly via Email, Slack, Discord, or
Telegram when important events occur. Start quickly with preset rules for common
scenarios or build custom rules filtered by event type, user, role, and log level.

**Log Forwarding** – Stream events to external destinations: local log files, syslog
servers (UDP/TCP/TLS), Datadog, Splunk, webhooks, or external MySQL/MariaDB databases.
Perfect for centralized logging, compliance, and backup.

**Enhanced Controls** – Custom retention periods (or keep logs forever), CSV/JSON
export of filtered search results, post activity panel in the block editor, custom
log entries for team decisions, stealth mode GUI, logger control to fine-tune which
events are recorded, and an ad-free experience.

#### 󠀁[WooCommerce Logger](https://simple-history.com/add-ons/woocommerce/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=addons&utm_content=readme_addon_woocommerce)󠁿

Track WooCommerce activity: orders, refunds, stock changes, product updates, pricing
adjustments, settings modifications, and coupon usage.

#### 󠀁[Debug and Monitor](https://simple-history.com/add-ons/debug-and-monitor/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=addons&utm_content=readme_addon_debug_monitor)󠁿

Monitor outgoing HTTP requests and emails, debug API calls, and see what’s happening
under the hood. Essential for developers and support teams.

### 💚 Sponsor this project

If you like this plugin please consider [sponsoring the development of the free plugin](https://simple-history.com/sponsor/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=sponsorship&utm_content=readme_sponsor_footer).
The plugin has been free for over 10 years and will continue to be free.

## Screenshots

 * [[
 * The main event log: a clear timeline of who did what on your site, when, and 
   from where — alongside a sidebar with daily activity and your most active users.
 * [[
 * Content changes show a full before/after diff, so you can see exactly which words
   were edited on a post or page — not just that something changed.
 * [[
 * User events capture every change to a profile: first and last name, display name,
   website, role, and more — with the previous value preserved next to the new one.
 * [[
 * Every plugin install, activation, and deactivation is logged with author, version,
   source, and a link to the plugin — so you always know what’s running on your 
   site.
 * [[
 * Click any IP address to see where it came from — hostname, organisation, city,
   and country — then filter every event from that IP or subnet in one click. Ideal
   for investigating failed logins.
 * [[
 * Open any event to see the full details Simple History stores behind it: post 
   IDs, user IDs, before/after values, and every other field — the complete audit
   trail for each entry.
 * [[
 * History Insights shows a chart of daily activity, event counts for today, this
   week, and this month, and your most active users — all next to the log.
 * [[
 * Stats and Summaries is a full reporting dashboard: breakdowns of users, posts
   and pages, plugins, media, and more — for any date range you choose.
 * [[
 * Dashboard widget: a compact view of recent activity right on your WordPress Dashboard,
   so you see what’s happened on your site without leaving the page you already 
   check every day.
 * [[
 * Weekly email reports keep you informed without logging in. Pick who receives 
   the digest, preview it, or send a test email — all from the settings page.
 * [[
 * The weekly digest itself: a clean summary of posts, users, logins, plugin changes,
   and more — delivered straight to your inbox.

## FAQ

### Is the plugin free?

Yes! Simple History has been free for over 10 years and will remain free. To support
development and unlock extra features, you can purchase the premium add-on. [View premium features](https://simple-history.com/premium/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=addons&utm_content=readme_addons_overview).

### How do I view the log?

You can access the log in multiple ways:

 * The **dashboard** widget with activity stats summary
 * A **dedicated log page** in the WordPress admin area
 * The **admin bar** quick view dropdown on
 * The **WordPress command palette** – type “Simple History” to jump to the log 
   for the current post

### Can I change where the History menu appears in WordPress admin?

Yes! You can customize the menu position in the plugin settings. Choose between 
showing Simple History at the top or bottom of the main menu, or inside the dashboard
menu or tools menu.

### Do I need coding skills to use the plugin?

No! Just install and activate the plugin, and it will start collecting activity 
logs automatically.

### Where is the log stored?

The log is stored in your WordPress database.

### Can I export the log?

Yes, you can export logs in **CSV** or **JSON** format for further analysis.

### Is it compatible with other plugins?

Yes! Simple History supports many popular plugins out of the box. Additionally, 
developers can integrate it with any plugin using the [Logging API](https://simple-history.com/docs/logging-api/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_faq_api).

### Will this plugin slow down my website?

No, Simple History is lightweight and optimized for performance. Most logging occurs
in the WordPress admin area when a WordPress user performs an action.

By default, nothing is logged on the front end, ensuring visitors experience no 
impact on performance.

### Who can view the log?

Access to the log depends on the user’s role:

 * **Administrators** can view all logged events.
 * **Editors** can see events related to posts and pages.

### Can I exclude certain users from being logged?

Yes, you can exclude users based on **role** or **email** using the [`simple_history/log/do_log`](https://simple-history.com/docs/hooks/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_hooks#simplehistorylogdolog)
filter.

For more details, check the [hooks documentation](https://simple-history.com/docs/hooks/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_hooks#simplehistorylogdolog).

### How long is the history kept?

By default, logs are stored for **60 days**.

Upgrade to [Simple History Premium](https://simple-history.com/add-ons/premium?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_premium)
to change this using a GUI.

### Can I track changes made by specific users?

Yes! You can **filter logs by username**, making it easy to track individual activity.

### Is this plugin GDPR compliant?

GDPR compliance depends on **how you use the plugin** and how you handle collected
data. WordPress guidelines prohibit plugins from making legal compliance claims,
so you should review your site’s data policies to ensure compliance.

That said, Simple History follows **privacy-friendly practices**:

 * ❌ No Google Fonts
 * ❌ No cookies
 * ❌ No local storage
 * ✅ IP addresses are anonymized by default

Since the plugin logs events (which may contain personal data), it’s **your responsibility**
to ensure GDPR compliance based on your site’s usage.

For more information, see our support page [GDPR and Privacy: How Your Data is Stored in Simple History](https://simple-history.com/support/gdpr-and-privacy/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_gdpr_support).

## Reviews

![](https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5c42d1151d28022ae04b3acdc4c0d5e0da4d349aa0bbd408fead7ca295f06ed4?
s=60&d=retro&r=g)

### 󠀁[Great plugin to see whats been going on](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/great-plugin-to-see-whats-been-going-on/)󠁿

 [cliffo4](https://profiles.wordpress.org/cliffo4/) May 29, 2026

Been using this for some time, great to be able to see at a glance whats been going
on or drill down further. Development has been good new features and updates as 
WP changes.

![](https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/8d59c7f991831b0a0aa451141da68963eb69d2766aaeb4588f7ab511344be0f6?
s=60&d=retro&r=g)

### 󠀁[A++++++](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/a-168/)󠁿

 [prezio77](https://profiles.wordpress.org/prezio77/) May 25, 2026

Great!

![](https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/8cd9de0e4f219c953677295070d691527cc47bbb87a67840cc3b073005045cf8?
s=60&d=retro&r=g)

### 󠀁[Works Great. So Helpful!](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/works-great-so-helpful/)󠁿

 [cmarrington](https://profiles.wordpress.org/cmarrington/) May 23, 2026

This plugin does what it says. A slug change was made over 60 days ago that needed
reversed, without this simple history plugin, it would have been a nightmare finding
the name of the original slug. Highly recommend.

![](https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/4e39a8684412186b30fe49ad72bbc0016e2c67fd80f8d1816b8289a718874192?
s=60&d=retro&r=g)

### 󠀁[Unverzichtbar](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/unverzichtbar-11/)󠁿

 [René A. Da Rin](https://profiles.wordpress.org/radarin/) May 19, 2026

Habe ich auf jeder WP Installation installiert.

![](https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/821b25e42eaf60012d31a647cf784cd8db9fe0ad991059230a386b5bc02d1ac3?
s=60&d=retro&r=g)

### 󠀁[Uninstalled after 3 years](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/uninstalled-after-3-years/)󠁿

 [Garrett Reiniggen](https://profiles.wordpress.org/reiniggen/) May 6, 2026 1 reply

It logs information I don’t need (e.g., failed login attempts — I have a security
plugin for that). And with the last update, I found out that emails and passwords
were being logged. What about personal data protection and the GDPR here? It seems
to be turning into a data monster that a regular community admin can’t control. 
That’s why I uninstalled the plugin after using it for 3 years.

![](https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/ba13ea52494170ada29b19648300196da94214c2dd0249e5b6d556cadeff64e8?
s=60&d=retro&r=g)

### 󠀁[Very simple and effective](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/very-simple-and-effective-31/)󠁿

 [rkingisl](https://profiles.wordpress.org/rkingisl/) May 6, 2026 1 reply

The plugin does what it says; it’s simple to use and has all the features I need.
I think this is a must-have for any Wordpress site.

 [ Read all 477 reviews ](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/simple-history/reviews/)

## Contributors & Developers

“Simple History – Track, Log, and Audit WordPress Changes” is open source software.
The following people have contributed to this plugin.

Contributors

 *   [ Pär Thernström ](https://profiles.wordpress.org/eskapism/)
 *   [ Simple History ](https://profiles.wordpress.org/wpsimplehistory/)

“Simple History – Track, Log, and Audit WordPress Changes” has been translated into
17 locales. Thank you to [the translators](https://translate.wordpress.org/projects/wp-plugins/simple-history/contributors)
for their contributions.

[Translate “Simple History – Track, Log, and Audit WordPress Changes” into your language.](https://translate.wordpress.org/projects/wp-plugins/simple-history)

### Interested in development?

[Browse the code](https://plugins.trac.wordpress.org/browser/simple-history/), check
out the [SVN repository](https://plugins.svn.wordpress.org/simple-history/), or 
subscribe to the [development log](https://plugins.trac.wordpress.org/log/simple-history/)
by [RSS](https://plugins.trac.wordpress.org/log/simple-history/?limit=100&mode=stop_on_copy&format=rss).

## Changelog

✨ If you find Simple History useful ✨

 * [Sponsor the plugin to keep it free.](https://simple-history.com/sponsor/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=sponsorship&utm_content=readme_sponsor_footer)
 * [Add a 5-star review so other users know it’s good.](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/simple-history/reviews/?filter=5)
 * [Get the premium add-on for more features.](https://simple-history.com/add-ons/premium?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_premium)

🧪 **Experimental** entries are gated behind the experimental features setting (
Settings  Simple History  Experimental). Enable it to try them, then share feedback
so we know what to ship for everyone.

### 5.28.0 (May 2026)

Ready for [WordPress 7.0](https://make.wordpress.org/core/7-0/)! This version is
tested and confirmed working on the latest WordPress version. It also adds logging
for the new [AI Connectors Screen](https://make.wordpress.org/core/2026/03/18/introducing-the-connectors-api-in-wordpress-7-0/).
Plus: WP-CLI and REST API coverage for content and settings changes. And the usual
round of UI improvements and bug fixes.
 [Read more about all changes in the release post](https://simple-history.com/2026/simple-history-5-28-0-released/)

**Added**

 * WordPress 7.0 AI Connectors screen changes are now logged.
 * Built-in WordPress settings changed via the REST API (`POST /wp/v2/settings`)
   or WP-CLI (`wp option update`) are now logged. Previously the Options Logger 
   only captured changes made through Settings  General/Writing/Reading/Discussion/
   Media/Permalinks, so automation, scripts, and AI agents could change the site
   tagline, title, default category, permalinks, and similar settings invisibly.
 * Post, user, media, menu, widget, and privacy page changes made via WP-CLI or 
   the REST API are now logged. Previously these loggers only captured changes from
   inside wp-admin, so commands like `wp post create`, `wp post update`, `wp user
   update`, `wp menu item add`, and REST-driven edits from external tools or AI 
   agents were not recorded.
 * Post update events now expose status, publish date, comment status, author, and
   page template as structured data in the REST API, “Copy as JSON”, and “Copy as
   Markdown” outputs — previously these fields were only available as prerendered
   HTML, so external clients had to parse the markup.
 * Action link on Options Logger events for quick navigation back to the Settings
   page where the option lives.
 * “How are AI agents detected?” link in the AI agent attribution tooltip, pointing
   to a [docs article that explains the detection signals](https://simple-history.com/docs/ai-agent-detection/).
 * System Information page, `wp simple-history db stats`, and the `/wp-json/simple-
   history/v1/support-info` REST endpoint now report the charset and collation of
   each Simple History table — useful when diagnosing emoji-related context-drop
   issues.
 * Reminder card on Simple History pages when an add-on is installed without a license
   key entered, so users notice that updates won’t arrive until the key is added.
   Links directly to the license entry field.

**Changed**

 * `wp simple-history info` now shows “Experimental features: enabled” when experimental
   features are active.
 * Options Logger event details show the change inline as a single row (new value
   strike-through old value) labeled with the setting name (e.g. “Site Title”, “
   Tagline”), instead of stacked “New value” / “Old value” rows.
 * Admin display for post update status, publish date, comment status, author, and
   page template switches from a stacked table row (“Changed from draft to publish”)
   to an inline pill style (“Status: draft  publish”), matching how user profile
   changes already render. Title, content, custom field, term, and featured-image
   diffs still render in the existing table layout.

**Fixed**

 * “Copy as JSON” and “Copy as Markdown” now include the full event context (request
   URI, method, user agent, error codes, etc.), making copied payloads self-contained
   for triage and bug reports.
 * IP addresses are now included in failed application password authentication events,
   matching how wp-login failures already worked.
 * New installs create history tables as `utf8mb4` (using `$wpdb->get_charset_collate()`),
   so emoji and other 4-byte UTF-8 characters in events are preserved.
 * Support info page no longer prints a “no such table: dbstat” database error when`
   WP_DEBUG` is on and SQLite’s optional `dbstat` virtual table isn’t available (
   notably on WordPress Playground).
 * “Most active users” widget no longer shows nameless entries for users without
   a display name.
 * Redirect loops in wp-admin for low-privilege users. A legacy-URL redirect intended
   only for the old `/wp-admin/index.php?page=simple_history_page` bookmark was 
   also firing for unrelated access-denied events on the dashboard, which could 
   send users in circles. [#639](https://github.com/bonny/WordPress-Simple-History/issues/639)
 * 🧪 **Experimental** — Brute-force attempts against `xmlrpc.php` now show which
   account is being targeted instead of logging an empty username.

### 5.27.0 (May 2026)

🤖 This release adds AI agent attribution to log events, so you can see when an 
action was triggered through Claude Code, ChatGPT, or other AI tools. Also, Action
links are now front-and-center for media, plugins, users, menus, and failed plugin
installs.
 [Read more about all changes in the release post](https://simple-history.com/2026/simple-history-5-27-0-released/)

**Added**

 * Plugin active/inactive status is now recorded when plugins are updated, shown
   in event details when the plugin was inactive at update time.
 * Success confirmation and automatic log refresh after manually adding a log entry.
 * Action links for media attachments (Edit, View), plugins (“View changelog”), 
   user profiles (“Edit user”), menu edits (“Edit menu” and “Manage menu locations”.
 * “Show error message” action link on plugin install/update failure events — opens
   the event details modal where the underlying error message and diagnostic context
   are shown.
 * `wp simple-history info` WP-CLI command — prints the installed version, premium
   add-on status, and a list of useful subcommands.
 * New opt-in columns for `wp simple-history list` via `--fields=`: `date_relative`(“
   5 minutes ago” style timestamps), `site` (blog name and host, useful when comparing
   output across installs), and `ai_agent` (detected AI tool name when an event 
   was initiated through an AI agent).
 * AI agent attribution on event log rows: when an event is triggered by an AI tool(
   Claude Code, ChatGPT, MCP clients, the Abilities API, etc.), a sparkle icon and
   the agent name appear next to the user who initiated the event. The signed-in
   user remains the actual initiator — this is additional audit context, not an 
   authentication signal.
 * “AI-initiated events only” filter in the expanded filters panel — quickly narrow
   the log to actions triggered via AI tools.
 * New “Copy as JSON” menu item for each event, that copies the full event payload—
   including all context data — for scripting and debugging.
 * 🧪 **Experimental** — “History” column on post and page list tables showing recent
   activity at a glance, with “View history” row action links.
 * 🧪 **Experimental** — Failed application password authentication on REST API 
   and XML-RPC requests is now logged as a warning, with the attempted user, error
   code and message, request URI, request method, and user agent. Closes a visibility
   gap where wrong app password attempts left no trace in the log, while wp-login
   failures already did. Can also be toggled directly via the new `simple_history/
   log_failed_app_password_auth` filter.

**Changed**

 * Event details for 12 loggers are now more consistent across the UI and structured
   in the REST API (migrated from manual HTML output to the Event Details API).
 * Navigational links in comment and plugin events (e.g. “Edit comment”, “View plugin
   info”) moved from event details to the action links bar for better discoverability.
 * Date filter dropdown reorganized: “All dates” moved to the top as the reset option,
   presets grouped under “Recent” (Today through Last 60 days, plus “Custom range…”),
   and specific months grouped under “By month” — easier to scan and matches how
   users think about date ranges.
 * “Copy detailed event message” action menu item renamed to “Copy as Markdown” 
   with a richer Markdown layout (heading + properties table + structured details
   + context table) suitable for pasting into a ticket, Slack, or notes app. The
   Details section reflects what the event row shows (e.g. plugin description / 
   version / author for plugin install events).
 * Stats page “Events overview” chart and sidebar “History Insights” daily activity
   chart switched from line charts to bar charts, with today highlighted in a contrasting
   accent color for at-a-glance recency.

**Security**

 * Event reaction endpoints now enforce per-event read permissions to prevent logged
   in users to be able to read events they shouldn’t have access to. Reactions are
   experimental and off by default. Many thanks to Ly Hoang at Wordfence for responsibly
   disclosing this vulnerability.
 * Password reset request events no longer store the full reset email body, which
   contained the activation URL. User, email, and origin are still logged.
 * Removed the `simple_history/comments_logger/log_failed_password` and `simple_history/
   comments_logger/log_not_existing_user_password` filters, which could log plaintext
   passwords from failed logins. Both defaulted to off.

**Fixed**

 * Retention upsell message showing “deleted in 0 days” when event deletion is imminent.
   Now shows “scheduled for deletion” instead.
 * Menu logger flagging unrelated items as “Renamed” on every menu save. Items with
   HTML in their label, and items inheriting their label from a linked page, are
   no longer reported as renamed when nothing was actually changed.
 * Menu logger not surfacing renames of the menu itself — the previous and new menu
   name are now shown in the event details when the “Menu Name” field is changed.

### 5.26.0 (April 2026)

This version makes the log actions more discoverable by moving them out of the dropdown
menu and into inline buttons. It also contains a new experimental feature: reactions!

[Read more about it in the release post](https://simple-history.com/2026/simple-history-5-26-0-released/)

**Added**

 * Media, Comments, and Themes sections to the weekly email summary report. Comments
   section only appears when comments are enabled on the site.
 * `--fields` support for `wp simple-history list` WP-CLI command, including a `
   reactions` field showing reaction counts.
 * 🧪 **Experimental** — Event reactions: react to log events with a thumbs up emoji,
   with a Slack-style emoji picker in the actions bar.

**Changed**

 * Control bar actions are now inline buttons instead of a dropdown menu, making
   Export, Create Alert, Create Log Entry, and Share View more visible and accessible.
 * Expanded filters panel: reordered filters with Users first, moved “Hide my own
   events” into the Users row, replaced initiators help link with an icon, and trimmed
   helper text for a cleaner layout.

**Fixed**

 * Memory exhaustion when exporting large event logs by reducing batch size and 
   eliminating redundant database queries.
 * Layout shift in control bar action buttons while search options are loading.
 * Oversized file type icon for non-image attachments (e.g. DOCX, PDF) in the event
   log.

### 5.25.0 (March 2026)

This release focuses on keeping your database lean. Three features that reduce log
storage size are now active for all users: smarter default retention for new installs,
failed login rate limiting, and compact diff storage for post content changes.
 
[Read more about it in the release post](https://simple-history.com/2026/simple-history-5-25-0-released/)

**Added**

 * Failed login rate limiting is now active for all users, capping logging at 100
   consecutive failed attempts to prevent database bloat from brute force attacks.
 * Compact diff storage for post content changes is now active for all users, storing
   only a compact diff instead of full old+new content (up to 99% smaller for typical
   edits) with automatic fallback when the diff would be larger.
 * Search is now faster and more accurate for all users: queries skip occasion grouping
   for speed and only search relevant context keys from registered loggers instead
   of scanning all metadata. Previously this was an experimental opt-in feature.
   Use the “Event metadata” search field in the advanced filters to search all metadata(
   similar to the old behavior).
 * Hover-reveal quick action button on event rows for faster access to event details.
 * List of current experimental features shown near the enable toggle in settings.
 * “/” keyboard shortcut to focus the search input, with a visual hint badge. Pressing
   Escape returns focus to the previously focused element.
 * Settings and Premium/Get Premium buttons in the top-right header, replacing the
   Add-ons link.
 * Email Reports settings moved to their own sub-tab under Settings for better discoverability.
 * New installs default to 30-day retention (existing installs keep 60 days), keeping
   your database lean from day one.
 * 🧪 **Experimental** — Feature discovery bar in the page header showing active
   features and settings status with dot indicators. Each item links directly to
   its settings section for quick access.

**Changed**

 * Search and filters redesigned into a single compact row with search input, date
   selector, and action buttons — replacing the previous multi-line layout.
 * Expanded filters panel now stacks labels above inputs on smaller screens for 
   better usability.
 * History Insights sidebar: today’s data point is now highlighted with a visible
   dot and the end date shows “(today)” for clarity.
 * History Insights sidebar: reduced y-axis clutter on the activity chart for a 
   cleaner look.
 * History Insights sidebar: database stats section is now visually separated as
   footer content with cache freshness info moved into the tooltip.

**Fixed**

 * Dashboard widget corners not matching the new rounded style in WordPress 7.0.
 * PHP notice on the widget editor screen (widgets.php) caused by the command palette
   script loading `wp-editor` on non-post-editor screens.
 * Occasion counts in the RSS feed were always zero and never rendered.
 * Inverted condition in the GitHub plugin info handler that caused it to always
   fail.
 * “No matching events” empty state text and icon too light to meet WCAG AA contrast
   requirements.
 * Deprecation notice when using Yoast Duplicate Post 4.6, which replaced the `dp_duplicate_post`
   and `dp_duplicate_page` hooks with `duplicate_post_after_duplicated`.

**Security**

 * Nonce verification added to the GitHub plugin info AJAX handler to prevent CSRF.

### 5.24.1 (March 2026)

**Security**

 * RSS feed error response no longer exposes the feed secret token in the self-referencing
   link.

**Changed**

 * Capabilities added to roles are now logged at “notice” level instead of “warning”
   to reduce unnecessary alarm during routine plugin activations.

**Fixed**

 * Role Capability Logger no longer spams the log when plugins (e.g. Astra/Spectra)
   toggle capabilities on every page load. Changes are now batched per request and
   only net differences are logged.

**Added**

 * User ID displayed as an inline suffix on the name in the user card popover, making
   it easier to identify users when debugging.

### 5.24.0 (March 2026)

A redesigned dashboard widget that takes up less space, user details card on click,
and much better logging of menus, categories, and image edits.
 [Read more about it in the release post](https://simple-history.com/2026/simple-history-5-24-0-released/)

**Added**

 * User card on avatar and name click, showing name, role, and email with a link
   to the user profile. The Premium add-on extends the card with login history and
   recent activity.
 * “Copy as image” action in the event menu that captures an event as a shareable
   image, ready to paste into Slack, social media, or bug reports.
 * Site Health Logger that tracks WordPress Site Health test status changes, logging
   when issues are detected, resolved, or change severity.
 * Menu change logging now shows item names, types, renames, moves, order changes,
   and display location updates instead of just item counts.
 * Parent category changes and diff details (name, slug, description, parent) when
   viewing edited category and tag events.
 * Logging when a page is set as the homepage or posts page from the block editor,
   including the name of the previously assigned page.
 * Image edit logging (crop, rotate, flip, scale) in the media logger, including
   a thumbnail preview.
 * Command palette command to view event history for the current post or page.
 * “Event metadata” search field in the advanced filters for searching all event
   data including IP addresses and emails.
 * “Clear filters” button to reset all search filters to their default values.
 * Rotating tips in the sidebar to help users discover features like RSS feeds, 
   WP-CLI, export, and sticky events.
 * User creation and profile update counts in the email digest report, displayed
   alongside login statistics in the Users section.
 * REST API `skip_count_query` parameter to skip the total count query when pagination
   info is not needed, improving response time for clients that don’t require total
   counts.
 * Multisite uninstall support, removing tables, options, and cron events across
   all subsites in the network.
 * Compact storage for post content changes (used for creating a diff between the
   old and new content), reducing database size for large posts (experimental).
 * Failed login throttling to protect the database from brute-force attacks — logs
   the first 100 failed attempts, then automatically skips the rest. Includes an
   informational notice on both the main event log and the dashboard widget (experimental).
 * Role & Capability Logger that tracks when roles are created, deleted, or have
   their capabilities modified, including which plugin triggered the change (experimental).

**Changed**

 * WP-CLI `--user` argument renamed to `--userid` and `--exclude_user` to `--exclude_userid`
   to avoid conflict with WP-CLI’s global `--user` argument, which caused warnings
   on newer WP-CLI versions. [#629](https://github.com/bonny/WordPress-Simple-History/issues/629)
 * Dashboard widget redesigned with an activity stats summary showing event counts
   for today and last 7 days, and a more compact event list. Loads significantly
   faster by limiting queries to the last 7 days and skipping the total count query.
 * Search now only searches the visible event message text by default, making results
   more relevant and dramatically faster on sites with large activity logs. Previously,
   search also scanned all hidden metadata which was slow and returned unexpected
   matches (experimental).
 * Multi-word search now matches each word independently across all searchable fields.
   For example, “api request 400” now finds events where “api” and “request” appear
   in the message text and “400” appears in event metadata, instead of requiring
   all words to exist in the same field (experimental).
 * “Show filters” / “Hide filters” toggle replaces “Show search options” / “Collapse
   search options”.
 * Action links (Edit, View, Preview, Revisions) now appear below post events.
 * IP address popover redesigned with prominent IP display, AS number links, map
   service links (Google Maps and OpenStreetMap), and subnet filtering.
 * Core file integrity restored log entry now shows how many files are still modified.
 * Auto backfill runs on the first admin page load instead of WP-Cron, ensuring 
   it works in more environments.
 * Admin bar JavaScript reduced by removing the wp-components dependency, saving
   ~919 KB on every page load.
 * Object caching added to stats queries, preventing duplicate database queries 
   within the same request.

**Fixed**

 * False-positive core file integrity warnings on localized WordPress installs (
   e.g. sv_SE) caused by hardcoded en_US checksums.
 * Term names showing backslash before apostrophes when editing categories and tags.
 * Incomplete option cleanup on plugin uninstall, leaving orphaned options in the
   database.
 * Three scheduled cron events not cleared during uninstall (database purge, core
   file integrity check, log file cleanup).
 * Missing icon for “Other” initiator type.
 * Manual backfill memory error on sites with many users, now processed in batches.

### 5.23.1 (February 2026)

**Fixed**

 * Added backward-compatibility stubs for PHP classes 5.21–5.23, hopefully preventing
   crashes when updating from those versions. 🤞

### 5.23.0 (February 2026)

**Added**

 * Detection of forced security updates from WordPress.org; shown as “Update method:
   Security auto-update” in plugin update details.
 * Upgrade notices from WordPress.org API in plugin update details.
 * Search labels on 11 loggers (Beaver Builder, Duplicate Post, Enable Media Replace,
   Jetpack, Limit Login Attempts, Redirection, User Switching, WP Crontrol, Privacy,
   Simple History, Translations) for better filtering in alert rules.
 * Granular failed-login filters: “Failed login (wrong password)” for known users
   and “Failed login (unknown user)” for non-existent usernames, alongside the existing“
   Failed user logins” option.
 * User role (`_user_role`) in event context for debugging and used by alerts to
   be able to add rules for specific user roles.
 * Notes feature stats (WordPress 6.9+):
    - Statistics in weekly email reports (notes added and resolved).
    - Statistics on History Insights for block editor notes activity.
    - REST API at `/wp-json/simple-history/v1/stats/notes`.
 * Alerts settings page with premium notification teasers (presets and custom rules
   in [Premium](https://simple-history.com/add-ons/premium/?utm_source=worg)).

**Changed**

 * Updated some logger messages to use active voice: e.g. “Was denied access”  “
   Attempted to access restricted”, “was auto-disabled”  “Auto-disabled”, “Was locked
   out because”  “Locked out after”, “was updated”  “Updated”.
 * Debug tab merged into Help & Support; System Information sits directly under 
   support links.
 * Status bar on Help & Support showing plugin version, event count, and retention
   at a glance.
 * System Information extended with PHP Max Input Vars, WP Memory Limit, Child Theme,
   Theme Author, and User Agent for support debugging.
 * Log level for forced security plugin updates is changed from “info” to “notice”,
   so auto-updates stand out.
 * Disable autoload for Available Updates Logger options, so they are only loaded
   when needed.
 * Sub-navigation tabs scroll horizontally on narrow screens instead of wrapping.
 * Plugin loading no longer scans the filesystem at startup; loggers and extensions
   are registered via static class lists for faster, more reliable init.
 * Sidebar stats and database purge queries rewritten to use the date index (faster
   on large tables).
 * Log_Query now has a `skip_count_query` option to omit the total row count when
   pagination metadata is not needed.
 * RSS feed now defaults to last 7 days and skips the count query for better performance.
   It also has a `dates` parameter for date filtering (e.g. `&dates=lastdays:30`).

**Fixed**

 * Infinite loop when the [Debug & Monitor add-on](https://simple-history.com/add-ons/debug-and-monitor/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_debug_monitor)
   logged HTTP requests from channels (Webhook, Datadog, Splunk).

### 5.22.0 (December 2025)

**Added**

 * Added exclusion filter support to RSS and JSON feeds, allowing you to subscribe
   to events while excluding specific users, loggers, messages, or log levels. Useful
   for monitoring what others do without seeing your own actions.

**Fixed**

 * Simplified internal file structure to hopefully fix “Class File_Channel not found”
   fatal error that some users experienced when updating the plugin.
 * Fixed slow appearance of “Stick event to top” and “Unstick event” menu items 
   in the event actions dropdown.

### 5.21.0 (December 2025)

🔍 Debug like a pro with the new “Surrounding Events” feature — see what happened
before and after any event. Plus: Log Forwarding (Beta) lets you send events to 
external log files, Syslog servers, or external databases for backup and compliance.
Also improved: auto-recovery for missing database tables.
 [Read more about it in the release post](https://simple-history.com/2025/simple-history-5-21-0-released/)

**Added**

 * “Show surrounding events” feature to view events chronologically before and after
   a specific event, useful for debugging to see what happened around a particular
   event. Available via the event actions menu (administrators only), REST API, 
   and WP-CLI. [#610](https://github.com/bonny/WordPress-Simple-History/issues/610).
 * Log Forwarding feature to send events to external destinations for backup, compliance,
   and security purposes. Includes File Channel for writing events to local log 
   files with automatic rotation. [Premium add-on](https://simple-history.com/add-ons/premium/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_log_forwarding)
   adds Syslog and External Database channels. [#573](https://github.com/bonny/WordPress-Simple-History/issues/573).
 * `simple_history/purge_db_where` filter for custom event retention rules, allowing
   per-logger retention periods or keeping certain events forever. [See documentation](https://simple-history.com/docs/hooks/#simplehistorypurgedbwhere).
 * `simple_history/db/purge_done` action that fires once when purge completes, with
   total deleted count.
 * `Helpers::count_events()` function for counting events in the database.

**Fixed**

 * Database tables not being created when using the plugin as MU plugin, after site
   duplication (where options are copied but custom tables are not), or during multisite
   network activation. The plugin now auto-recovers by recreating missing tables
   when needed. [#606](https://github.com/bonny/WordPress-Simple-History/issues/606).
 * IP addresses not showing when expanding grouped similar events.
 * Debug page showing “No tables found” when using SQLite (e.g., wp-playground) 
   due to missing dbstat extension.

### 5.20.0 (December 2025)

🚀 Ready for WordPress 6.9 — this release logs the new Notes feature so you can 
track when notes are added or removed. Also new: automatic backfilling on first 
install so your log isn’t empty, a “Hide my own events” checkbox, and a “Yesterday”
date filter.
 [Read more about it in the release post](https://simple-history.com/2025/simple-history-5-20-0-released/)

**Changed**

 * Improved code quality by resolving phpcs warnings for WordPress VIP Go compatibility.

**Fixed**

 * Fixed Notes Logger causing error in some cases when deleting comments.
 * Fixed event context being silently dropped when post content contained emojis,
   causing incomplete log entries. (This is a long standing issue that has been 
   around for a while, but now it’s finally fixed 🤞.) [#607](https://github.com/bonny/WordPress-Simple-History/issues/607).

### 5.19.0 (November 2025)

🚀 Ready for WordPress 6.9 — this release logs the new Notes feature so you can 
track when notes are added or removed. Also new: automatic backfilling on first 
install so your log isn’t empty, a “Hide my own events” checkbox, and a “Yesterday”
date filter.
 [Read more about it in the release post](https://simple-history.com/2025/simple-history-5-19-0-released/)

**Added**

 * Add automatic backfilling of existing events on first install, so the activity
   log isn’t empty when you start using the plugin for the first time.
 * Add logging of new [notes feature in WordPress 6.9](https://make.wordpress.org/core/2025/11/15/notes-feature-in-wordpress-6-9/).
   [#599](https://github.com/bonny/WordPress-Simple-History/issues/599).
 * Add “Yesterday” option to the date filter dropdown for quick access to previous
   day’s events.
 * Add “Hide my own events” checkbox to filters, allowing users to quickly exclude
   their own activity from the log. [#604](https://github.com/bonny/WordPress-Simple-History/issues/604).
 * Add WordPress VIP Go coding standards for enterprise compatibility.
 * Add rollback context to plugin update failed events.
 * Add logging of failed theme updates.
 * Add support for negative filters in the event log query API, to the REST API,
   and to WP-CLI. [#86](https://github.com/bonny/WordPress-Simple-History/issues/86).
 * Add error message when trying to view an event that does not exist.
 * Add filter `simple_history/show_promo_boxes` to determine if promo boxes should
   be shown.
 * Add developer mode badge to the page header.
 * Add new Tools tab with manual backfill option for importing historical events
   on demand.

**Changed**

 * Rename “Export” menu to “Export & Tools” and add tabbed interface to support 
   additional tools.
 * Post creation events now capture initial post content, excerpt, and status transitions
   to provide complete audit trail without information gaps.
 * Stop polling for new events after 10+ new events are detected to reduce server
   resource consumption from inactive browser tabs.
 * Improved auto-backfill completion message to be more user-friendly and include
   the number of days imported.
 * Improved welcome message text for clarity and better Premium feature promotion.
 * Admin Bar Quick View: Display count of similar events (occasions) on a new line
   below the main event message and style it.
 * Insights sidebar: Clicking on users now also filters the log by the last 30 days.
 * Insights sidebar: Update text to show current events in database and total events
   logged with links to settings page for retention period.
 * Insights sidebar: Improve messages for message count.
 * Decrease font size on stats sidebar stats box to fit more events.
 * Reduce number of HTTP requests by consolidating the small sidebar CSS file (just
   4 rules) into the main stylesheet that’s already being loaded on the page.
 * Hide sidebar donation box, support box, and review box when promo boxes are hidden
   for a cleaner interface with the premium add-on.
 * Internal code and UI refinements.
 * Tested up to WordPress 6.9.

**Fixed**

 * Fixed post creation via Gutenberg autosave not being logged.
 * Fixed incorrect timezone handling for imported user registration dates.
 * Fixed sidebar stats box styling conflict with premium add-on.
 * Fixed warning about invalid HTML nesting in the log GUI filters. [#548](https://github.com/bonny/WordPress-Simple-History/issues/548).

**Removed**

 * Remove donation box from sidebar.

### 5.18.0 (November 2025)

👆 This release makes sidebar stats interactive – click on avatars, user names, 
or chart dates to instantly filter your event log. It also fixes email reports always
showing Sunday as the busiest day, plus several bug fixes and improvements.
 [Read more about it in the release post](https://simple-history.com/2025/simple-history-5-18-0-released/)

**Added**

 * Context search to the log GUI filters.
 * Date support to create event REST API endpoint (allows creating events for specific
   dates).
 * User names to list of most active users in last 30 days (previously only showed
   avatars).
 * Clickable elements in sidebar stats box: avatars, user names, and chart dates
   now filter the event log when clicked.
 * Dedicated Experimental Features admin page for users with experimental features
   enabled.
 * New experimental feature: Import existing data from WordPress into Simple History(
   posts, pages, users, and attachments).

**Fixed**

 * Email reports always showing Sunday as the busiest day.
 * PHP warning “Trying to access array offset on value of type null” in Theme Logger
   when displaying widget events.
 * More timezone and localization issues.

**Changed**

 * Weekly email reports now sent earlier in the day (6 AM instead of 8 AM), so they
   are ready when the user wakes up.
 * Reordered sidebar stats: Most active users now appears before Daily activity 
   to group admin-only information together.
 * Misc internal code improvements and changes.

### 5.17.0 (October 2025)

This version focuses on stats alignment and accuracy, timezone handling fixes, email
report improvements, and performance optimizations.

Read more about it in the [release post](https://simple-history.com/2025/simple-history-5-17-0-released/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=documentation&utm_content=readme_doc_release_5_17_0).

**Added**

 * Add icon to sticky events label.
 * Add help text to sidebar stats box about refresh interval and what data is used
   for the statistics (for admin the stats are based on all events, for other users
   is based on the events they have permission to view).
 * Email reports: Add tooltips to email “Activity by day” showing full date (e.g.,“
   Thursday 2 October 2025”) on hover for each day.
 * Email reports: Each day is now a link to the full log for that day.

**Fixed**

 * Sidebar stats was not always using the correct cached data.
 * Fix timezone and date handling across all stats features (sidebar, Insights page,
   REST API, charts) and all filter dropdowns (Today, Last N days, custom date ranges,
   month filters) to use WordPress timezone instead of server/UTC timezone.
 * “Today” now correctly shows events from 00:00 until current time (previously 
   showed events from now minus 24 hours).
 * Email reports: Fix timezone and date handling issues (now consistently use WordPress
   timezone), improved daily stats accuracy, date range, and updated email copy.
 * Occasions count in main GUI was displaying incorrect number (always one event
   to many!) – button now shows the actual number of similar events that will be
   loaded when expanded.

**Changed**

 * Email preview now shows last 7 days including today (matching sidebar “7 days”
   stat) so users can verify preview numbers against sidebar.
 * Email sent on Mondays now shows previous complete Monday-Sunday week (excludes
   current Monday).
 * Email “Activity by day” now displays days in chronological order matching the
   date range instead of fixed calendar week order.
 * Use “Today” instead of “Last day” in main GUI filters to make it more clear what
   range is being shown.

**Performance**

 * Improved performance by loading logger messages only when needed, eliminating
   ~980 gettext filter calls on every page load. This reduces …

## Meta

 *  Version **5.28.0**
 *  Last updated **2 weeks ago**
 *  Active installations **300.000+**
 *  WordPress version ** 6.3 or higher **
 *  Tested up to **7.0**
 *  PHP version ** 7.4 or higher **
 *  Languages
 * [Chinese (China)](https://cn.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/), [Danish](https://da.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/),
   [Dutch](https://nl.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/), [Dutch (Belgium)](https://nl-be.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/),
   [English (US)](https://wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/), [French (France)](https://fr.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/),
   [German](https://de.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/), [German (Switzerland)](https://de-ch.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/),
   [Korean](https://ko.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/), [Polish](https://pl.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/),
   [Portuguese (Brazil)](https://br.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/), [Romanian](https://ro.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/),
   [Russian](https://ru.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/), [Spanish (Colombia)](https://es-co.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/),
   [Spanish (Mexico)](https://es-mx.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/), [Spanish (Spain)](https://es.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/),
   [Spanish (Venezuela)](https://ve.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/), and 
   [Swedish](https://sv.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/).
 *  [Translate into your language](https://translate.wordpress.org/projects/wp-plugins/simple-history)
 * Tags
 * [activity](https://vec.wordpress.org/plugins/tags/activity/)[audit log](https://vec.wordpress.org/plugins/tags/audit-log/)
   [event log](https://vec.wordpress.org/plugins/tags/event-log/)[history](https://vec.wordpress.org/plugins/tags/history/)
   [user tracking](https://vec.wordpress.org/plugins/tags/user-tracking/)
 *  [Advanced View](https://vec.wordpress.org/plugins/simple-history/advanced/)

## Ratings

 4.9 out of 5 stars.

 *  [  451 5-star reviews     ](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/simple-history/reviews/?filter=5)
 *  [  13 4-star reviews     ](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/simple-history/reviews/?filter=4)
 *  [  6 3-star reviews     ](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/simple-history/reviews/?filter=3)
 *  [  4 2-star reviews     ](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/simple-history/reviews/?filter=2)
 *  [  3 1-star reviews     ](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/simple-history/reviews/?filter=1)

[Your review](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/simple-history/reviews/#new-post)

[See all reviews](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/simple-history/reviews/)

## Contributors

 *   [ Pär Thernström ](https://profiles.wordpress.org/eskapism/)
 *   [ Simple History ](https://profiles.wordpress.org/wpsimplehistory/)

## Support

Issues resolved in last two months:

     8 out of 10

 [View support forum](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/simple-history/)

## Donate

Would you like to support the advancement of this plugin?

 [ Donate to this plugin ](https://simple-history.com/sponsor/?utm_source=wordpress_org&utm_medium=plugin_directory&utm_campaign=sponsorship&utm_content=readme_donate_link)