I put BigCloudy through a full technical review covering real sysbench tests, the complete signup flow, and live support. My first impression is a provider punching well above its price point. Keep reading to find out why.
I put BigCloudy through a full technical review covering real sysbench tests, the complete signup flow, and live support. My first impression is a provider punching well above its price point. Keep reading to find out why.
BigCloudy is an India-based hosting provider that has quietly built out an impressive product lineup spanning shared hosting, managed WordPress, Linux and Windows VPS, and dedicated servers, all backed by seven global data center locations, including India and the UAE, two strategically important regions for Asian and Middle Eastern audiences.
Performance results during my testing backed that impression up, and support responded to a technical question in under 20 minutes. If you are shopping for a VPS or shared hosting plan and value for money is near the top of your checklist, BigCloudy deserves a serious look.
BigCloudy
BigCloudy offers reliable hosting solutions backed by cutting-edge technology. The India and Europe -based data centres are designed to provide the highest level of redundancy, physical security, and network connectivity. With lightning-fast speeds and 24/7 availability, you can trust that their applications will always be up and running smoothly.
30-day and a 7-day money-back guarantee on most services
Cons
Introductory pricing requires a 36-month commitment
The WHMCS client area is functional, but it still looks dated
Rating Breakdown
Our reviews follow a structured rating methodology designed to evaluate hosting providers consistently and fairly across the metrics that matter most to real users. You can read more about how we score providers here.
Here is how BigCloudy performed across every category we tested.
Exceptional entry pricing with strong feature inclusion, four shared hosting packages, and specialised plans such as SEO VPS and Offshore VPS. The deepest discounts are still tied to longer billing cycles.
NVMe storage, LiteSpeed, Cloudflare CDN, daily backups, SSH and terminal access, application-level hosting, and migration support make this a stronger feature set than most budget-focused hosts offer.
Memory throughput of nearly 38,400 MiB/sec was outstanding. CPU held steady across sustained load, disk latency stayed sub-millisecond, and five consecutive stress tests passed without a single failure.
The setup flow is logical and well structured from navigation through to provisioning. Tax handling for Indian customers is clearly relevant at checkout, and the functional but dated WHMCS client area stops it from scoring higher.
A 16-minute response on a technical ticket is genuinely impressive, and BigCloudy also highlights a 5-minute response time target for support. The answer was accurate and structured, though it could still have gone deeper on Node.js specifics.
Overall
9.4/10
BigCloudy delivers strong value across pricing, features, and infrastructure performance, with extra appeal for developer-oriented application hosting, SEO VPS, and Offshore VPS use cases.
BigCloudy
BigCloudy offers reliable hosting solutions backed by cutting-edge technology. The India and Europe -based data centres are designed to provide the highest level of redundancy, physical security, and network connectivity. With lightning-fast speeds and 24/7 availability, you can trust that their applications will always be up and running smoothly.
BigCloudy covers a wide range of hosting needs. In my complete review, I found they offer:
Shared cloud hosting
cPanel hosting
WordPress and WooCommerce hosting
eCommerce and Magento hosting
Laravel, Node.js, and Django hosting
Reseller hosting
Linux VPS and Windows VPS hosting
SEO VPS hosting optimized for search-focused workloads
Offshore VPS hosting for privacy-conscious deployments
Forex VPS hosting for a low-latency trading application
Dedicated servers
Two offerings worth highlighting specifically are their SEO VPS, built for running rank-tracking tools and crawlers, and their Offshore VPS, which is designed for users who need hosting in jurisdictions with greater privacy flexibility.
Check the pricing below to see the latest up-to-date plan costs across all hosting types.
BigCloudy offers a 30-day and a 7-day money-back guarantee on most of its services.
30-day money-back guarantee applies to:
Shared hosting plans
Cloud hosting plans
WordPress hosting plans
Laravel hosting plans
Node.js hosting plans
Django hosting plans
Magento hosting plans
Envato hosting plans
Reseller hosting plans
7-day money-back guarantee applies to:
VPS hosting plans
Dedicated server plans
If you request a refund within the 30-day window on an eligible plan, it goes back to your original payment method after deducting any applicable taxes or completed work charges.
For payments, BigCloudy accepts:
Credit cards and debit cards
Net banking and UPI
PayPal
All of the above activate your account instantly once payment clears. Cheque payments take up to five working days to process, so I would skip that route if you want to get started quickly.
Tip BigCloudy’s biggest discounts are tied to the 36-month billing cycle. If you are confident about committing long-term, the triennial plan saves you the most and even throws in four extra months free on shared hosting plans.
BigCloudy Hosting Features
cPanel control panel for easy management
Multiple PHP version switching supported
SSH, SFTP, and terminal access available for developer workflows
One-click WordPress installation tool included
Imunify360 malware scanning and firewall protection
Spam Experts email filtering built in
DDoS protection across all hosting plans
99.9% uptime guarantee across shared, VPS, and dedicated services
Staging environment for safe site testing
Unmetered bandwidth on all shared plans
WP CLI access for developer workflows
Application-level hosting for NodeJS, Django, Laravel, Magento, WordPress, and Envato
Free migration support and onboarding help included
Server configuration assistance and full root access available on VPS plans
Multiple Linux distributions supported on VPS
Web application firewall included as standard
99.9% uptime guarantee across all shared plans
SSH and terminal access available on shared hosting
BigCloudy
BigCloudy offers reliable hosting solutions backed by cutting-edge technology. The India and Europe -based data centres are designed to provide the highest level of redundancy, physical security, and network connectivity. With lightning-fast speeds and 24/7 availability, you can trust that their applications will always be up and running smoothly.
To properly evaluate BigCloudy’s infrastructure, I ran a full suite of benchmarks on my Linux VPS Premium server hosted in their Germany data center.
BigCloudy notes that its newer platform hardware now includes AMD EPYC 9005 5th Gen or Intel Xeon 6700/6900 series processors, depending on the location and service line.
Here are the specs I was working with:
CPU: AMD EPYC 9005 5th Gen or Intel Xeon 6700/6900 series
vCPU cores: 6
RAM: 12GB
Storage: 200GB NVMe
OS: Ubuntu 24.04
Kernel: 6.8.0-106-generic
Hypervisor: KVM (full virtualisation)
The Xeon E5-2640 v3 is a Haswell-generation processor. It is not the newest silicon on the market, but it is a well-proven server-grade CPU and perfectly capable for the majority of real-world VPS workloads. The notable point for 2026 is that BigCloudy says newer deployments now sit on meaningfully more modern AMD EPYC or Intel Xeon 6-class hardware.
Here is how it performed across every test.
CPU Benchmark
I used sysbench with a prime number limit of 20,000 across all 6 threads for 60 seconds. This tests how efficiently the CPU handles sustained mathematical computation under full thread load.
Results:
Events per second: 2,078.20
Total events completed: 124,702
Average latency: 2.89ms
95th percentile latency: 3.02ms
Min latency: 2.35ms
Max latency: 10.78ms
What this means: The CPU handled sustained load cleanly across all six threads with very tight latency distribution. The gap between average latency and the 95th percentile is minimal at just 0.13ms, which tells you the CPU was not throttling or spiking under pressure.
Thread fairness was also strong, with an events standard deviation of just 109 across threads, meaning the workload was balanced evenly rather than piling onto a single core. For a virtualised KVM environment this is a solid result.
Memory Benchmark
I ran sysbench memory with a 1MB block size across 10GB total transfer using all 6 threads.
Results:
Total operations: 10,236
Transfer speed: 38,386 MiB/sec
Total time: 0.26 seconds
Average latency: 0.15ms
95th percentile latency: 0.24ms
What this means: 38,386 MiB/sec is an exceptionally strong memory throughput figure. The 10GB transfer completed in just over a quarter of a second, with sub-millisecond latency throughout.
This is the standout result from my testing. For applications that are memory-intensive, such as caching layers, in-memory databases, or high-concurrency web apps, this server will not be your bottleneck.
Disk I/O Benchmark
I tested random read/write performance using sysbench fileio across a 5GB file set with a 16KB block size, 6 threads, over 60 seconds.
Results:
Read speed: 133.03 MiB/s
Write speed: 88.69 MiB/s
Reads per second: 8,514
Writes per second: 5,676
fsyncs per second: 18,174
Average latency: 0.18ms
95th percentile latency: 0.57ms
Initial sequential write speed during file preparation: 337.48 MiB/s
What this means: The random read performance at 133 MiB/s is solid for a shared NVMe environment. The write speed of 88.69 MiB/s is respectable, though naturally lower under random I/O conditions compared to the sequential write speed of 337 MiB/s seen during file preparation. The sub-millisecond average latency on disk operations is the number I care about most here.
It means your database queries, file reads, and log writes are happening fast, which translates directly to responsive application behaviour.
Stress Test
I ran stress-ng five consecutive times at full load, pushing all 6 CPU cores and 2 VM stressors with 5GB of memory pressure per stressor for 60 seconds each run.
What this means: Five consecutive passes with no failures and consistent CPU throughput across runs is exactly what you want to see. The bogo ops/s figures stayed within a tight band across all five iterations, which tells you the server is not thermally throttling or dropping performance under sustained pressure.
The VM stressor figures varied more between runs, which is normal behaviour under heavy memory pressure in a virtualised environment. The key point is that nothing broke and nothing degraded significantly over time.
Network Performance
I ran Speedtest via the Ookla CLI twice. The test routed through a server in Vanderbijlpark, South Africa, which is a considerable geographic distance from the Germany data center.
Keep that in mind when reading the latency figures.
First run:
Download: 732.55 Mbps
Upload: 130.90 Mbps
Idle latency: 162.09ms
Packet loss: 0.3%
Second run:
Download: 661.07 Mbps
Upload: 119.24 Mbps
Idle latency: 175.21ms
Packet loss: 0.3%
What this means: Download throughput averaging around 700 Mbps is strong for a VPS at this price point. The upload speed at 120 to 130 Mbps is adequate for most workloads.
The latency figures look high on paper, but that is almost entirely a function of the test routing to South Africa rather than to a nearby European endpoint. For users and applications closer to the Germany location you would expect idle latency to drop to the 5 to 20ms range. The 0.3% packet loss is low and within acceptable range for intercontinental routing.
Overall Performance Verdict
I found BigCloudy’s VPS Premium performance genuinely impressive for its price tier. The memory throughput result was the highlight, coming in at nearly 38,400 MiB/sec, which is a figure I rarely see from shared VPS environments.
CPU performance was consistent and fair across all threads, disk I/O was clean with sub-millisecond average latency, and the server held up without a single failure across five consecutive full-load stress test runs.
Network throughput was strong, with the latency figures being geography-dependent rather than reflective of any infrastructure issue. Based on my test node, I would have no issue deploying a production application here, and BigCloudy’s move toward newer AMD EPYC 9005 5th Gen or Intel Xeon 6700/6900 hardware only strengthens that outlook.
Ease of Use
A powerful hosting product that is frustrating to navigate will cost you time and confidence, especially if you are not deeply technical.
To assess BigCloudy properly, I looked at three things that shape your day-to-day experience: how straightforward it is to get started, how the configuration process works, and what the checkout flow looks like. Here is what I found.
1. Registration and Plan Selection
Getting started was straightforward. From the homepage, I navigated to the VPS and Dedicated Server menu, which opens a clean dropdown showing every product category at a glance, including more specialised options such as SEO VPS and Offshore Hosting.
I went with Linux VPS since that matched my testing needs.
The popular tags next to SEO VPS and n8n VPS were a small but useful touch for first-time visitors trying to figure out what others typically go for. It also helps surface the fact that BigCloudy is not limited to generic shared hosting alone.
Choosing a Plan
On the Linux VPS pricing page, the billing cycle toggle sits right at the top, showing clear savings at each interval:
Monthly at a 9% saving
Quarterly at a 9% saving
Semi-annually at a 23% saving
Annually at a 45% saving
Below the toggle is a control panel selector, letting you pick your preferred panel before even committing to a plan.
I left this at No Panel for now since I wanted to configure it properly on the next screen. The four plans on offer were Starter, Basic, Business, and Premium, all billed on the 12-month term at that point.
I went with the Premium plan, which sits at the top of the Linux VPS lineup. It was the obvious choice for benchmarking purposes given its resource headroom.
Plan Configuration
Clicking through to configure the Premium plan opened a detailed setup page. Here is exactly what I selected and what was on offer:
Resources included with the plan:
6 vCPU cores
12 GB RAM
200 GB NVMe disk space
Unmetered bandwidth
1 clean IP
100 Mbps uplink
1 snapshot
For billing cycle, I chose annually at $251.93 USD, which reflected a 40% saving over the monthly rate of $34.99 USD per month.
For server location, I selected Germany. Other available options were:
Mumbai, India
Central USA
United Kingdom (at an additional $38/yr)
Singapore, Asia (at an additional $84/yr)
Sydney, Australia (at an additional $72/yr)
UAE
Amsterdam, Netherlands
The operating system defaulted to Ubuntu 24.04, which I kept. Other distributions were available from the dropdown.
For the control panel, I chose No Panel since I prefer working directly via SSH. The options available were:
No Panel
cPanel
ISPmanager
Plesk
DirectAdmin
Hestia
CyberPanel
Under the Application section, BigCloudy lets you deploy a stack at provisioning rather than doing it manually after the fact. That is especially relevant now that the company is leaning harder into application-level hosting. Options included:
n8n
Docker
WooCommerce
WordPress
NodeJS
OpenVPN, etc.
I left this as None for my test. But for users deploying production apps, the combination of application templates, migration support, and VPS-side setup assistance is a meaningful plus. For SSL addons, options ranged from Comodo SSL at $9.25/yr up to Positive EV SSL at $102.50/yr, with a backup service available as an additional service at $15.00 per month.
I skipped both for this setup.
Checkout
The checkout page presented a clean order summary throughout:
Subtotal: $251.93 USD
IGST at 18%: $45.35 USD
Total due today: $297.28 USD
The IGST addition is worth flagging since it pushed the total noticeably above the advertised plan price.
GST is applicable on all invoices issued to Indian customers, in compliance with Indian tax regulations. International clients outside India are not subject to any additional taxes on their invoices.
The checkout form covered:
First and last name
Email address and phone number
Billing address with optional company name and VAT/GST fields
Password setup for the new account
Promo code field
Payment ran through PayU Payment Gateway. After completing the order, I received a confirmation email immediately, which is exactly what you want. No waiting, no chasing.
Overall, I found the entire flow, from menu navigation through to the confirmed order, well-structured and logical.
Nothing felt buried, and the level of configuration detail at the provisioning stage, particularly the one-click application options and specialised VPS categories, is genuinely above average for a host at this price point.
2. Dashboard and Client Area
Next, after completing registration and checkout, I wanted to see how the client area was laid out and whether it gave me a clear picture of my account from the moment I logged in.
The dashboard loads to a clean, WHMCS-based client area.
It is not the flashiest interface I have seen, but it is well organised and gets the job done.
At a glance, the top of the main panel shows four quick-stat counters:
Services (1 active in my case)
Domains (0)
Unpaid Invoices (0)
Tickets (0)
That summary row alone tells you everything important about your account status in under two seconds, which I appreciated. No digging required.
Below that, the Your Active Products/Services section showed my Linux VPS Premium plan marked as Active, with a Manage button sitting right next to it. The server hostname was already assigned and visible, which confirmed provisioning had happened quickly after payment.
The left sidebar holds your account profile, a contacts section, and a shortcuts panel with quick links to:
Order New Services
Register a New Domain
Logout
The main area also surfaces a domain search widget and a Services Renewing Soon widget on the right, which is a practical reminder I find genuinely useful since renewal dates are easy to lose track of across multiple services.
The Recent Support Tickets and Recent News panels were both empty at this stage, which is expected for a fresh account. The Open Ticket button was clearly visible for when I needed it.
Overall, the client area is functional and logically structured. It will not win design awards, but everything you need is reachable within one or two clicks, and for day-to-day hosting management that is what matters most.
3. Server and Hosting Management
And finally, I wanted to see what options BigCloudy offers for server management. This is where a hosting provider either proves itself or falls short, because monitoring and controlling your server should not require opening a separate tool or logging into a third-party panel just to check basic stats.
Clicking Manage on the Linux VPS Premium service took me straight to the Product Details page, and I was genuinely pleased with what I found there.
At the top of the page sits a row of server control buttons that cover everything you would need for day-to-day and emergency management:
Start
Stop
Power Off
Restart
Reinstall
VNC Access
Reset Root Password
Change Hostname
Rescue
Having VNC Access and Rescue mode directly in the panel is something I look for specifically when reviewing VPS hosts.
It means that if your server becomes unreachable over SSH, you still have a way in without raising a support ticket and waiting.
Below the controls, the panel surfaces four live usage graphs:
CPU usage showing load average over time
Network usage with read and write KiB tracked separately
Disk usage with read and write KiB
Memory usage in MB
These graphs updated in real time during my session and gave a clear picture of server activity at a glance. For a freshly provisioned server the memory usage was already sitting around 1,200 to 1,400 MB, which I noted as worth monitoring during heavier workloads.
Further down the page, a clean summary table shows all the key service details in one place.
The left sidebar keeps action links within easy reach:
Upgrade/Downgrade
Upgrade/Downgrade Options
Renew Service
Request Cancellation
The Upgrade button at the bottom of the page reinforces that scaling up is designed to be a one-step process rather than something that requires raising a ticket.
Overall, I found the server management panel well above average for a host in this price range. The combination of live resource graphs, emergency access tools, and clear billing information in a single screen is exactly what you want when you need to diagnose an issue quickly or just keep an eye on how your server is performing day to day.
It is also worth noting that BigCloudy provides application-level hosting support on VPS plans, meaning their team can assist with configuring your server environment, deploying specific applications, and handling migration from another host directly to your VPS. For users who want a managed feel without paying managed server prices, this is a meaningful addition.
Overall Ease of Use Verdict
BigCloudy holds up well across the full setup journey. From a well-organised navigation menu and a detailed but easy-to-follow configuration flow, through to a functional client area and a server management panel that puts real control in your hands, the experience is consistent and logical at every step.
The tax treatment at checkout is worth being aware of, especially for Indian customers, and the client area is built on WHMCS, so it prioritises function over design.
But neither of those things gets in the way of actually using the platform. If you are new to VPS hosting, I found BigCloudy easier to get started with than several more established names I have reviewed.
BigCloudy
BigCloudy offers reliable hosting solutions backed by cutting-edge technology. The India and Europe -based data centres are designed to provide the highest level of redundancy, physical security, and network connectivity. With lightning-fast speeds and 24/7 availability, you can trust that their applications will always be up and running smoothly.
Before getting into my test, it is worth understanding what support options BigCloudy actually makes available once you are inside the client area. The company also says it targets a 5-minute response time, which sets a notably high bar for expectation.
From the Support menu in the dashboard navigation, you get access to:
Tickets
Announcements
Knowledgebase
Open Ticket
The Open Ticket button also sits persistently in the top right corner of every page, so you are never more than one click away from raising an issue.
When opening a ticket, the system asks you to choose a department first:
Sales
General Enquiries
Billing
Support
That department routing is a small but useful detail. It means your ticket lands with the right team immediately rather than being passed around internally before someone looks at it. For setup, migration, billing, or server configuration queries, that kind of routing matters.
My Support Test
For my test, I submitted a deliberately technical question to put the support team through their paces.
I opened a ticket under the Support department, linked it to my Linux VPS Premium service, set the priority to High, and asked:
“If I’m running a high-traffic Node.js app on my Linux VPS Premium and I’m hitting CPU spikes during peak hours, what’s the recommended approach on your infrastructure? Vertical scaling, or would you suggest a load-balancing setup?”
This is the kind of question that separates a genuinely knowledgeable support team from one that relies on scripted answers.
The Response
Ticket submitted: Monday, March 30th, 2026 at 13:00
Response received: Monday, March 30th, 2026 at 13:16
Response time: 16 minutes
Note: BigCloudy advertises average response times as low as 5 minutes. In my test I received a reply in 16 minutes, which is still a strong result for a technical query set to High priority.
The response came from Sid Pagar, a technical support operator. Here is how I would break down the quality of the reply:
What they got right:
Acknowledged that the best approach depends on traffic patterns and scalability goals, rather than giving a one-size-fits-all answer
Correctly identified vertical scaling as the faster and simpler short-term fix with no architectural changes required
Correctly flagged its limitations under sustained high traffic
Recommended load balancing as the more robust long-term solution, citing both performance distribution and redundancy benefits
Suggested a hybrid approach of combining both, which is genuinely the most practical real-world recommendation
Offered follow-up assistance for setting up either option
What could have been stronger:
No mention of specific BigCloudy tooling or infrastructure options for load balancing
Could have referenced upgrade paths directly available from the client area
No mention of Node.js specific optimisations such as clustering or PM2
Overall Support Verdict
The 16-minute response time on a technical ticket set to High priority is genuinely good. BigCloudy also says it targets a 5-minute response time more broadly, so there is clearly an emphasis on fast handling as part of the support pitch.
The answer itself was structured, accurate, and covered both sides of the question without defaulting to a vague response. For most users running production workloads on a VPS, especially those who may need migration help or basic server-side guidance, this level of support would be more than sufficient.
BigCloudy
BigCloudy offers reliable hosting solutions backed by cutting-edge technology. The India and Europe -based data centres are designed to provide the highest level of redundancy, physical security, and network connectivity. With lightning-fast speeds and 24/7 availability, you can trust that their applications will always be up and running smoothly.
Yes, I recommend BigCloudy. After putting their Linux VPS Premium through real benchmarks, navigating the full setup process, and testing their support team with a technical question, the picture that emerges is a provider that genuinely delivers on its promises.
What stands out most to me is the performance-to-price ratio. Memory throughput close to 38,400 MiB/sec and five clean stress test passes is not something you typically see at this price point.
Add in the feature depth, with LiteSpeed, NVMe, Cloudflare CDN, daily backups, SSH access, application-level hosting, migration support, and one-click app deployment all included as part of the broader platform story, and BigCloudy starts to look like a serious option for developers, startups, agencies, and growing businesses alike. The stronger emphasis on SEO VPS and Offshore VPS also gives it more range than the average budget host.
Tax treatment at checkout for Indian customers and the depth of support responses are still areas with room to grow. But neither is a dealbreaker. For the price, the infrastructure quality here is hard to argue with.
It's once again in a short period of time that I have been extremely satisfied with Big Cloudy prompt and satisfactory service. Five stars to Big Cloudy and their excellent support.
My hosting service is down again, and on top of that, I've been having to report problems to the support team every week. They can't keep everything running. I've already lost three clients because of this. I recommend that before migrating your environment, you conduct a testing period.
We sincerely apologize for the repeated downtime and the frustration it has caused. We understand the serious impact this can have on your clients and business, and we truly regret that your experience has not met expectations. Our team has taken corrective measures to improve stability and prevent further disruptions. Your feedback is important to us, and we are continuously working to enhance our service reliability. Kind regards, Team BigCloudy
Moved from n8n Cloud to BigCloudy mainly to avoid the execution caps, and it's been a smooth switch. The pre-built workflow templates are a nice time-saver. Documentation could be more detailed for beginners, though the support team fills that gap well enough.
Outstanding support and excellent Managed VPS Hosting.
I’ve a really great experience with BigCloudy. Their Managed VPS hosting has been excellent so far the servers are fast, stable, and work perfectly for SEO projects. Uptime has been solid, and managing multiple websites is smooth without any issues.
What truly stands out is their support team. They always respond quickly, are very professional, and genuinely helpful whenever I need assistance. It’s rare to find hosting with both strong performance and such reliable support. Highly recommended if you’re looking for Managed VPS hosting with outstanding customer service!!!
“I’ve been using BigCloudy for my WordPress website, and the performance has been outstanding. The loading speed is fast, uptime is reliable, and installation was incredibly easy. Highly recommended for anyone running WordPress.”
Nikhil supported me in setting up my Node.js website properly and ensured everything was configured smoothly from start to finish. He has strong technical knowledge of Node.js and was able to understand the requirements clearly before implementing the solution.
My WordPress website went down on VPS, but Abhishek fixed it quickly. Great support, very responsive, and professional service. Highly recommend! Thank you, Abhishek
My WordPress websites went down on my VPS,and Abhishek solved the issue very quickly.The support was fast,reliable,and professional.Really thankful for the quick resolution and smooth experience.
I had an issue with my VPS and the support team was very responsive and quick to resolve it. Everything was handled smoothly and professionally. Thank you, Abhishek
Yes. BigCloudy offers strong performance, competitive pricing, application-friendly hosting options, and a wide range of services backed by seven global data centers and 24/7 support
How much does BigCloudy hosting cost?
Pricing varies by product line, from low-cost shared hosting to WordPress, reseller, VPS, Offshore VPS, SEO VPS, and dedicated server plans. The live pricing widgets above are the best place to check the latest rates.
Does BigCloudy offer a money-back guarantee?
Yes. BigCloudy says it offers a 30-day money-back guarantee on NodeJS, Django, Magento, WordPress, Laravel, Envato, and reseller hosting plans, plus a 7-day money-back window on VPS and dedicated servers.
Where are BigCloudy's data centers located?
BigCloudy operates data centers in the USA, UK, Netherlands, Sweden, UAE, India, and Singapore, giving you solid location options across multiple regions and a clear presence in both India and the UAE.
Is BigCloudy good for VPS hosting?
Yes. In my testing, the Linux VPS Premium delivered impressive memory throughput, consistent CPU performance, and clean disk I/O results. BigCloudy is also more compelling now that it puts more emphasis on specialised VPS options such as SEO VPS and Offshore VPS.
HostAdvice.com provides professional web hosting reviews fully independent of any other entity. Our reviews are unbiased, honest, and apply the same evaluation standards to all those reviewed.While monetary compensation is received from a few of the companies listed on this site, compensation of services and products have no influence on the direction or conclusions of our reviews. Nor does the compensation influence our rankings for certain host companies.This compensation covers account purchasing costs, testing costs and royalties paid to reviewers.