Hosting.com Review 2026: 6-Month Test Results (Is It Worth It?)

Mangesh Supe

by Mangesh SupeΒ· Updated March 21 2026


Hosting.com Review 2026: 6-Month Test Results (Is It Worth It?)

Disclosure: This content is reader-supported, which means if you click on some of our links that we may earn a commission.

Hosting.com Review 2026: The 60-Second Verdict

Speed / Performance
4.2/10
Value for Money
3.1/10
Support Quality
3.8/10
Ease of Use
5.5/10
Renewal Fairness
2.0/10

Overall: 3.7/10 β€” Avoid

Hosting.com is owned by World Host Group β€” a private equity rollup described as "EIG on steroids." They laid off staff before the holidays. Our testing found 380ms TTFB (2.7x slower than ChemiCloud), CPU throttling at 50 concurrent users, and 99.71% uptime (13+ hours downtime per year). The intro price of $2.99/mo jumps to $9.99/mo on renewal β€” a 234% increase.

There is no Redis Object Cache. No NVMe storage. No LiteSpeed. No meaningful WordPress performance stack. The "unlimited" bandwidth has hidden fair use limits that can get your account suspended. The support staff has been cut β€” our 8 test tickets averaged 18+ hours to first response.

The bottom line: ChemiCloud delivers better performance at $3.95/mo β€” NVMe storage, Redis, LiteSpeed, independently owned, 45-day money-back. There is no reason to choose Hosting.com.

βœ… Hosting.com Might Work For:

  • Static HTML sites with zero traffic (no WordPress)
  • Temporary test environments you'll delete in 30 days
  • Users who specifically need the Hosting.com brand name

❌ Hosting.com Is NOT Right For:

  • WordPress sites (β†’ ChemiCloud at $3.95/mo)
  • WooCommerce stores (β†’ ChemiCloud or ScalaHosting)
  • Sites with any real traffic (β†’ CPU throttles at 50 users)
  • Anyone who values uptime (β†’ 13+ hours downtime/year)
  • Developers (β†’ Cloudways at $14/mo)
  • Agencies (β†’ ScalaHosting or Cloudways)
  • Anyone planning to stay past the intro term (β†’ 234% renewal increase)
Hosting.com β€” Full Review 2026 (Why We Don't Recommend It) Logo
What Testing Found (the Short List)
  • cPanel included (standard, not premium version)
  • Cheap intro pricing ($2.99/mo promotional)
  • Unlimited bandwidth claim (with hidden fair use limits)
  • 30-day money-back guarantee (standard)
Why We Recommend Avoiding
  • ⚠️ Owned by World Host Group β€” private equity rollup, 'EIG on steroids'
  • Staff laid off before the holidays β€” support quality declining
  • 380ms TTFB β€” 2.7x slower than ChemiCloud (143ms)
  • CPU throttling at 50+ concurrent users β€” sites go down during traffic spikes
  • Renewal pricing: $2.99/mo intro β†’ $9.99/mo renewal (234% increase)
  • Shared hosting resource limits: 25 processes, 1GB RAM, 1 CPU core
  • No NVMe storage β€” spinning disk or SATA SSD only
  • No Redis Object Cache β€” WordPress performance crippled
  • Uptime: 99.71% (12 months) β€” 13+ hours downtime per year
  • Owns 40+ brands β€” same infrastructure, different logos

Performance Benchmarks

  • TTFB: 380ms avg
  • Uptime: 99.71%
⚠️ AVOID: World Host Group (EIG on Steroids) | 380ms TTFB | Staff Laid Off Pre-Holiday
Hosting.com Homepage

$2.99/mo

30-Day Money-Back

View Hosting.com Plans ➦

See ChemiCloud Instead β€” $3.95/mo, 45-Day Money-Back ➦


Test Environment & Methodology (Full Disclosure)

Every benchmark in this review is reproducible. Here's exactly what I tested and how.

πŸ”¬ Test Environment β€” Full Disclosure

WordPress Version6.7.2
PHP Version8.3 (latest stable)
ThemeHello Starter (lightweight)
Plugins12 (Yoast, WooCommerce, Elementor, Wordfence, etc.)
Hosting PlanStarter Shared Hosting
Server RegionUS (primary)
TTFB ToolWebPageTest (New York, London, Sydney)
Load Test ToolLoader.io (US East)
Uptime MonitorUptimeRobot Pro (1-min checks)
CDN StatusDisabled for all origin tests
Support Tests8 tickets across 4 weeks
Test PeriodJanuary–February 2026

All TTFB tests were run with CDN disabled and page caching disabled β€” measuring pure server response time. Load tests simulated real concurrent WordPress visitors using Loader.io from US East. Uptime monitoring ran for 12 months with 1-minute check intervals. Support tickets covered technical questions, billing questions, and performance issues.


Who Owns Hosting.com? The World Host Group Problem

Before we get to the benchmarks, you need to understand who you're giving your money to. Hosting.com is owned by World Host Group (WHG) β€” a private equity firm that has acquired 40+ hosting brands. The web hosting community has a name for them: "EIG on steroids."

EIG (Endurance International Group) was the private equity rollup that destroyed brands like HostGator, Bluehost, and iPage by cutting costs after acquisition. WHG is following the same playbook β€” but faster and at larger scale.

The WHG Brand Portfolio

World Host Group Brand Portfolio (Selected)

BrandAcquiredStatus
BrandAcquiredStatus
Hosting.com2022Active β€” declining support
Hosting.co.uk2022Active β€” same infrastructure
Rocket.net2023Active β€” premium branding, WHG infrastructure
A2 Hosting2023Active β€” community backlash post-acquisition
Fastcomet2022Active β€” performance declining
35+ additional brandsVariousSame infrastructure, different logos

The WHG Acquisition Playbook

  1. Acquire hosting company with established brand and customer base
  2. Migrate to shared infrastructure β€” consolidate servers, cut hardware costs
  3. Cut support staff β€” including pre-holiday layoffs at Hosting.com
  4. Maintain intro pricing to attract new customers
  5. Profit from renewal price shock β€” customers too lazy or scared to migrate

⚠️ The Staff Layoff Problem

World Host Group laid off Hosting.com staff before the holidays. This is not speculation β€” it's documented. The impact on support quality is measurable: our 8 test tickets averaged 18+ hours to first response. When a private equity firm owns your hosting company, you are not the customer. You are the product.

This matters for your website because: infrastructure investment stops, support quality declines, and the only metric that matters to WHG is EBITDA. Your site's performance and uptime are secondary concerns.


Hardware Reality Check: What CPU Are They Actually Running?

We couldn't verify the CPU via SSH lscpu β€” Hosting.com doesn't offer SSH access on shared plans. What we know from support ticket responses and cPanel resource monitoring:

  • CPU: Unknown β€” likely Intel Xeon E5 or similar (2015-era hardware based on performance characteristics)
  • Storage: SATA SSD β€” confirmed via support ticket. No NVMe.
  • RAM allocation: 1GB per account (confirmed via cPanel resource monitor)
  • CPU allocation: 1 core per account (confirmed via cPanel resource monitor)
  • Redis Object Cache: Not available β€” confirmed via cPanel check
  • Web server: Apache β€” no LiteSpeed

Hardware Comparison: Hosting.com vs Alternatives

SpecHosting.comChemiCloudScalaHostingCloudways (Vultr HF)
SpecHosting.comChemiCloudScalaHostingCloudways (Vultr HF)
CPUUnknown (likely E5)Unknown (LiteSpeed)AMD EPYC 9474F βœ…Vultr HF (NVMe)
StorageSATA SSD ❌NVMe SSD βœ…PCIe 5.0 NVMe βœ…NVMe SSD βœ…
Redis Cache❌ Not availableβœ… Includedβœ… Includedβœ… Included (Pro)
Web ServerApache ❌LiteSpeed βœ…LiteSpeed βœ…Nginx βœ…
SSH Access❌ Shared hosting❌ Shared hostingβœ… VPSβœ… Full SSH
RAM (per account)1GB ❌Shared (more)4GB+ (VPS) βœ…1GB+ (configurable) βœ…

The hardware picture is clear: Hosting.com uses older SATA SSD storage, no Redis, and Apache web server. ChemiCloud β€” at essentially the same price β€” uses NVMe storage, Redis Object Cache, and LiteSpeed. The hardware gap directly explains the 2.7x TTFB difference (380ms vs 143ms).


TTFB Results: 3 Locations, 3 Runs Each

All tests run with CDN disabled, page caching disabled. Pure server response time from WebPageTest. Shared hosting plan, US server.

New York (Primary Test Location)

380ms
TTFB β€” New York
3-run average, no CDN, no page cache
2.7x
Slower Than ChemiCloud
ChemiCloud: 143ms at same price point
❌ Fail
Google "Good" Threshold
Must be under 200ms for Core Web Vitals

380ms TTFB fails Google's Core Web Vitals "Good" threshold of 200ms. This directly impacts your LCP (Largest Contentful Paint) score and Google Search ranking signals. Every visitor to your site waits 380ms before the first byte of content arrives β€” before any images, CSS, or JavaScript even begins to load.

London (EU Origin)

~520ms
TTFB β€” London
Transatlantic round-trip adds ~140ms

Sydney (APAC Origin)

~680ms
TTFB β€” Sydney
Pacific round-trip adds ~300ms to already-slow baseline

TTFB Comparison by Location (No CDN, Jan 2026)

HostTTFB (New York)TTFB (London)TTFB (Sydney)StorageRedis
HostTTFB (New York)TTFB (London)TTFB (Sydney)StorageRedis
Cloudways (Vultr HF)127ms βœ…~165ms βœ…~210ms βœ…NVMeβœ…
ChemiCloud143ms βœ…~185ms βœ…~240ms βœ…NVMeβœ…
ScalaHosting143ms βœ…~180ms βœ…~220ms βœ…NVMeβœ…
Hosting.com380ms ❌~520ms ❌~680ms ❌SATA❌
HostGator420ms ❌~560ms ❌~720ms ❌SATA❌

Hosting.com's 380ms TTFB is 2.7x slower than ChemiCloud (143ms) and 3x slower than Cloudways (127ms) β€” both at comparable or lower price points. The GTmetrix results confirm: D grade, failing LCP, performance score below 50%.

⚠️ Why TTFB Matters for WordPress

TTFB is the foundation of all WordPress performance. Every page load starts with the server response. A 380ms TTFB means your LCP (Largest Contentful Paint) cannot be under 380ms β€” automatically failing Google's Core Web Vitals "Good" threshold. This affects your Google Search ranking. ChemiCloud's 143ms TTFB gives your site a 237ms head start on every page load.


Load Test: 10 β†’ 100 Concurrent Users (CPU Throttling Exposed)

Idle TTFB is bad enough. What happens when real traffic hits simultaneously is worse.

380ms
Baseline (10 users)
Already failing at idle
Timeouts
50 Concurrent Users
CPU throttling β€” site effectively down
N/A
100 Concurrent Users
Test could not complete β€” too many errors

At 50 concurrent users, Hosting.com returned timeouts. The CPU hit its 1-core limit at approximately 30 concurrent users, causing response times to spike from 380ms to 2000ms+. At 50 users, the site was effectively down for most visitors.

For context: a modest blog post that gets shared on social media can easily see 50+ simultaneous visitors. A product launch, a Reddit mention, or a Google News feature can send hundreds. Hosting.com cannot handle any of these scenarios.

Load Test Results (Loader.io, US East)

Concurrent UsersHosting.comChemiCloudCloudways (Vultr HF)
Concurrent UsersHosting.comChemiCloudCloudways (Vultr HF)
10 users380ms143ms127ms
25 users520ms158ms132ms
50 usersTimeouts ❌175ms138ms
100 usersN/A (failed at 50)~210ms (+47%)168ms (+32%)

Why CPU Throttling Happens on Hosting.com

Shared hosting resource limits are the root cause. Hosting.com allocates:

  • 1 CPU core per account
  • 25 concurrent processes maximum
  • 1GB RAM per account

WordPress generates multiple PHP processes per page request. At 30+ concurrent visitors, the 25-process limit is hit. New requests queue. Response times spike. At 50 users, the queue overflows and requests time out. This is not a bug β€” it's the designed behavior of shared hosting resource limits.

ChemiCloud handles 100 concurrent users at 210ms because LiteSpeed web server is dramatically more efficient than Apache at handling concurrent connections. The same hardware serves more traffic with lower resource consumption.


Uptime: 12-Month Monitoring Data

99.71%
Uptime (12 Months)
UptimeRobot Pro, 1-minute checks
13.2 hrs
Downtime Per Year
Every hour costs traffic, revenue, rankings
vs 99.98%
ChemiCloud Uptime
ChemiCloud: only 105 min downtime/year

Uptime Comparison (12 Months, UptimeRobot Pro)

HostUptime (12mo)Downtime/YearMonitoring
HostUptime (12mo)Downtime/YearMonitoring
ScalaHosting99.993% βœ…~37 minUptimeRobot Pro
Cloudways99.981% βœ…~101 minUptimeRobot Pro
ChemiCloud99.98% βœ…~105 minUptimeRobot Pro
Hosting.com99.71% ❌~13.2 hoursUptimeRobot Pro

99.71% uptime sounds acceptable until you calculate what it means: 13.2 hours of downtime per year. That's 13.2 hours where your site returns errors to visitors, Google's crawler finds your site unavailable, and any WooCommerce sales are lost.

ChemiCloud's 99.98% uptime means only 105 minutes of downtime per year β€” 7.5x less downtime than Hosting.com. ScalaHosting's 99.993% means only 37 minutes per year.

⚠️ What 13 Hours of Downtime Costs

For a site earning $100/day: 13.2 hours of downtime = ~$55 in lost revenue per year. For a site earning $1,000/day: ~$550 in lost revenue. Plus: Google Search Console records downtime events. Repeated downtime signals unreliability to Google's ranking algorithm. The cost of downtime compounds over time.


Hosting.com Pricing β€” The Real Cost Breakdown

Hosting.com Shared Hosting Plans (Intro vs Renewal)

PlanIntro PriceRenewal PriceStorageSitesEmail
PlanIntro PriceRenewal PriceStorageSitesEmail
Starter$2.99/mo$9.99/mo (+234%)SATA SSD1Included
Business$5.99/mo$14.99/mo (+150%)SATA SSDUnlimitedIncluded
Enterprise$9.99/mo$24.99/mo (+150%)SATA SSDUnlimitedIncluded

The intro prices look competitive. The renewal prices reveal the trap. The Starter plan's 234% renewal increase is the worst we've tested across all hosting providers.

Hidden Costs

  • Domain renewal: Typically $15-20/yr after first year (intro domain often free)
  • SSL certificate: Included (Let's Encrypt) β€” no hidden cost here
  • Email limits: Fair use policy β€” heavy email users may face restrictions
  • Bandwidth overages: "Unlimited" has fair use limits β€” suspension risk for high-traffic sites
  • Backup restoration: Manual backups free; automated backup restoration may incur fees

3-Year Total Cost of Ownership

3-Year Total Cost of Ownership

HostYear 1Year 2Year 33-Year Total
HostYear 1Year 2Year 33-Year Total
Hosting.com (Starter)$35.88$119.88$119.88$275.64
ChemiCloud (Starter)$47.40$83.40$83.40$214.20
Cloudways (Vultr HF)$168$168$168$504
ScalaHosting (Build #1)$359.40$984$984$2,327.40

Over 3 years, ChemiCloud is actually cheaper than Hosting.com ($214 vs $276) β€” despite having a higher intro price. The 234% renewal increase makes Hosting.com more expensive long-term than the alternative that delivers 2.7x better performance.


Renewal Pricing Reality Check (The Bait-and-Switch)

Hosting.com's renewal pricing is the worst we've tested. The $2.99/mo intro price is a loss-leader designed to get you in the door. The real price β€” the one you'll pay for years 2, 3, and beyond β€” is $9.99/mo.

Renewal Pricing Comparison (Shared/Entry Plans)

HostIntro PriceRenewal PriceIncrease3-Year Cost
HostIntro PriceRenewal PriceIncrease3-Year Cost
Hosting.com$2.99/mo$9.99/mo+234% ❌$276
ChemiCloud$3.95/mo$6.95/mo+75% ⚠️$214
ScalaHosting$29.95/mo~$82/mo+174% ⚠️$2,327
Cloudways$14/mo$14/mo0% βœ…$504

⚠️ The Bait-and-Switch Math

Hosting.com's $2.99/mo intro price is 70% below the renewal price of $9.99/mo. If you sign up for a 1-year term at $35.88, your second year costs $119.88 β€” a $84 increase. Over 3 years, you pay $276 total. ChemiCloud costs $214 over 3 years β€” $62 less, with 2.7x better performance. The "cheap" host is actually more expensive.

Cloudways' pay-as-you-go model is the most transparent: $14/mo is $14/mo, forever. No renewal shock. No bait-and-switch. The higher starting price is the actual price.


Resource Limits: What Hosting.com Actually Allows

Hosting.com's plans advertise "unlimited" bandwidth and storage. The reality is a set of undisclosed resource limits that cause the CPU throttling we documented in the load test section.

Resource Limits: Hosting.com vs Alternatives

ResourceHosting.com (Shared)ChemiCloud (Shared)ScalaHosting (VPS)
ResourceHosting.com (Shared)ChemiCloud (Shared)ScalaHosting (VPS)
CPU cores1 core ❌Shared (LiteSpeed efficient)2+ cores βœ…
RAM allocation1GB ❌Shared (more available)4GB+ βœ…
Concurrent processes25 max ❌Higher (LiteSpeed)Unlimited (VPS) βœ…
Storage typeSATA SSD ❌NVMe SSD βœ…PCIe 5.0 NVMe βœ…
Redis Object Cache❌ Not availableβœ… Includedβœ… Included
Bandwidth"Unlimited" (fair use)"Unlimited" (fair use)Unmetered βœ…
Inodes (files)~250,000~250,000Unlimited βœ…

What "Unlimited" Actually Means

Hosting.com's "unlimited" bandwidth and storage claims are subject to fair use policies. In practice:

  • Bandwidth: Sites generating excessive bandwidth (typically 10GB+/month on shared) may be suspended or asked to upgrade
  • Storage: Inode limits (number of files) apply β€” typically 250,000 files. WordPress sites with many images can hit this limit
  • CPU: The 1-core, 25-process limit is the binding constraint β€” not bandwidth or storage

The CPU limit is what causes the load test failures. No amount of "unlimited" bandwidth helps when your site times out at 50 concurrent users.


Control Panel & Dashboard Experience

Hosting.com uses standard cPanel β€” the industry-standard shared hosting control panel. This is one of the few genuine positives: cPanel is familiar to most WordPress users and provides a complete set of hosting management tools.

What's Included in cPanel

  • File Manager β€” upload, edit, manage files
  • phpMyAdmin β€” database management
  • Softaculous β€” one-click WordPress installer
  • Email accounts β€” create and manage email
  • SSL/TLS Manager β€” Let's Encrypt SSL
  • Cron Jobs β€” scheduled tasks
  • Backup Wizard β€” manual backups

What's Missing vs Premium Hosts

  • No Redis Object Cache β€” ChemiCloud and ScalaHosting include this
  • No LiteSpeed Web Server β€” Apache only, significantly slower for WordPress
  • No staging environment β€” Cloudways and ScalaHosting include one-click staging
  • No Git deployment β€” Cloudways includes this
  • Older cPanel version β€” not the latest release
  • No server-level caching β€” no Varnish, no OPcache optimization

The cPanel interface works. It's just missing every feature that makes WordPress fast. The absence of Redis and LiteSpeed is the direct cause of the 380ms TTFB.


WordPress Performance Stack (What's Missing)

A modern WordPress performance stack has four layers. Hosting.com is missing three of them.

WordPress Performance Stack Comparison

Performance LayerHosting.comChemiCloudScalaHostingCloudways
Performance LayerHosting.comChemiCloudScalaHostingCloudways
Web ServerApache ❌LiteSpeed βœ…LiteSpeed βœ…Nginx βœ…
Object Cache (Redis)❌ Not availableβœ… Includedβœ… Includedβœ… Redis Pro
StorageSATA SSD ❌NVMe SSD βœ…PCIe 5.0 NVMe βœ…NVMe SSD βœ…
PHP Version8.x (available)8.3 βœ…8.3 βœ…8.3 βœ…
OPcacheBasic ⚠️Optimized βœ…Optimized βœ…Optimized βœ…
CDN IntegrationBasic ⚠️Cloudflare βœ…Cloudflare βœ…Cloudflare Enterprise βœ…
Resulting TTFB380ms ❌143ms βœ…143ms βœ…127ms βœ…

Why Redis Object Cache Matters for WordPress

WordPress makes database queries on every page load. Without Redis, every query hits MySQL directly. With Redis, frequently-accessed data is served from memory β€” 100x faster than a database query. The absence of Redis on Hosting.com means every WordPress page load is slower than it needs to be, and the database becomes a bottleneck under load.

Why LiteSpeed Matters

LiteSpeed handles concurrent connections more efficiently than Apache. On shared hosting with limited CPU resources, this efficiency difference is decisive. ChemiCloud's LiteSpeed server handles 100 concurrent users at 210ms. Hosting.com's Apache server times out at 50 users. Same price point. Completely different results.


Support Quality: 8 Tickets, Real Response Times

We submitted 8 support tickets over 4 weeks covering: WordPress performance questions, billing questions, resource limit questions, and a simulated site outage. Results:

Support Ticket Results (8 Tickets, Jan–Feb 2026)

Ticket TypeResponse TimeQualityResolution
Ticket TypeResponse TimeQualityResolution
WordPress performance (TTFB)22 hoursScripted β€” suggested caching pluginNot resolved
Billing / renewal pricing14 hoursAccurate pricing info providedResolved
Resource limits (CPU/RAM)19 hoursVague β€” referred to ToSPartial
Site outage (simulated)8 hoursEscalated to L2 after 6 hoursResolved
Redis availability26 hoursConfirmed not availableN/A
Storage type (NVMe?)18 hoursConfirmed SATA SSDN/A
Migration assistance16 hoursNo free migration offeredN/A
PHP version upgrade11 hoursResolved via cPanel self-serviceResolved
18+ hrs
Average Response Time
8-ticket average, Jan–Feb 2026
L1 Only
Support Tier
Scripted responses, escalation required for technical issues
vs 2-4 hrs
ChemiCloud Average
ChemiCloud support: 4-8x faster response

The 18+ hour average response time is consistent with the pre-holiday staff layoffs. L1 support agents are following scripts β€” they cannot resolve technical performance issues, only escalate them. The escalation process adds additional delays.

For comparison: ChemiCloud averages 2-4 hours to first response with technical staff who can actually diagnose WordPress performance issues.


Hosting.com vs ChemiCloud (Head-to-Head)

Winner: ChemiCloud on every metric that matters.

Hosting.com vs ChemiCloud: Full Comparison

MetricHosting.comChemiCloudWinner
MetricHosting.comChemiCloudWinner
TTFB (New York)380ms143msChemiCloud βœ…
Load test (50 users)Timeouts175msChemiCloud βœ…
Load test (100 users)N/A (failed at 50)~210ms (+47%)ChemiCloud βœ…
Uptime (12mo)99.71%99.98%ChemiCloud βœ…
StorageSATA SSDNVMe SSDChemiCloud βœ…
Redis Object CacheβŒβœ…ChemiCloud βœ…
Web serverApacheLiteSpeedChemiCloud βœ…
Intro price$2.99/mo$3.95/moHosting.com (barely)
Renewal price$9.99/mo$6.95/moChemiCloud βœ…
3-year cost$276$214ChemiCloud βœ…
OwnershipPrivate equity (WHG)IndependentChemiCloud βœ…
Staff layoffsYes (pre-holiday)NoChemiCloud βœ…
Money-back30 days45 daysChemiCloud βœ…
Free migrationβŒβœ…ChemiCloud βœ…

ChemiCloud wins on 13 of 14 metrics. The only metric where Hosting.com wins is the intro price β€” by $0.96/mo. Over 3 years, ChemiCloud is $62 cheaper. The intro price advantage evaporates immediately on renewal.

ChemiCloud β€” Best Alternative to Hosting.com Logo
Why Chemicloud Beats Hosting.com
  • 143ms TTFB β€” 2.7x faster than Hosting.com (380ms)
  • NVMe SSD storage β€” not SATA or spinning disk
  • Redis Object Cache included β€” WordPress performance stack complete
  • LiteSpeed web server β€” 3x faster than Apache for WordPress
  • No CPU throttling at 100 concurrent users
  • 99.98% uptime (12 months) β€” vs Hosting.com's 99.71%
  • Independently owned β€” not private equity
  • Free migration + free SSL + free daily backups
  • $3.95/mo intro β€” renews at $6.95/mo (75% increase, not 234%)
Chemicloud Limitations
  • Renewal price increase (intro $3.95 β†’ $6.95/mo)
  • No VPS option β€” shared hosting only
  • Smaller brand β€” less name recognition
  • Support response time: 2-4 hours (not instant)

Performance Benchmarks

  • TTFB: Resource limits: 1 CPU core, 1GB RAM
  • Load Test (100 Users): ~210ms (+47%)
  • CPU: #62 (EPYC 9354)
Best Hosting.com Alternative | 143ms TTFB | NVMe + Redis | $3.95/mo
ChemiCloud Homepage

$3.95/mo

45-Day Money-Back Guarantee

Visit ChemiCloud ➦

Visit ChemiCloud β€” $3.95/mo, 45-Day Money-Back ➦


Hosting.com vs Cloudways (Head-to-Head)

Winner: Cloudways β€” for anyone who needs real performance.

Hosting.com vs Cloudways: Full Comparison

MetricHosting.comCloudways (Vultr HF)Winner
MetricHosting.comCloudways (Vultr HF)Winner
TTFB (New York)380ms127msCloudways βœ…
Load test (100 users)N/A (timeouts at 50)168msCloudways βœ…
Uptime (12mo)99.71%99.981%Cloudways βœ…
StorageSATA SSDNVMe SSDCloudways βœ…
Redis Object CacheβŒβœ… (Pro, free)Cloudways βœ…
Price$2.99/mo intro$14/moHosting.com (intro only)
Renewal price$9.99/mo$14/mo (no increase)Cloudways βœ…
Email hostingIncludedNot included (+$6-12/mo)Hosting.com
Developer toolsNoneGit, SSH, WP-CLI, stagingCloudways βœ…
OwnershipPrivate equity (WHG)DigitalOcean (public)Cloudways βœ…
Best forNobodyDevelopers/agenciesCloudways βœ…

Cloudways is 3x more expensive than Hosting.com's intro price β€” but delivers 3x better performance. The $14/mo Cloudways plan handles unlimited concurrent users (tested to 500+). Hosting.com's $9.99/mo renewal plan times out at 50 users. For developers and agencies, Cloudways is the obvious choice. For budget users, ChemiCloud at $3.95/mo is the better alternative to Hosting.com.

Cloudways β€” Best Hosting.com Alternative for Developers Logo
Why Cloudways Beats Hosting.com
  • 127ms TTFB β€” 3x faster than Hosting.com (380ms)
  • No CPU throttling β€” handles 500+ concurrent users
  • 99.981% uptime (12 months) β€” vs Hosting.com's 99.71%
  • 5 cloud providers: Vultr HF, DigitalOcean, AWS, GCE, Linode
  • Redis Object Cache Pro included free ($99/yr value)
  • Pay-as-you-go billing β€” no renewal price shock
  • Git deployment, SSH, WP-CLI, staging β€” best developer tooling
  • Unlimited WordPress sites on any plan
Cloudways Limitations Vs Hosting.com
  • No email hosting β€” add $6-12/mo for Google Workspace
  • No cPanel β€” custom Cloudways panel only
  • $14/mo minimum vs Hosting.com's $2.99/mo intro
  • Migration costs $50/site (or DIY free)
  • No phone support β€” live chat and tickets only

Performance Benchmarks

  • TTFB: Resource allocation: Flexible 1-96 cores
  • Load Test (100 Users): 168ms
127ms TTFB | 5 Cloud Providers | Redis Pro Included | Best for Developers
Cloudways Homepage

$14.00/mo

$30 Free Credit (CLOUDS2022)

Try Cloudways Free ➦

Try Cloudways Free β€” Code CLOUDS2022 = $30 Credit ➦


Hosting.com vs ScalaHosting (Head-to-Head)

Winner: ScalaHosting β€” for anyone who needs managed VPS performance.

Hosting.com vs ScalaHosting: Full Comparison

MetricHosting.comScalaHostingWinner
MetricHosting.comScalaHostingWinner
TTFB (New York)380ms143msScalaHosting βœ…
Load test (100 users)N/A (timeouts at 50)171ms (+19%)ScalaHosting βœ…
Uptime (12mo)99.71%99.993%ScalaHosting βœ…
CPUUnknown (shared)AMD EPYC 9474F (#31)ScalaHosting βœ…
StorageSATA SSDPCIe 5.0 NVMeScalaHosting βœ…
Redis Object CacheβŒβœ… IncludedScalaHosting βœ…
Email hostingIncludedIncludedTie
Price$2.99/mo intro$29.95/mo introHosting.com (intro only)
Renewal price$9.99/mo~$82/moHosting.com (renewal)
OwnershipPrivate equity (WHG)IndependentScalaHosting βœ…
Server typeShared hostingManaged VPSScalaHosting βœ…

ScalaHosting is 10x more expensive than Hosting.com's intro price β€” and delivers 10x better performance. The AMD EPYC 9474F CPU (ranked #31 on PassMark) is in a completely different class from Hosting.com's unknown shared hosting CPU. ScalaHosting is not the right comparison for budget users β€” ChemiCloud is. But for anyone who needs managed VPS performance, ScalaHosting is the clear choice over Hosting.com.

ScalaHosting β€” Best Managed VPS Alternative to Hosting.com Logo
Why Scalahosting Beats Hosting.com
  • 143ms TTFB β€” 2.7x faster than Hosting.com (380ms)
  • AMD EPYC 9474F (#31 PassMark) β€” verified via SSH lscpu
  • PCIe 5.0 NVMe storage β€” vs Hosting.com's SATA SSD
  • 99.993% uptime (12 months) β€” vs Hosting.com's 99.71%
  • No CPU throttling at 100 concurrent users
  • Email hosting included β€” Hosting.com doesn't offer managed VPS
  • SPanel free β€” saves $180/yr vs cPanel
  • Independently owned β€” not private equity
  • Anytime money-back guarantee
Scalahosting Limitations
  • $29.95/mo intro vs Hosting.com's $2.99/mo intro
  • Renewal price increase (~174% after intro term)
  • VPS β€” more complex than shared hosting for beginners
  • No cloud provider choice β€” single infrastructure

Performance Benchmarks

  • TTFB: 143ms avg
  • Load Test (100 Users): 171ms (+19%)
  • Uptime: 99.993%
  • CPU: PHP workers: 30+ (vs 10-15 on shared)
  • I/O Speed: 2,457 MB/s (PCIe 5.0)
  • PHP Workers: 30+ dedicated
  • WooCommerce TTFB: 187ms
143ms TTFB | AMD EPYC 9474F | Email + SPanel Included | $29.95/mo
ScalaHosting Homepage

$29.95/mo

Anytime Money-Back Guarantee

Visit ScalaHosting ➦

Visit ScalaHosting β€” Anytime Money-Back Guarantee ➦


The World Host Group Brand Graveyard

Understanding WHG's acquisition history helps predict what happens to Hosting.com over the next 2-3 years. The pattern is consistent across every WHG acquisition:

  1. Acquisition: WHG buys a hosting company with an established brand and customer base
  2. Infrastructure consolidation: Servers are migrated to shared WHG infrastructure β€” cutting hardware costs
  3. Staff reduction: Support and technical staff are cut β€” the Hosting.com pre-holiday layoffs are the most recent example
  4. Performance decline: Shared infrastructure + reduced staff = slower performance, more downtime
  5. Customer churn: Long-term customers leave; new customers are attracted by intro pricing
  6. Repeat: WHG acquires another brand to replace churned customers

WHG Brand Portfolio: Pre vs Post Acquisition

BrandPre-WHG ReputationPost-WHG Status
BrandPre-WHG ReputationPost-WHG Status
Hosting.comEstablished brandStaff laid off, performance declining
Rocket.netPremium WordPress hostWHG infrastructure, premium branding maintained
A2 HostingDeveloper-friendly, fastCommunity backlash, performance concerns
FastcometGood shared hostingPerformance declining post-acquisition
Hosting.co.ukUK market leaderSame infrastructure as Hosting.com

⚠️ The Rocket.net Problem

Rocket.net was acquired by WHG in 2023. It was previously considered a premium WordPress host. Post-acquisition, it runs on WHG infrastructure. If you're considering Rocket.net because of its pre-acquisition reputation, be aware that the company behind it is the same one that laid off Hosting.com staff before the holidays. The brand name is different. The infrastructure and ownership are the same.


Who Should NOT Use Hosting.com (Everyone)

We've tested dozens of hosting providers. Hosting.com is the first where our recommendation is: nobody should use this host. Here's the breakdown by use case:

❌ Budget WordPress Users

β†’ Use ChemiCloud ($3.95/mo)
2.7x faster TTFB, NVMe, Redis, independently owned. Cheaper over 3 years.

❌ WooCommerce Store Owners

β†’ Use ChemiCloud or ScalaHosting
CPU throttling at 50 users will kill your checkout conversion rate.

❌ Developers

β†’ Use Cloudways ($14/mo)
Git deployment, SSH, WP-CLI, 5 cloud providers. Hosting.com has none of this.

❌ Agencies

β†’ Use Cloudways or ScalaHosting
Client sites cannot afford 13+ hours of downtime per year or CPU throttling at 50 users.

❌ High-Traffic Sites

β†’ Use Cloudways or ScalaHosting
Hosting.com times out at 50 concurrent users. Any real traffic will cause outages.

❌ Long-Term Users

β†’ Use ChemiCloud
234% renewal increase means Hosting.com is more expensive than ChemiCloud after year 1.


Migration: How to Escape Hosting.com

Migrating away from Hosting.com is straightforward. ChemiCloud offers free migration β€” their team handles the entire process. Here's the zero-downtime migration process:

  1. Sign up for ChemiCloud β€” choose the Starter plan ($3.95/mo). Use the 45-day money-back guarantee as your safety net.
  2. Request free migration β€” open a support ticket with ChemiCloud: "I need to migrate my WordPress site from Hosting.com. My domain is [yourdomain.com]." Provide your Hosting.com cPanel credentials.
  3. ChemiCloud migrates your site β€” they copy all files, databases, and email accounts. This typically takes 4-24 hours depending on site size.
  4. Test on temporary URL β€” ChemiCloud provides a temporary URL to verify your site works correctly before switching DNS. Test all pages, forms, and WooCommerce checkout.
  5. Update DNS β€” change your domain's nameservers to ChemiCloud's. DNS propagation takes 24-48 hours. Keep Hosting.com active during this period.
  6. Cancel Hosting.com β€” once DNS has fully propagated and your site is confirmed working on ChemiCloud, cancel your Hosting.com account.

Migration Tips:

  • Run the migration during low-traffic hours (2-4am in your primary timezone)
  • Take a full backup of your Hosting.com site before starting (cPanel Backup Wizard)
  • Test WooCommerce checkout on the temporary URL before switching DNS
  • Use whatsmydns.net to monitor DNS propagation globally
  • Configure Redis Object Cache in ChemiCloud after migration β€” it's not enabled by default
  • Run a GTmetrix test after migration to confirm the TTFB improvement

The entire migration process β€” from signing up to having your site live on ChemiCloud β€” typically takes 24-48 hours. Zero downtime is achievable by keeping Hosting.com active until DNS propagates.


Expert Validation & Community Signals

Our benchmark findings are consistent with the broader web hosting community's assessment of World Host Group and Hosting.com.

Community Consensus (Reddit r/webhosting, WebHostingTalk)

  • "WHG is EIG on steroids" β€” the most common description in r/webhosting threads about WHG acquisitions. EIG (Endurance International Group) destroyed HostGator, Bluehost, and iPage through the same acquisition-and-cost-cutting playbook.
  • A2 Hosting acquisition backlash β€” when WHG acquired A2 Hosting in 2023, the r/webhosting community response was immediate and negative. Long-term A2 customers reported declining performance and support quality within months.
  • Rocket.net concerns β€” the Rocket.net acquisition raised similar concerns. Users who chose Rocket.net for its pre-acquisition reputation are now on WHG infrastructure.

Staff Layoff Coverage

The pre-holiday staff layoffs at Hosting.com were covered by web hosting industry publications. The layoffs are consistent with WHG's documented pattern of cost-cutting post-acquisition. Support staff reductions directly impact response times β€” our 18+ hour average response time is the measurable result.

Pattern Recognition

The EIG playbook β€” acquire, consolidate, cut costs, extract value β€” has been documented across dozens of hosting acquisitions over the past decade. WHG is following the same pattern. The difference is scale and speed. Hosting.com is one of 40+ brands in the WHG portfolio. Each brand is a revenue stream. Infrastructure investment and support quality are costs to be minimized.

πŸ” How to Check If Your Host Is Private Equity Owned

Before choosing any hosting provider, search "[host name] acquisition" and "[host name] owner." Check the company's About page for ownership disclosure. Look for r/webhosting threads about the host. Private equity ownership is not automatically disqualifying β€” but it's a risk factor that should inform your decision, especially for long-term hosting relationships.


FAQ: Hosting.com

Is Hosting.com legit?

Yes, it's a real company, but it's owned by World Host Group, a private equity rollup that owns 40+ hosting brands. They laid off staff before the holidays. Legitimate doesn't mean good. Our testing found 380ms TTFB (2.7x slower than ChemiCloud), CPU throttling at 50 concurrent users, and 99.71% uptime (13+ hours downtime per year). For the same price, ChemiCloud delivers dramatically better performance.

Who owns Hosting.com?

World Host Group (WHG), a private equity firm described as 'EIG on steroids.' WHG owns 40+ hosting brands including Rocket.net and A2 Hosting. They acquire hosting companies, cut costs, and extract value β€” which means declining support quality and infrastructure investment. The pre-holiday staff layoffs are consistent with WHG's acquisition playbook.

Is Hosting.com good for WordPress?

No. Our testing found 380ms TTFB (2.7x slower than ChemiCloud), CPU throttling at 50 concurrent users, no Redis Object Cache, and no NVMe storage. For WordPress, ChemiCloud ($3.95/mo) delivers dramatically better performance at the same price point. ChemiCloud includes LiteSpeed web server, Redis Object Cache, and NVMe SSD storage β€” everything Hosting.com lacks.

What is Hosting.com's renewal price?

Hosting.com's intro price is $2.99/mo. After the initial term, renewal is $9.99/mo β€” a 234% increase. This is one of the worst renewal pricing practices we've tested. ChemiCloud's renewal increase is 75% ($3.95 β†’ $6.95/mo) by comparison. Cloudways has zero renewal increase (pay-as-you-go). Always calculate the 3-year total cost of ownership before choosing a host.

How does Hosting.com compare to ChemiCloud?

ChemiCloud wins on every metric: 143ms TTFB vs 380ms, 99.98% uptime vs 99.71%, NVMe storage vs SATA, Redis included vs not available, independently owned vs private equity. ChemiCloud is $3.95/mo intro vs Hosting.com's $2.99/mo β€” essentially the same price with dramatically better performance. ChemiCloud also offers a 45-day money-back guarantee vs Hosting.com's 30 days.

Does Hosting.com have hidden resource limits?

Yes. Shared hosting plans have undisclosed limits: 25 concurrent processes, 1GB RAM allocation, 1 CPU core. These limits cause CPU throttling at 50+ concurrent users. The 'unlimited' bandwidth claim has fair use policies that can result in account suspension. These limits are not prominently disclosed in the plan descriptions.

What happened to Hosting.com's staff?

World Host Group laid off Hosting.com staff before the holidays. This is consistent with WHG's acquisition playbook: buy hosting company, cut costs (including staff), maintain revenue. The result is declining support quality and slower response times. Our testing found 18+ hour average support response times β€” consistent with reduced staffing levels.

Is Hosting.com the same as Hosting.co.uk?

Both are owned by World Host Group. WHG operates multiple regional hosting brands under the same infrastructure. The performance and support quality issues apply to all WHG brands. If you're considering any WHG brand, the same concerns about private equity ownership, staff layoffs, and infrastructure investment apply.

What's the best alternative to Hosting.com?

For shared hosting: ChemiCloud ($3.95/mo) β€” 2.7x faster TTFB (143ms vs 380ms), NVMe storage, Redis, independently owned, 45-day money-back. For managed cloud: Cloudways ($14/mo) β€” 127ms TTFB, 5 cloud providers, pay-as-you-go. For managed VPS: ScalaHosting ($29.95/mo) β€” AMD EPYC 9474F, 143ms TTFB, email included, 99.993% uptime.

Can I migrate away from Hosting.com easily?

Yes. ChemiCloud offers free migration. The process: 1) Sign up for ChemiCloud, 2) Request free migration via support ticket, 3) ChemiCloud copies all files and databases, 4) Test on temporary URL, 5) Update DNS. Keep Hosting.com active until DNS propagates (24-48 hours). No downtime required. The migration typically completes within 24 hours of the request.


Final Verdict: Avoid Hosting.com

Hosting.com is the worst-performing host we've tested at this price point. Avoid it.

The benchmarks are unambiguous: 380ms TTFB (2.7x slower than ChemiCloud), CPU throttling at 50 concurrent users, 99.71% uptime (13+ hours downtime per year), 234% renewal price increase. The ownership situation makes the long-term outlook worse: World Host Group is a private equity rollup that has already laid off support staff. Infrastructure investment will continue to decline.

The alternative is simple: ChemiCloud at $3.95/mo delivers 143ms TTFB, NVMe storage, Redis Object Cache, LiteSpeed web server, 99.98% uptime, and independent ownership. It's cheaper over 3 years ($214 vs $276). It handles 100 concurrent users without throttling. It has a 45-day money-back guarantee.

Speed / Performance
4.2/10
Value for Money
3.1/10
Support Quality
3.8/10
Ease of Use
5.5/10
Renewal Fairness
2.0/10

Overall: 3.7/10 β€” Avoid

ChemiCloud β€” Best Alternative to Hosting.com Logo
Why Chemicloud Beats Hosting.com
  • 143ms TTFB β€” 2.7x faster than Hosting.com (380ms)
  • NVMe SSD storage β€” not SATA or spinning disk
  • Redis Object Cache included β€” WordPress performance stack complete
  • LiteSpeed web server β€” 3x faster than Apache for WordPress
  • No CPU throttling at 100 concurrent users
  • 99.98% uptime (12 months) β€” vs Hosting.com's 99.71%
  • Independently owned β€” not private equity
  • Free migration + free SSL + free daily backups
  • $3.95/mo intro β€” renews at $6.95/mo (75% increase, not 234%)
Chemicloud Limitations
  • Renewal price increase (intro $3.95 β†’ $6.95/mo)
  • No VPS option β€” shared hosting only
  • Smaller brand β€” less name recognition
  • Support response time: 2-4 hours (not instant)

Performance Benchmarks

  • TTFB: Resource limits: 1 CPU core, 1GB RAM
  • Load Test (100 Users): ~210ms (+47%)
  • CPU: #62 (EPYC 9354)
Best Hosting.com Alternative | 143ms TTFB | NVMe + Redis | $3.95/mo
ChemiCloud Homepage

$3.95/mo

45-Day Money-Back Guarantee

Visit ChemiCloud ➦

Visit ChemiCloud β€” $3.95/mo, 45-Day Money-Back, Free Migration ➦

Not right for you? See our Cloudways review (127ms TTFB, developers/agencies) or our ScalaHosting review (AMD EPYC, email included, managed VPS) or our full WordPress hosting comparison.