Why your website displays Not Secure
A missing security certificate damages visitor trust instantly. We explain why this warning happens in plain English, and how to restore your green padlock today.
Three reasons certificates fail
Most browser warnings trace back to one of these common server misalignments.
Expired SSL Certificates
DNS Record Mismatch
Mixed Content Errors
Security certificates must be renewed annually. When they lapse, browsers immediately block access to protect user data.
If your domain records point to the wrong hosting server, the security handshake fails and triggers a warning.
Your site has an SSL certificate, but still loads old images or scripts over insecure connections, breaking the padlock.
Common security questions
No technical jargon. Just straightforward explanations of how domain security works.
Is my website hacked?
How does SSL protect us?
Can I fix this myself?
No. The warning simply means data sent between your visitor and your server is unencrypted. Your files and database are intact, but the connection itself is exposed.
An SSL certificate encrypts passwords, forms, and credit card numbers. It proves to browsers that your domain is authentic and safe to browse.
Unless you are comfortable editing DNS zones, configuring server handshakes, and rewriting database URLs, manual fixes can easily break your email or take your site offline.
Get your green padlock back
Don't let a warning turn customers away. We resolve your SSL configuration issues within two hours, guaranteed.
