Uninstall & Data Cleanup
What the plugin leaves behind when you remove it, and how to clean up if you want a spotless database.
What happens on uninstall
The plugin does not delete its settings when you uninstall it (it ships no uninstall routine). Removing it via Plugins → Delete deletes the files but leaves a few option rows in wp_options. This is harmless — a handful of small rows — but if you want them gone, remove them manually.
What’s left behind
This plugin’s settings (only the ones you changed from defaults will exist):
wc_ajax_pricing_disable_with_cartwc_ajax_pricing_disable_for_logged_inwc_ajax_pricing_vat_exempt_fixwc_ajax_pricing_refresh_stockwc_ajax_pricing_loading_text
Shared Super Speedy settings (used by all Super Speedy plugins — only relevant if you’re removing every one of them):
superspeedy_options(includes your licence key)- licence / update transients:
superspeedy_l_*,superspeedy_changes_*,ssp_*
The plugin creates no custom database tables, no post meta, and no scheduled events.
Cleaning up
WP-CLI (recommended):
wp option delete \
wc_ajax_pricing_disable_with_cart \
wc_ajax_pricing_disable_for_logged_in \
wc_ajax_pricing_vat_exempt_fix \
wc_ajax_pricing_refresh_stock \
wc_ajax_pricing_loading_text
Leave the shared superspeedy_* options alone unless you’re removing every Super Speedy plugin — deleting them would wipe the licence key the others rely on.
Prefer the admin? Use any options/database-cleanup tool and search for wc_ajax_pricing_.
Reinstalling later
If you reinstall and didn’t delete the options, your previous settings are picked up automatically; defaults apply to anything not set.
Cross-links: Settings Reference, Installation, Licensing & Updates, Privacy, GDPR & the AJAX Endpoint.