Hyva theme development services are becoming the preferred choice for Magento 2 store owners seeking a modern, fast, and easy-to-manage online store. Many ecommerce business owners assume that upgrading to a Hyva theme will be expensive, but that’s a misconception. In reality, it’s possible to get a high-quality, efficient, and visually appealing Hyva theme without overspending. The key lies in understanding what these services include, identifying the right developer, and planning your budget wisely.
Hyva theme changed the Magento frontend conversation. Since November 10, 2025, when the core theme became fully open source and free under OSL 3.0 and AFL 3.0 licenses, the only real reason to stay on Luma is genuine technical debt that makes migration uneconomic. The performance numbers are real: roughly 98% fewer page requests than Luma, 86% lighter page weight, and 65% of Hyva-based Magento stores passing Core Web Vitals against just 41% of standard Magento stores. But the honest picture is more nuanced than the marketing copy. Migration is not a drop-in theme swap. Hosting needs to keep up. Custom checkout work still requires Hyva Checkout (still paid). Some heavily-customised Luma stores will not benefit enough to justify the effort. This guide covers what Hyva actually is, what it costs, what it doesn’t fix, and when migration is the right call.
What Is Hyva Theme for Magento?
Hyva theme is a complete Magento 2 frontend replacement that swaps the legacy Luma stack (KnockoutJS, RequireJS, jQuery, LESS) for a modern lightweight stack built on Tailwind CSS and Alpine.js. Magento’s backend, admin panel, APIs, catalogue, and order management stay exactly the same. Hyva only changes how the storefront renders in the browser. Think of it as replacing the exterior of a building while keeping the plumbing, wiring, and foundation intact.
Launched in 2021 by Willem Wigman and Vinai Kopp, Hyva was built to fix Magento’s biggest pain point: frontend performance. Standard Luma stores routinely fail Core Web Vitals because the default Magento 2 frontend ships hundreds of HTTP requests, megabytes of JavaScript, and a rendering pipeline that struggles on mid-range mobile devices. Hyva removes most of that overhead by design.
The plain-English definition
If a Magento store running Luma loads roughly 230 page requests and 3MB of uncompressed assets, the same store rebuilt on Hyva theme loads about 5 page requests and 0.4MB. That’s a 98% reduction in requests and 86% reduction in page weight. The pages render faster, score 90+ on Lighthouse out of the box, and pass Core Web Vitals at roughly 1.6x the rate of standard Magento stores. The mechanism is simple: less code shipped to the browser means faster everything.
Hyva is not a replatform. It’s a frontend layer change on the same Magento installation. Your products, customers, orders, integrations, payment providers, and admin workflows all stay where they are. Migration is a project; replatforming is a much bigger project. The two get conflated regularly in articles that don’t know the difference.
The November 2025 Open Source Pivot
On November 10, 2025, Hyva Themes relicensed the core Hyva theme under OSL 3.0 and AFL 3.0, making it free and open source. This single change reshaped the economic case for migrating. Before November 2025, Hyva carried an annual licence fee (around €1,000/year). The fee wasn’t expensive in agency terms, but it was a meaningful psychological barrier for smaller UK Magento merchants weighing migration cost-benefit. That barrier is gone.
What changed and what didn’t
| Hyva product | Status before Nov 2025 | Status now |
|---|---|---|
| Hyva Theme (core) | Paid licence | Free, open source |
| Hyva UI library | Bundled with theme | €250/store separate |
| Hyva Checkout | Paid + theme licence required | Paid, theme not required |
| Hyva Enterprise | Paid + theme licence required | Paid, theme not required |
| Hyva Commerce suite | Paid | Paid (cashback for upgraders) |
| Free licence keys | Not available | Up to 5 per account |
Why this matters strategically
Before November 2025, the question UK Magento merchants asked was “is Hyva worth the licence fee plus migration?” Now the question is just “is the migration worth it?” That’s a structurally different conversation. The licence fee was always small compared to migration cost; removing it doesn’t change the maths much in absolute terms. But removing the upfront commitment friction has accelerated UK merchant adoption noticeably. Smaller stores, students, and beginning merchants now have access without barrier.
For most UK Magento merchants currently on Luma, the question is no longer “should we move to Hyva?” It’s “when and how?” The exception is genuinely small or low-traffic stores where the migration cost still exceeds the realistic return, and heavily-customised Luma builds where compatibility work would consume the savings.
The Hyva community size
Hyva theme powers more than 7,000 live Magento storefronts globally, including major brands like Volkswagen, Citizen, Replay, Nestlé, and Dunkin’. The Netherlands, US, UK, Germany, and Belgium are the top adopting markets. The Hyva Slack community has 10,000+ members, and the compatibility module library covers 300+ extensions, including most of the popular UK Magento extensions from Amasty, Mageworx, MageCommerce, and Smile.
Hyva vs Luma: The Real Performance Numbers
The performance gap between Hyva theme and Luma is genuinely large, and the numbers come from multiple independent sources rather than just Hyva’s marketing material. The HTTP Archive Technology Report shows 65% of Hyva-based Magento stores pass Core Web Vitals on mobile, against just 41% of standard Magento stores. WordPress sits at 46%; Shopify leads major platforms at 77%. Hyva closes most of the gap between Magento and Shopify.
Side-by-side technical reality
- ~230 HTTP requests on first page load
- ~3MB uncompressed page weight
- ~1.5MB JavaScript payload
- RequireJS + KnockoutJS + jQuery
- Lighthouse mobile score: 30-50 typical
- ~41% pass Core Web Vitals
- Frontend dev time: slow, complex
- Adobe-shipped, supported indefinitely
- ~5 HTTP requests on first page load
- ~0.4MB uncompressed page weight
- ~80-150KB JavaScript payload
- Tailwind CSS + Alpine.js
- Lighthouse mobile score: 85-97 typical
- ~65% pass Core Web Vitals
- Frontend dev time: 30-50% faster
- Free, open source, community-driven
What the numbers actually mean for conversion
Walmart found a 2% conversion lift per 1-second improvement in page load time. The same pattern holds across UK Magento stores. A Luma store loading at 4.5 seconds that drops to 1.5 seconds with Hyva theme is gaining 3 seconds of speed, which translates to a typical 6-15% conversion lift, sometimes higher on mobile-heavy stores. The plumrocket case study with IRON COMPANY reported a 96% speed boost translating to 12% revenue growth. Industry data suggests Hyva merchants typically see 15-30% conversion lifts and 50-70% faster page loading times once migration is complete.
“Hyva is one of the few Magento upgrades where the performance numbers actually match the marketing copy. The complication isn’t whether Hyva is faster than Luma; everyone agrees it is. The complication is whether your specific store will see the full theoretical lift, or whether hosting, custom modules, or checkout extensions will eat some of the gain. Honest scoping makes the difference.”
Paraphrased from UK Magento performance audit patterns
The Core Web Vitals dimension
Google’s ranking signals weight Core Web Vitals (LCP, INP, CLS) as part of overall search performance. Magento stores failing CWV typically lose organic search traffic over time, particularly on competitive product category terms. Migrating to Hyva theme is one of the few moves that reliably flips a Magento store from “failing CWV” to “passing CWV”, which usually triggers a 10-25% organic search traffic recovery within 60-90 days of the new performance being indexed.
The Hyva Product Stack Explained
The Hyva theme brand actually covers four distinct products, three of which are still paid. Understanding what each does (and what you actually need) prevents overpaying and avoids missing pieces that matter for conversion.
Hyva Theme (free, open source)
The core frontend replacement: storefront templates, layouts, category pages, product pages, account pages. This is what most articles mean when they say “Hyva”. Free since November 2025, free Composer keys via the Hyva Portal, full source on GitHub. For most UK Magento stores, this alone delivers the bulk of the performance benefit.
Hyva UI library (€250/store)
A library of pre-built UI components: headers, footers, mega menus, carousels, product cards, cart drawers. Speeds up new build development significantly but isn’t required for migration. Worth it for new builds; optional for existing stores that already have custom UI work.
Hyva Checkout (paid, ~€1,000)
A React-based checkout that replaces Magento’s native checkout entirely. Conversion-optimised, faster, and integrates with most major payment service providers (Stripe, PayPal, Adyen, Mollie, Klarna). Still paid even after the November 2025 open-source pivot. Worth the cost for stores serious about checkout conversion; some merchants opt to keep Magento native checkout to save the licence cost initially.
Hyva Enterprise / Hyva Commerce (paid)
Adobe Commerce compatibility (Enterprise) and the full suite for enterprise merchants (Commerce). Includes modern admin panel, enhanced CMS, and additional features. Aimed at larger merchants with budgets to match. Most UK SMB Magento merchants don’t need these tiers.
For most UK Magento Open Source merchants migrating from Luma, the minimum viable stack is just Hyva Theme (free) plus the development time to migrate. Hyva UI is nice-to-have, Hyva Checkout is conversion-positive but optional initially, and Hyva Enterprise/Commerce are for stores at the top of the market. Starting with the free theme and adding paid pieces later as ROI justifies them is the disciplined approach.
What Hyva Actually Costs (And Where the Real Money Goes)
The biggest misunderstanding about Hyva theme costs is that the licence fee was ever the main expense. It wasn’t, even when it existed. The real cost of moving to Hyva is the development time to migrate, the extension compatibility work, and (often overlooked) the hosting upgrade required to actually deliver the promised performance. Removing the licence fee changed the headline; it didn’t change the substantive economics.
The honest cost breakdown for UK Magento stores
| Cost component | Typical range (UK) | What it covers |
|---|---|---|
| Hyva Theme licence | £0 | Free since Nov 2025 |
| Hyva UI library | £0-£220/store | Optional, faster development |
| Hyva Checkout licence | £0-£900 | Optional but recommended |
| Migration development | £8,000-£60,000 | The actual work; depends on customisation depth |
| Extension compatibility work | £0-£15,000 | If non-compatible custom modules need rebuild |
| Magento upgrade (if needed) | £3,000-£20,000 | Hyva needs Magento 2.4.5+ |
| Design refresh (optional) | £0-£25,000 | If you want to redesign at the same time |
| Hosting upgrade | £100-£800/month additional | If current hosting can’t deliver the speed |
| QA and launch | £2,000-£8,000 | Cross-browser, cross-device validation |
Typical total project cost by store size
For UK Magento stores, total Hyva migration project costs typically land in these brackets:
- Total: £8,000-£18,000
- Timeline: 4-6 weeks
- Free Hyva Theme + light migration
- Few extension dependencies
- Standard hosting often sufficient
- Total: £20,000-£50,000
- Timeline: 6-10 weeks
- Hyva Theme + Checkout + UI
- 10-20 extensions to verify
- Hosting upgrade often required
- Total: £45,000-£90,000
- Timeline: 10-16 weeks
- Hyva Theme + Checkout + UI
- 20+ extensions, custom rebuild work
- Premium hosting essential
- Total: £80,000-£200,000+
- Timeline: 16-24+ weeks
- Hyva Enterprise / Commerce required
- Heavy custom integration work
- Multi-storefront, B2B, multi-currency
Comparing migration cost vs alternatives
Hyva theme migration sits between two options. Cheaper but limited: continued Luma optimisation work, which hits a hard ceiling because Luma’s architecture is fundamentally slow. More expensive: a full headless build (PWA Studio, Vue Storefront, Alokai) which typically costs 3-5x the Hyva equivalent and takes 6-18 months. For roughly 80% of UK Magento merchants, Hyva delivers the best cost-to-performance ratio of available frontend options.
Cheap shared hosting will not deliver Hyva’s performance promise no matter how clean the frontend is. The Magento backend still needs to render the page, query the database, and serve the response. Stores running on £30-£60/month managed Magento hosting often need to upgrade to £200-£600/month tier (Cloudways, Sonassi, Hypernode, JetRails, MGT-Commerce) to actually see the Hyva speed gains. Skipping this step is the single most common reason a “completed Hyva migration” doesn’t deliver expected performance.
Migration Complexity and Realistic Timeline
A Hyva theme migration is a structured project, not a weekend swap. The Hyva team’s official guidance suggests projects can range from 6 weeks to 8 months depending on complexity, which is wide enough to be unhelpful. UK Magento agencies running mid-market migrations consistently report 6-12 weeks as the realistic mid-market window. Smaller stores can land in 4-6 weeks; complex enterprise builds stretch to 4-6 months.
The factors that shape your timeline
Magento version
Hyva requires Magento 2.4.5+ minimum, with 2.4.7-p3+ recommended for current versions. Stores on older Magento versions need to upgrade first, which can add 2-6 weeks and £3-20K to the project. This is the single biggest hidden timeline cost.
Custom theme depth
Stores running stock Luma migrate fastest. Stores with heavy custom theme work need design recreated in Tailwind. The visual result can be identical, but the underlying code is rebuilt entirely.
Extension count and complexity
Each non-compatible extension needs either a Hyva-compatible alternative, a compatibility module, or custom rebuild work. UK Magento stores typically run 15-30 extensions; auditing each one is the first migration step.
Checkout customisation
Custom Luma checkout work is the highest-risk migration component. Either accept Magento native checkout on Hyva (often a downgrade in conversion), buy Hyva Checkout (recommended), or rebuild custom checkout work in React. None of these are quick.
Integration touchpoints
ERP, PIM, marketing automation, and review platform integrations usually work without change because they hit Magento’s API layer, not the frontend. Custom JavaScript-based integrations (chatbots, popup tools, A/B testing scripts) need re-evaluation.
The realistic phased project plan
| Phase | Duration | Key activities |
|---|---|---|
| Phase 1: Audit | 1-2 weeks | Extension compatibility, Magento version check, customisation inventory, scope definition |
| Phase 2: Setup | 1 week | Free Hyva keys, Composer install, child theme creation, dev environment |
| Phase 3: Build | 3-8 weeks | Theme development, page templates, custom components, CMS migration |
| Phase 4: Integration | 1-2 weeks | Extension compatibility work, custom module rebuilds, checkout integration |
| Phase 5: QA | 1-2 weeks | Cross-browser, cross-device, payment flow testing, accessibility checks |
| Phase 6: Launch | 1 week | Performance optimisation, cache warming, DNS, monitoring, support |
Total: typically 8-16 weeks for a UK mid-market Magento migration. Stores trying to compress below 6 weeks usually skip QA properly and ship with regression issues.
For a structured pre-migration review, our 5-point growth marketing audit framework includes the conversion baseline measurement that should run before any migration begins, so you can prove the lift afterwards.
The Extension Compatibility Reality
The most common concern UK Magento merchants raise about Hyva theme migration is extension compatibility. The concern is legitimate. Hyva removes Luma’s JavaScript stack entirely, which means any Magento extension relying on KnockoutJS, RequireJS, or jQuery for its frontend won’t work out of the box. The frontend components of those extensions need rebuilding or replacing.
Why this is less scary now than it was at Hyva’s launch
In 2021, when Hyva launched, only a handful of extensions had Hyva-compatible versions. Today, the Hyva compatibility module library covers more than 300 extensions, and the major UK Magento extension vendors (Amasty, Mageworx, MageCommerce, Smile, Klevu) ship Hyva-compatible variants of most flagship products. The “extension compatibility wall” most articles still warn about is dramatically lower than it was three years ago.
The audit pattern that catches problems early
- List every Magento extension currently active in your store admin
- Check each one against the official Hyva compatibility list at hyva.io
- For non-listed extensions, contact the vendor directly to ask about Hyva support
- Identify any custom modules with frontend code; these always need rebuilding
- Map third-party JavaScript that runs on the frontend (chat tools, popup tools, analytics tools)
- Categorise each as: compatible / Hyva variant available / needs custom rebuild / needs replacement
- Estimate compatibility work effort in days, then add 25% buffer
- Make migration go/no-go decision based on full picture
A UK Magento fashion store running 23 extensions found 19 had Hyva-compatible versions, 3 had paid Hyva variants, and 1 custom-built module needed rebuilding. Total compatibility work: ~12 developer days. The migration completed in 9 weeks total, including the rebuild. Stores that skip this audit step and discover compatibility issues mid-build typically lose 4-8 weeks to unplanned work.
The extension categories most likely to need work
Custom checkout extensions: the highest-risk category. Most Luma checkout customisations don’t survive a Hyva migration without re-implementation work. Custom search extensions: usually need Hyva-specific frontend integration. Custom popup or notification tools: may need replacement with Hyva-native alternatives. B2B-specific Luma modules: increasingly have Hyva variants but verify before committing. Layered Navigation customisations: usually need rebuild on the Hyva-friendly Layered Navigation pattern.
Some UK Magento stores discover during the audit that 60%+ of their extensions don’t have Hyva variants and the custom module count is high. At that point, the “migration” is actually a partial replatform, with all the cost and risk that implies. Better to know this in week 1 than month 3. Honest audits sometimes recommend staying on Luma and optimising heavily instead.
The Hosting Requirement Most Teams Miss
Hyva theme can score 100/100 on Lighthouse only when the backend is fast enough to render the page in the first place. Magento performance on shared or under-provisioned hosting will never reach acceptable Core Web Vitals regardless of how clean the frontend is. This is the single most common cause of “completed Hyva migrations” that didn’t deliver expected speed gains.
The hosting stack Hyva actually needs
PHP 8.3 or 8.4 with FPM
Older PHP versions cap Magento performance significantly. PHP 8.3+ improvements compound the Hyva frontend gains. PHP-FPM rather than mod_php for better request handling.
Varnish 6 or 7 in front of Magento
Magento’s built-in Full Page Cache works, but Varnish in front of it works better. Properly configured Varnish with hole-punching for cart and customer blocks consistently delivers sub-1-second TTFB on cached pages.
Redis for sessions and cache backend
Default file-based cache is too slow at scale. Redis as cache backend and session storage cuts response times noticeably under load.
OpenSearch or Elasticsearch 7.6+
Magento 2.4+ requires Elasticsearch or OpenSearch for catalogue search. Properly configured search reduces page render times on category pages and product listings.
CDN for static assets
Cloudflare, BunnyCDN, or similar in front of static assets (images, CSS, JS). Reduces TTFB on geographic distance and offloads bandwidth from origin.
UK hosting providers that consistently deliver Hyva performance
For UK Magento merchants serious about delivering on Hyva’s performance promise, the typical hosting tiers are: Cloudways with Magento-optimised stacks (£100-£400/month for mid-market), Sonassi managed Magento hosting (highly performant, premium pricing), Hypernode (Hyva official partner), JetRails, MGT-Commerce, or self-hosted on AWS/Linode/Hetzner with proper DevOps support. Adobe Commerce Cloud is another path for stores already on Adobe’s stack.
An extra £150-£400/month on hosting feels expensive in isolation, but framed against a £25,000 migration project, it’s 6-15% of project cost over 12 months. Spending the migration budget and then skipping the hosting upgrade is one of the more wasteful choices in UK Magento operations. Get the hosting question right before signing migration contracts.
SEO Impact: What Hyva Does and Doesn’t Fix
UK Magento merchants often migrate to Hyva theme partly for SEO benefits. Some of those benefits are real and significant. Others are commonly oversold. Knowing which is which helps set realistic expectations.
What Hyva genuinely improves for SEO
| SEO factor | Hyva impact | Realistic improvement |
|---|---|---|
| Core Web Vitals (LCP, INP, CLS) | Significant improvement | Pass rate from ~41% to ~65% of stores |
| Mobile page speed | Major improvement | Lighthouse 30-50 → 85-97 typical |
| Time to First Byte (TTFB) | Modest improvement | Helped more by hosting/Varnish than Hyva itself |
| Mobile usability signals | Significant improvement | Touch targets, viewport, responsive UX |
| Bounce rate | Often improves | Faster pages → fewer bounces |
| Crawl efficiency | Improves | Lighter pages crawl faster, more pages indexed |
What Hyva doesn’t fix
| SEO factor | Hyva impact | Reality |
|---|---|---|
| Content quality | Zero impact | Thin product descriptions still rank badly |
| Internal linking structure | Zero impact | Same Magento navigation logic |
| Structured data / schema | Same as Luma by default | Needs same work whether on Hyva or Luma |
| URL structure | Zero impact | Magento URL settings unchanged |
| Layered Navigation indexing | Zero impact | Still needs canonicalisation work |
| Backlink profile | Zero impact | Off-site SEO entirely separate |
| Site architecture / IA | Zero impact | Category structure stays the same |
The realistic SEO timeline post-migration
UK Magento stores that migrate to Hyva theme typically see organic search recovery in 60-90 days as Google re-crawls and processes the improved Core Web Vitals signals. The lift is meaningful (often 10-25% organic traffic recovery on stores that were CWV-failing before), but it’s not instant and it’s not the same as a full SEO overhaul. Hyva amplifies the SEO foundation you already have; it doesn’t create one where none exists.
For the broader instrumentation framework that should sit underneath any migration measurement programme, our guide to what ecommerce brands should track covers what UK ecommerce stores need to measure cleanly through and after a major frontend change. And for the consolidated analytics stack, our guide to marketing analytics tools covers the tooling most UK Magento stores need to track Hyva migration impact properly.
When Hyva Is (and Isn’t) the Right Move
Hyva theme is the right move for most UK Magento merchants currently running Luma, but “most” isn’t “all”. Here is the honest decision framework based on UK audit patterns.
Hyva is clearly the right move when:
- Your Magento store is currently failing Core Web Vitals on mobile
- Mobile drives 50%+ of your traffic (which it does for most UK ecommerce)
- Your store loads slower than 3 seconds on mid-range mobile devices
- You have an active development budget and roadmap
- Your extension stack is mostly Hyva-compatible (or close to it)
- Your business case can absorb a £10-50K project cost
- You’re planning a redesign anyway (combine with migration for cost efficiency)
- You’re on Magento 2.4.5+ already (or willing to upgrade)
Hyva needs careful evaluation when:
- Your store is on an older Magento version requiring expensive upgrade first
- You have heavy custom Luma checkout work that would need expensive rebuild
- Your extension stack is unusual or includes obscure modules without Hyva variants
- Your traffic and revenue don’t justify £10K+ project costs
- You’re planning a full replatform within 18 months (migrate at replatform time instead)
- Your current hosting can’t deliver Hyva’s potential (factor in hosting upgrade cost)
Hyva might not be worth it when:
- Your store does under £100K annual revenue and is small enough that performance gains won’t justify £10K+ migration cost
- You’re planning to replatform to Shopify or another platform within 12 months
- You have so much custom Luma work that “migration” is effectively rebuild
- You don’t have access to a Magento development team or agency
Want an honest Hyva migration assessment?
5MS is an Adobe Solutions Partner UK Magento agency. Free 30-minute scoping call to assess whether Hyva makes sense for your store, what it would actually cost, and what timeline to expect. We tell you when migration isn’t worth it.
Common Hyva Migration Mistakes
Most UK Hyva theme migrations that disappoint do so for predictable reasons. These are the patterns that turn a strong project into a frustrating one.
- Treating Hyva as a “drop-in theme swap” and discovering custom module rework needed in week 4
- Skipping the extension compatibility audit in week 1 and getting blocked mid-build
- Forgetting Hyva needs Magento 2.4.5+ and discovering an upgrade dependency mid-project
- Migrating without upgrading hosting and wondering why the speed gains are smaller than expected
- Underestimating checkout migration risk (custom Luma checkout work is the highest-risk component)
- Combining Hyva migration with a full redesign without scoping each separately, doubling scope creep
- Insufficient cross-browser and cross-device QA before launch
- Skipping conversion baseline measurement before migration so the lift can’t be proven afterwards
- Treating performance as “done” after launch instead of continuing image and code discipline
- Choosing a developer or agency without verified Hyva experience
“The Magento migrations to Hyva that go well share two things: a thorough extension audit before any code is written, and an honest hosting conversation before any contract is signed. The migrations that struggle skip one or both. Hyva is the right answer for most UK Magento merchants now, but only if the project is scoped properly, not assumed to be simple.”
Paraphrased from UK Magento migration audit patterns
Hyva Theme: The Short Answer
For most UK Magento merchants currently on Luma, Hyva theme is the right next frontend investment. Since November 2025 it’s free and open source, the performance numbers are real (98% fewer requests, 65% Core Web Vitals pass rate vs 41% on standard Magento), and the extension compatibility ecosystem has matured to cover 300+ modules. The honest cost is not the licence (now zero) but the migration work itself: typically £10,000-£50,000 for UK mid-market stores, completed in 6-12 weeks, plus a likely hosting upgrade to deliver the full speed promise. Stores planning a replatform within 12 months should skip Hyva. Stores planning to keep Magento for 2+ years should plan the migration. The middle ground (continued Luma optimisation) hits a hard ceiling and should be avoided.
The 10-step Hyva action list:
- Confirm your Magento version is 2.4.5+, upgrade first if not.
- Audit your extension stack against Hyva compatibility before scoping anything else.
- Establish a conversion baseline now, so the lift can be proven post-migration.
- Get free Hyva Theme keys via the Hyva Portal at hyva.io.
- Decide whether you need Hyva Checkout (usually yes for serious conversion work).
- Assess hosting capability honestly, budget for upgrade if needed.
- Scope the migration as a structured 6-12 week project, not a simple swap.
- Run thorough cross-device and cross-browser QA before launch.
- Plan post-launch monitoring for Core Web Vitals, conversion, and SEO recovery.
- Treat the migration as the start of ongoing performance work, not the end.
Ready to scope your Hyva migration properly?
5MS is an Adobe Solutions Partner UK Magento agency that runs honest Hyva migration audits, builds detailed project scopes, and ships migrations that deliver the performance gains promised. We tell you when migration isn’t right, too. Free 30-minute scoping call.
Hyva Theme: Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & further reading
- Hyva Themes: official open-source announcement (November 10, 2025)
- Hyva Portal: free licence keys, GitHub repository, compatibility list
- HTTP Archive Technology Report: Magento and Hyva Core Web Vitals data
- Adobe Commerce / Magento: official platform documentation
- Google: Core Web Vitals thresholds and ecommerce ranking impact
- Walmart: page speed and conversion correlation research
- UK Hyva agency reports and migration project benchmarks
- Hosting provider documentation: Cloudways, Sonassi, Hypernode, JetRails
This guide is updated periodically with refreshed Hyva ecosystem data, UK Magento migration benchmarks, and shifts in the Hyva Commerce product stack.
