I will install an SSL certificate on your site — HTTPS, no warnings, fast
About this gig
Get a valid SSL certificate installed correctly on your site so it loads over HTTPS with the padlock, zero browser warnings, and a clean A-grade configuration — done for you, fast.
If your site shows "Not Secure," throws a "Your connection is not private" warning, or fails the padlock check, this service fixes it end to end. I obtain or install your SSL/TLS certificate, wire up HTTPS, force secure redirects, and verify the result in a real browser so visitors and search engines see a trusted, encrypted site.
What you get
- A correctly installed, browser-trusted SSL/TLS certificate covering your exact domain (and
wwwwhere applicable). - HTTPS enabled site-wide with HTTP-to-HTTPS redirects so every visitor lands on the secure version.
- The green padlock with no "Not Secure" label and no certificate warnings in Chrome, Safari, Firefox, and Edge.
- Full certificate chain installed (leaf + intermediates) — fixes the common "certificate not trusted" error caused by a missing intermediate.
- Correct certificate-to-private-key matching and secure CSR handling on your server or panel.
- A post-install validation report: SSL Labs grade, chain check, expiry date, and cipher summary.
- Mixed-content guidance so images, scripts, and stylesheets all load over HTTPS (no half-broken padlock).
- Works with Let's Encrypt (free, auto-renewable) or a paid certificate you've already purchased.
Plans
| Tier | What's included |
|---|---|
| Starter | Single domain or subdomain. Install your existing certificate or issue a free Let's Encrypt cert, enable HTTPS, add the HTTP→HTTPS redirect, and verify a clean padlock. |
| Growth | Everything in Starter, plus www + root coverage, full chain repair, auto-renewal setup, basic mixed-content cleanup, and an SSL Labs grade report. |
| Scale | Everything in Growth, plus wildcard or multi-domain (SAN) certificates, multiple sites, HSTS and modern TLS hardening, and CDN/reverse-proxy certificate setup. |
How it works
- You order and share access. Send me your hosting/server or control-panel login (cPanel, Plesk, NGINX/Apache, cloud host, or CDN), plus the domain you want secured.
- I assess. I check your current certificate state, DNS, server type, and whether you want a free Let's Encrypt cert or to use one you already bought.
- I obtain or import the certificate. I generate the CSR, validate domain ownership, and install the certificate with its complete chain — or import the files you provide.
- I enable HTTPS and redirects. I switch the site to HTTPS and add a permanent HTTP→HTTPS redirect so no insecure version stays reachable.
- I verify in real browsers. I confirm the padlock, run an SSL Labs scan, check the chain and expiry, and flag any mixed-content issues.
- I deliver the report. You get a short summary of what was done, your grade, the renewal date, and how renewal will be handled.
Why choose this
- No more warnings, guaranteed scope. The deliverable is a clean, trusted padlock — I don't close out until the warning is gone in real browsers.
- Chain done right. Most "untrusted certificate" problems are missing intermediates; I install the full chain so mobile and older clients trust it too.
- Renewal that doesn't bite you. On Growth and Scale I set up auto-renewal so you don't wake up to an expired-certificate outage.
- Server-agnostic. NGINX, Apache, cPanel, Plesk, cloud hosts, and CDN/reverse-proxy setups are all in scope.
- Fast and verifiable. You receive an SSL Labs grade and a checklist, not just a "trust me, it's done."
Who it's for / use cases
- Founders launching a new site who need HTTPS live before going public.
- Developers who'd rather hand off a fiddly cert/CSR/chain task than burn an afternoon on it.
- Shop owners on WooCommerce or other e-commerce who need a secure checkout and the trust padlock.
- Agencies rolling out HTTPS across many client sites or subdomains at once.
- Anyone hit with "Not Secure" or "Your connection is not private" wanting it fixed the first time.
- Teams migrating to a new server or CDN who need certificates re-installed cleanly.
FAQ
Q: Will this remove the "Not Secure" warning? Yes — once the certificate is installed and HTTPS is enforced, the warning disappears and visitors see the padlock; I verify this in real browsers before delivery.
Q: Do I need to buy a certificate first? No. I can issue a free, auto-renewable Let's Encrypt certificate, or install a paid one you already own — whichever you prefer.
Q: Which servers and panels do you support? NGINX, Apache, cPanel, Plesk, most cloud hosts, and CDN/reverse-proxy setups like Cloudflare; tell me yours and I'll confirm before we start.
Q: Can you cover both my root domain and www? Yes — root + www coverage is included from the Growth tier, and wildcard/multi-domain certificates are available on Scale.
Q: What about renewal so it doesn't expire again? On Growth and Scale I configure auto-renewal so the certificate refreshes itself; I also give you the expiry date and a renewal plan.
Q: My certificate shows as "not trusted" on phones — can you fix that? Almost always yes; that's a missing intermediate in the chain, and installing the full chain correctly resolves it.
Q: Will my site go down during the install? No downtime is expected — installs are quick, but I can schedule a low-traffic window if you prefer.
Q: What access do you need? Your hosting or control-panel login and the domain name; I handle the CSR, key, and certificate files securely.
Reviews★4.6(5)
- @avaf★★★★★5
Quick and clean. No more browser warnings and the whole site loads over https now.
- @hub7★★★★★5
Site is finally on HTTPS and that scary 'not secure' warning is completely gone. Super fast turnaround too.
- @ria_v★★★★★5
Installed the SSL cert without any fuss and now the green padlock shows up in every browser I tested.
- @ninahq★★★★★4
Did exactly what was promised, my pages serve securely and the certificate is valid. Communication was clear throughout.
- @oliviacodes★★★★★4
Cert is in and HTTPS works with no warnings. Took a little back and forth on my hosting login but ended up solid.