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❓Topic covered in this documentation article:

🧐 WPDistrib Review of One User Avatar🔵 Optional

🟡 Iteration 2 —
Tagged version

🏷 This article has been tagged: it now has all the basic technical elements to be properly interpreted by search engines.

This includes SEO metadata (title, description, excerpt), a featured image, and a consistent internal linking structure.

📌 This step is not yet a complete SEO optimization, but it allows the article to be shared properly on social media.
Thanks to its image, title, and excerpt, it’s ready to circulate in a content distribution logic.

Illustration for the article "WPDistrib Review of One User Avatar" with a profile icon and plus symbol in the WordPress admin.

The One User Avatar plugin lets you add custom images to WordPress user accounts. While no longer included in WPDistrib by default, it remains recommended for specific use cases.

In WordPress, each user can have roles, identifiers, permissions… But not a profile image.

This is a surprising limitation when trying to visually distinguish accounts in the admin area, especially in a structured environment.

The One User Avatar plugin addresses this issue by allowing a custom image to be added to each user profile. While this plugin is no longer included in the default WPDistrib setup, it remains relevant in certain use cases. Here’s what to know before using it in a project.


Understanding Why WordPress Doesn’t Let You Change the Default Avatar

WordPress doesn’t include a built-in system for adding a custom profile image to a user account. The CMS relies solely on Gravatar, an external service that links email addresses to global avatars.

This setup is poorly suited for local, internal, or educational environments, where each user account should have a distinct image without exposing personal data to a third-party platform.

This limitation quickly becomes an issue when trying to differentiate multiple accounts, such as a main administrator, a secondary editor, or a test account. Without visible avatars, all these users appear identical in the admin.

💡 This limitation is structural: WordPress considers the user image as public data, whereas in many cases it should be local and customizable.


Improving Admin Clarity with a Custom Avatar

In a multi-account setup, adding a custom image to each profile offers an immediate boost in clarity. The avatar allows for quick visual identification of the user’s role or purpose.

✅ A theme editing account can be visually distinguished from an admin account.

✅ A test account can have a specific icon to avoid confusion during operations.

✅ In multisite or collaborative contexts, personalized avatars streamline teamwork.

🚀 Example from WPDistrib: a secondary account was used to adjust theme settings, with the User Switching plugin to switch between roles. Thanks to One User Avatar, each role had a clear visual cue, making tests and management more efficient.


Using One User Avatar to Add an Image to a User Account

The One User Avatar plugin solves this simply. It adds an Avatar field to each user profile, letting you assign an image:

👉 Either by uploading a new image.

👉 Or by selecting an existing image from the media library.

👉 Or by leaving the field empty to keep the default avatar.

The image then appears in the admin interface, such as the user list and other screens displaying the author.

✅ No Gravatar account required.

✅ Clean and simple interface that follows native WordPress design.

✅ The image is stored locally on the WordPress site.

💡 This is a lightweight yet helpful feature, especially in training or workshop settings where multiple users need to be clearly identified.


Reassessing Its Role After WPDistrib’s Simplification

WPDistrib recently removed several secondary plugins, including Members and User Switching, as part of an effort to simplify the core distribution. This move reflects a focus on keeping only the essentials.

In this context, One User Avatar was also removed. It is no longer included by default because:

⚠ It is not essential for single-user sites or simple setups.

⚠ It becomes redundant if no real multi-account use case exists.

⚠ It should only be activated when visual distinction between users is needed.

🚫 The plugin is no longer part of WPDistrib by default, but that doesn’t mean it is discouraged.


🌀 One User Avatar: an Optional Plugin to Personalize User Accounts

One User Avatar is not a critical plugin, but it remains recommended in several scenarios:

👉 Educational projects with different accounts for various roles.

👉 Collaborative or multisite setups with multiple authors or moderators.

👉 Local testing cases where a visual marker helps avoid mistakes.

It integrates easily into a WPDistrib site without disrupting visual coherence and adds no technical bloat.

✅ No impact on performance.

✅ Simple, localized, and effective feature.

In conclusion, One User Avatar is a useful plugin worth knowing, addressing a structural gap in WordPress. It can be installed based on project needs, but is no longer part of WPDistrib’s core setup for the sake of simplicity.

💡 Did this article speak to you, make you think, or make you want to go further?

You might be wondering:

  • Can I create a website that reflects who I am, without relying on a closed tool?
  • Can I learn to publish, structure, and organize my content myself?
  • Am I ready to dedicate time to it?

If the answer is yes, then you’re in the right place.

Creating a useful and sustainable website does take some time — but it’s time well invested, to learn how to do things with clarity and method.

That’s exactly the goal of WPDistrib:

save time right from the start,
→ with an already optimized WordPress,
→ and free resources to learn how to use it well.


  • 👉 Want to start with an enhanced, lightweight, already optimized WordPress? I download WPDistrib
  • Prefer to learn and understand before you dive in?👉 I explore the documentation base
  • 👉 Want to go further and structure a site around a profession or a passion? I discover the method
Illustration for the article "WPDistrib Review of One User Avatar" with a profile icon and plus symbol in the WordPress admin.
🟡 Iteration 2 —
Tagged version

🏷 This article has been tagged: it now has all the basic technical elements to be properly interpreted by search engines.

This includes SEO metadata (title, description, excerpt), a featured image, and a consistent internal linking structure.

📌 This step is not yet a complete SEO optimization, but it allows the article to be shared properly on social media.
Thanks to its image, title, and excerpt, it’s ready to circulate in a content distribution logic.

, , , , ,

The One User Avatar plugin lets you add custom images to WordPress user accounts. While no longer included in WPDistrib by default, it remains recommended for specific use cases.

Beginning of the article

In WordPress, each user can have roles, identifiers, permissions… But not a profile image.

This is a surprising limitation when trying to visually distinguish accounts in the admin area, especially in a structured environment.

The One User Avatar plugin addresses this issue by allowing a custom image to be added to each user profile. While this plugin is no longer included in the default WPDistrib setup, it remains relevant in certain use cases. Here’s what to know before using it in a project.


Understanding Why WordPress Doesn’t Let You Change the Default Avatar

WordPress doesn’t include a built-in system for adding a custom profile image to a user account. The CMS relies solely on Gravatar, an external service that links email addresses to global avatars.

This setup is poorly suited for local, internal, or educational environments, where each user account should have a distinct image without exposing personal data to a third-party platform.

This limitation quickly becomes an issue when trying to differentiate multiple accounts, such as a main administrator, a secondary editor, or a test account. Without visible avatars, all these users appear identical in the admin.

💡 This limitation is structural: WordPress considers the user image as public data, whereas in many cases it should be local and customizable.


Improving Admin Clarity with a Custom Avatar

In a multi-account setup, adding a custom image to each profile offers an immediate boost in clarity. The avatar allows for quick visual identification of the user’s role or purpose.

✅ A theme editing account can be visually distinguished from an admin account.

✅ A test account can have a specific icon to avoid confusion during operations.

✅ In multisite or collaborative contexts, personalized avatars streamline teamwork.

🚀 Example from WPDistrib: a secondary account was used to adjust theme settings, with the User Switching plugin to switch between roles. Thanks to One User Avatar, each role had a clear visual cue, making tests and management more efficient.


Using One User Avatar to Add an Image to a User Account

The One User Avatar plugin solves this simply. It adds an Avatar field to each user profile, letting you assign an image:

👉 Either by uploading a new image.

👉 Or by selecting an existing image from the media library.

👉 Or by leaving the field empty to keep the default avatar.

The image then appears in the admin interface, such as the user list and other screens displaying the author.

✅ No Gravatar account required.

✅ Clean and simple interface that follows native WordPress design.

✅ The image is stored locally on the WordPress site.

💡 This is a lightweight yet helpful feature, especially in training or workshop settings where multiple users need to be clearly identified.


Reassessing Its Role After WPDistrib’s Simplification

WPDistrib recently removed several secondary plugins, including Members and User Switching, as part of an effort to simplify the core distribution. This move reflects a focus on keeping only the essentials.

In this context, One User Avatar was also removed. It is no longer included by default because:

⚠ It is not essential for single-user sites or simple setups.

⚠ It becomes redundant if no real multi-account use case exists.

⚠ It should only be activated when visual distinction between users is needed.

🚫 The plugin is no longer part of WPDistrib by default, but that doesn’t mean it is discouraged.


🌀 One User Avatar: an Optional Plugin to Personalize User Accounts

One User Avatar is not a critical plugin, but it remains recommended in several scenarios:

👉 Educational projects with different accounts for various roles.

👉 Collaborative or multisite setups with multiple authors or moderators.

👉 Local testing cases where a visual marker helps avoid mistakes.

It integrates easily into a WPDistrib site without disrupting visual coherence and adds no technical bloat.

✅ No impact on performance.

✅ Simple, localized, and effective feature.

In conclusion, One User Avatar is a useful plugin worth knowing, addressing a structural gap in WordPress. It can be installed based on project needs, but is no longer part of WPDistrib’s core setup for the sake of simplicity.

End of the article

💡 Did this article speak to you, make you think, or make you want to go further?

You might be wondering:

  • Can I create a website that reflects who I am, without relying on a closed tool?
  • Can I learn to publish, structure, and organize my content myself?
  • Am I ready to dedicate time to it?

If the answer is yes, then you’re in the right place.

Creating a useful and sustainable website does take some time — but it’s time well invested, to learn how to do things with clarity and method.

That’s exactly the goal of WPDistrib:

save time right from the start,
→ with an already optimized WordPress,
→ and free resources to learn how to use it well.


  • 👉 Want to start with an enhanced, lightweight, already optimized WordPress? I download WPDistrib
  • Prefer to learn and understand before you dive in?👉 I explore the documentation base
  • 👉 Want to go further and structure a site around a profession or a passion? I discover the method