
Hostinger launches ecommerce platform that turns a product photo into a checkout link in minutes - no website required
Hostinger Ecommerce offers sellers a commerce backend that exists outside any single platform

Hostinger Ecommerce offers sellers a commerce backend that exists outside any single platform
Hostinger dropped crypto from its supported payment methods a while ago, but it's back now. The availability depends on the customer's location.
Most global customers can pay Hostinger in crypto, except those located in Canada, Australia, and some European countries (Austria, Belgium, Switzerland.)
Sometimes I prefer paying with crypto when I have extra funds. The only downside is that those payments can't be refunded.
DreamHost has long offered managed VPS hosting, and now they have a self-managed option. They've noticed the increased demand for the cheaper self-managed option driven by AI.
They're not the cheapest but prices are reasonable.
If anyone gives it a try, let us know how it performs.
I am up for a renewal of my Namecheap Stellar Plus hosting service, but I am considering moving away if better alternatives are available. I use this mainly for email. It hosts two email domains with several users. This is set up though cpanel and I connect to it mainly through IMAP. In addition, it hosts a very small website.
I have two reasons for considering alternatives: First, their smtp server gave me problems as it does not seem to be trusted by all recipients. So I had to look for external smtp services. That works, but it is a hassle. Second, I'd prefer to use an EU service.
Other considerations: I need at least 15 GB of storage.
Any suggestions for alternatives? It should not charge by domain or user, but simply a fixed amount per year. It should not cost more than my current plan ($146.44 for 2 years).
It's only been a couple of months since OVHcloud raised their prices, and they already have to do it again!
CEO Octave Klaba announced an upcoming price hike on his X account. And he also predicts more price increases to follow as hardware keeps getting more expensive!
Hostinger's support switched to an AI-first chatbot a while ago. Their AI assistant chatbot (Kodee) is the first line of contact. You can still get a human support agent if you ask for that, but they don't always respond quickly.
Someone else was complaining in this thread about not being able to get human support at all because they're stuck in a loop with the chatbot.
Have you been able to get human chat support from Hostinger lately? And if so, how fast did they respond?
Some Bluehost customers used to escape the premium email add-on by opting for the free cPanel email option...not anymore!
Unless you have two or less mailboxes, cPanel email now costs extra at Bluehost. They've upgraded all users to paid email plans based on the number of mailboxes they have.
Here's a breakdown of the new pricing for cPanel email:
| Plan | No. of mailboxes | Monthly price | Yearly price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free | 0-2 | $0 | $0 |
| Basic | 3-10 | $2.99 | $35.88 |
| Plus | 11-20 | $5.99 | $71.88 |
| Premium | Unlimited | $8.99 | $107.88 |
There is a sending limit of 200 emails per hour per domain for the Free, Basic and Plus plans, and 1,000 emails/hr for the Premium plan.
The bigger deal-breaker is that outbound email filtering (SpamExperts) is only available for the Premium plan. That means in the other lower plans, email is sent from a shared server IP, which is not good if you want maximum deliverability.
Hostinger uses their own custom-built control panel for managing shared hosting accounts, which is called hPanel. They used to offer cPanel shared hosting as an alternative but that's no longer available.
I find both cPanel and hPanel to be intuitive and easy to work with. cPanel has more tools and gives you more freedom in adjusting some server configurations. It's also easier when you're migrating from one cPanel host to another.
What's your experience with both like?
I just got this e-mail notice from Host Gator. Mind you, I rarely ever use the e-mails on my server:
| As part of our recent communication regarding enhancements to your cPanel Email service, we have reviewed your current mailbox usage to ensure you’re on the best plan to meet your needs. |
|---|
| Based on your active cPanel mailboxes, we will be moving you to the cPanel Email Basic Plan at 35.88 starting with your upcoming hosting plan renewal August 7, 2026. This plan is designed to provide you with all the features you currently enjoy at a competitive price aligned with your usage. |
I contacted Host Gator who said that this would be an extra $38 A MONTH and to avoid it, I would have to narrow my account down to two e-mail addresses. Mind you, my hosting server doesn't even cost that much. What has the world come to?
I have seven e-mails, including the system e-mail that Host Gator won't allow me to delete. There's less than 50MB of e-mails received when all off those e-mails are combined. This is because I mainly use my g-mail account.
After dealing with the random price hikes with NO NOTICE, prior to this, over a span of years, I'm done with Host Gator.
Can anyone refer a better host?
"DreamHost today announced that Remixer, its conversational AI builder, now creates both websites and full-stack applications from plain language descriptions, without writing a line of code.
Remixer is built for small business owners and developers alike, anyone who can describe what they need in plain language can build with it, without touching code or configuring a backend. Describe what you need and Remixer generates the frontend, backend, database, and user authentication automatically through AI chat inside the editor." [press release]
The new site tools sidebar layout is incredibly clunky and much more difficult to use. Being able to see all the options made it so much faster to swap back and forth between areas of the site tools, and now the new layout not only requires two clicks every single time but it assumes that someone knows exactly what is under each dropdown. I have been using Siteground for likely over 5 years and I still do not know exactly what items are under each dropdown, which made the previous layout 1000% better because I could easily click the toggle and see the options - and have them all open at the same time so I can easily see all the options at once. This new way is just a major step backwards and makes it so much worse and so much more difficult to use.
Compare the new UI with the previous UI.
New:
Previous:
Also, I really do not understand why everyone likes flyout views like this. Just make them dropdowns and have it so everyone can see everything at once rather than clicking and clicking until you find what you need.
With the previous UI - you could have all options open at once and it made switching back and forth between sections of the sitetools a breeze.
tldr; I really don't understand why tech companies mess with things that do not need fixing.
I have a KVM2 server on Hostinger, and for the past few days I've noticed slowness and even service outages. I even suspected it was a problem with my application or a virus. After several tests, I'm convinced that the problem is actually with Hostinger.
As you can see in the screenshot, we have over 90% CPU steal, and currently I can't even access the VPS via SSH.
When contacting support, only a bot responds.
In the ticket I submitted, nobody responds!
In short, it's a terrible experience with Hostinger, I don't recommend it to anyone!
I'm migrating to NetCup.
edit:
See the difference in quality compared to NetCup.
Lately, my client websites hosted on Bluehost have either been crashing, loading very slowly, or becoming inaccessible through cPanel. Bluehost keeps saying the issue is due to high server load, but I’m on a VPS and currently only have three active client websites on it. Two of those are just informational websites, so the load should not be that heavy.
Right now, all of my client websites are inaccessible in cPanel, and I was told again to wait for the admins to check it. This has happened before, but I never received a proper follow-up. I only heard back after I posted about it on Reddit.
At this point, it’s becoming really frustrating and unacceptable, especially since these are client websites and the issue keeps happening without a clear explanation or resolution.
I’ve been a paying customer of WebHostingPad for over 11 years. My last payment was for a 3-year “Power Plan” (08/29/2024 – 08/28/2027), totaling $245.52 USD.
In early June 2026, they migrated my domain to a new server. Shortly after, on June 6, they suspended my account for "high traffic" — with no prior warning and no time to fix the issue.
They rejected my request for temporary access to my own data so I could at least manually serve my users.
Every time I asked to restore service, they pushed me to upgrade to a VPS instead of helping.
When I requested a prorated refund for the unused 14 months, they replied: "We do not offer prorated refunds."
So they terminated the service — and kept the money.
Has anyone dealt with this? What else can I do?
Hey everyone,
I’ve been testing out Hostinger Horizons to build and update my website, but the credit system is driving me crazy. Here are the main issues I’m running into:
At this rate, I’m going to run out of credits instantly just trying to build a basic media library.
Does anyone have a better workflow or a workaround to create an image repository for your website without burning through all your Horizons credits? How are you guys handling large amounts of images on this platform?
Appreciate any tips!
Hetzner has done it again: another price hike, and this one is big. Some plans have more than doubled in price.
These are the new monthly prices next to the old prices for each cloud server plan (German and Finland locations):
Cost Optimized Servers
| Plan | Old price | New price |
|---|---|---|
| CX23 | $4.99 | $6.49 |
| CAX11 | $5.49 | $6.99 |
| CX33 | $7.99 | $9.99 |
| CAX21 | $9.49 | $12.49 |
| CX43 | $13.99 | $18.49 |
| CAX31 | $18.49 | $24.99 |
| CX53 | $26.49 | $34.99 |
| CAX41 | $36.99 | $48.49 |
Regular Performance Servers
| Plan | Old price | New price |
|---|---|---|
| CPX22 | $9.49 | $22.99 |
| CPX32 | $15.99 | $41.99 |
| CPX42 | $29.99 | $81.99 |
| CPX52 | $42.99 | $118.99 |
| CPX62 | $59.49 | $152.99 |
General Purpose Servers
| Plan | Old price | New price |
|---|---|---|
| CCX13 | $18.49 | $50.49 |
| CCX23 | $36.99 | $101.49 |
| CCX33 | $73.99 | $162.99 |
| CCX43 | $147.49 | $325.49 |
| CCX53 | $294.99 | $629.49 |
| CCX63 | $441.99 | $1,006.99 |
That's gonna piss off many customers!
I spent the last few days trying to report a very obvious scam website that was hosted by Hostinger, and I’m still blown away by how difficult they made it.
I sent them everything: screenshots, documents, URLs, the whole story. Instead of acting, they kept asking me for the same information over and over, like nobody was actually reading anything. Every time I tried to escalate, they pushed me back to the same team that wasn’t doing anything.
Then came the template emails. I got multiple messages saying the site “has been suspended,” but the site was still fully online. When I pointed that out, they suddenly acted like they didn’t know which URL I was talking about, even though it was in every message.
The wildest part?
They told me to contact them from the scammer’s email address.
I still can’t wrap my head around that one.
Meanwhile, their public replies on review sites made it look like I wasn’t giving them enough information, while privately they were contradicting themselves and stalling.
The only moment things suddenly changed was when they noticed that one of my earlier emails had an ICANN address in the BCC field. I hadn’t even submitted a formal complaint yet. But the tone changed instantly, and shortly after that, the domain was finally put on hold and the site went offline.
It’s honestly ridiculous that it took this much effort. Most people would have given up long before that point. And that’s what worries me — how many scam sites stay online simply because the reporter doesn’t have the energy to fight through this mess?
Hostinger loves bragging about becoming “one of the biggest hosting companies.”
After this experience, I can see why.
If you host every scammer under the sun and make it nearly impossible for people to get them taken down, your numbers grow fast.
I’m relieved the scam site is finally down, but the process was unacceptable from start to finish. I expected a hosting provider to take fraud seriously. Instead, it felt like I had to drag them to the finish line.
DirectAdmin is the classic alternative to cPanel for reseller hosting, and it's much cheaper, but still most resellers choose cPanel.
I think it's because most customers prefer cPanel due to its popularity. Using DirectAdmin might put you at a disadvantage against competitor providers.
Would you go with DirectAdmin instead of cPanel?
Source: oxylabs.io