Hostinger Review: Multiple Scams, Fake Reviews, And Low Cores + I/O Limits Lead To Suspension With Poor Support/Uptimes

Hostinger review

Before you even think about using Hostinger, look at their scam reports from Reddit and TrustPilot.

Once you give Hostinger your credit card, don’t be surprised when you’re billed for unauthorized purchases and get phone calls from scammers. They’ve been repeatedly threatened with lawsuits and Hostinger’s CEO (Arnas Stuopelis) openly admitted to fake reviews. This company is only popular from deceptive marketing and dishonest affiliates.

Migrations are done by inexperienced support who don’t read notes, make mistakes, and scam/ignore you. Resources are far from “unlimited” with low cores/RAM, slow SSDs, and extremely low I/O limits (sometimes 10x less than GoDaddy). This leads to server crashes, 503 errors, and account suspensions then you’re prompted to upgrade. Downtimes and degraded performance are common, but they don’t always update the status page to reflect it. There are several scams/issues related to all 3 of Hostinger’s main services: hosting, domains, and email.

Do not believe the “glowing reviews” from Hostinger’s affiliates and the fake reviews. The “quality” is directly reflected in their dirt cheap prices. SiteGround is just as bad, so avoid both.

If you need cheap/fast hosting with LiteSpeed + cPanel, look into ChemiCloud. They’re faster, use NVMe storage, give you more CPU cores/RAM, and have a perfect 5/5 star TrustPilot rating.

Hostinger poll

Hostinger bad

 

1. How Hostinger Scams You

  • Renewals process when set to manual.
  • Charges for “free” SSL, backups, and support.
  • Gives your information to other scammers who call you.
  • Suspends your account for “abuse” without refunding you.
  • Domain renewals increase to $100+/year with privacy protection.
  • Domains and hosting plans don’t appear in the dashboard after payment.
  • Advertises way more sites/storage/bandwidth than plans can actually handle.

You can find many complaints on Reddit and TrustPilot. There are probably others I missed (please let me know if I missed any in the comments), but these seem to be the common scams.

Hostinger scam reports

 

2. CEO Admitted To Fake Reviews

Hostinger CEO Arnas Stuopelis openly said “it is their right” to write reviews of themselves.

Arnas hostinger feedback

Hostinger ceo arnas stuopelis

But in Facebook groups, they’ve always said these are “customer” reviews.

Hostinger fake reviews

Hostinger got banned from Facebook groups for voting for themselves in polls and other unethical behavior. However, many groups are now run by SiteGround (WordPress Hosting, WordPress Speed Up, WP Rocket Users, and others) where admins censor posts and favor SiteGround. I recommend Gijo’s WP Speed Matters Facebook Group for less biased opinions.

Hostinger banned from facebook groups

Hostinger also monitors the internet prying on people asking for hosting recommendations. When someone asks, one of their 250+ employees will jump in and say something like “I use Hostinger and couldn’t be happier” with a link to the Hostinger website. Then their other 250+ employees will like the comment so people are fooled into thinking how amazing Hostinger is.

Since they’ve been called out by Review Signal and banned from Facebook groups, their employees no longer list “works at Hostinger” on their Facebook profile. They also created hundreds of fake Facebook profiles to keep the scam going and be more sneaky. Very clever!

 

3. Resources Are Extremely Limited

Don’t believe the numbers Hostinger puts on their WordPress Hosting page. The 100s of websites, 100-200GB storage, and unlimited bandwidth are completely inaccurate numbers. Even Hostinger’s VPS 3 plan advertises 60GB NVMe storage for $7.99/mo which is unheard of.

If you compare resources to another bad host (GoDaddy), Hostinger has 10x less I/O (KB/s) on most plans with only 1-2 CPU cores. That’s why Hostinger lets you boost your account for 24 hours while you lower CPU/memory usage. But chances are, the low limits will hold you back.

Godaddy linux hosting resource limits
GoDaddy resource limits: 1-2 CPU cores + 10,240 I/O
Hostinger resource limitations
Hostinger resource limits: 1-2 CPU cores + 1,024 I/O on most plans (10x less than GoDaddy)
Hostinger resource limits 1
Hostinger’s limited resources lead to 503 errors and account suspensions
Cpu cores comparison hostinger vs a2 hosting vs namehero vs chemicloud
Hostinger has some of the lowest CPU cores, RAM, and resources compared to similar hosts

 

4. Downtimes + Degraded Performance

Advertising 99.9% uptimes (and uptimes tests) usually don’t mean anything because your websites are running on different servers/nodes than other sites.

Hostinger’s hosting agreement page clearly says “the service uptime guarantee does not apply to service interruptions caused by periodic maintenance.” While this is standard with hosting companies, Hostinger’s status page is usually filled with maintenance and degraded performance notifications. This is also one of the biggest complaints in their TrustPilot reviews.

Hostinger service uptime guarantee

Hostinger doesn’t come anywhere close to 99.9% uptimes.

Hostinger uptime network status

 

5. 1GB Email Storage With Various Issues

Hostinger’s email includes 1GB for free, then it’s $.99/account per month for 10GB. However, there are many issues reported with their email service, including emails not going through.

Of course, I always recommend keeping web/email hosting separate to avoid exceeding inode/storage limits, and because you don’t have to constantly move email if you switch hosts.

Hostinger 1gb email storage

 

6. Support Is Slow, Scammy, Or Non-Existent

Cheap hosting rarely has good support, but Hostinger’s is borderline incompetent.

Aside from scams, you may not get a response for hours, days, or ever at all. They upsell support for a monthly fee, and they’ve been caught logging into accounts without permission and changing things (including lowering the resource limits). Support is usually something you have to experience, but take my word, it’s one of the worst support teams you will come across.

Hostinger poor service trustpilot

 

7. Hostinger Uses Slower SATA SSDs

Hostinger uses SATA SSDs while other hosts (including shared hosts) are starting to move to faster NVMe SSDs. As I mentioned earlier, while Hostinger’s claims to use “terabytes of NVMe SSD storage” on their VPS plans, take it with a grain of salt since they lie all over their website.

Nvme vs sata
Source: PCWorld

 

8. hPanel Is Slow, Limited, And Has Bugs

Hostinger’s hPanel is basically a cPanel ripoff but worse.

Hostinger hpanel

Here’s a walkthrough of it:

 

9. Data Breach Affected 14M Customers

Back in 2019, 14 million Hostinger accounts were compromised.

The server contained customer usernames, email addresses, first names, IP addresses, and hashed passwords. Hostinger claimed no financial data was compromised, but they also lie about everything else, so I wouldn’t take their word. If you value security, don’t use Hostinger.

Hostinger security breach 1

 

10. 4 LiteSpeed Hosts That Outperform Hostinger

Use ChemiCloud instead.

You get LiteSpeed, cPanel, faster NVMe storage, more email storage, scalable CPU cores/RAM, and free migrations from a reliable support team who has a perfect 5/5 star rating on TrustPilot.

Chemicloud trustpilot

NameHero is very similar to ChemiCloud but costs more and only uses NVMe on their US data center. FastComet is cheaper but uses slower SATA SSDs + MySQL. If you want more powerful shared/cloud hybrid plan, look at Scala’s Entry WP Cloud plan. All of these hosts use LiteSpeed.

Hostinger Business WordPress Plan FastComet FastCloud Extra Plan ChemiCloud WordPress Turbo Plan NameHero Plus WordPress Plan Scala Entry WP Cloud Plan
Type Shared Shared Shared Shared Cloud
Cores/RAM 2 cores/1.5GB 6 cores/6GB 3 cores/3GB (scalable to 6/6) 3 cores/3GB No hard limit
Storage 20GB SATA 35GB SATA 40GB NVMe (9/11 data centers) Unlimited NVMe (only in the US) 50GB NVMe
Database MariaDB MySQL MariaDB MariaDB MariaDB
Object cache Memcached Memcached Memcached Redis Redis
Data centers 8 11 11 2 (US + EU) 3 (US + EU)
Server LiteSpeed LiteSpeed LiteSpeed LiteSpeed LiteSpeed
Cache plugin LiteSpeed Cache LiteSpeed Cache LiteSpeed Cache LiteSpeed Cache LiteSpeed Cache
CDN QUIC.cloud ($.02-.08/GB) QUIC.cloud ($.02-.08/GB) QUIC.cloud ($.02-.08/GB) QUIC.cloud ($.02-.08/GB) QUIC.cloud ($.02-.08/GB)
Control panel hPanel cPanel cPanel cPanel sPanel
Email storage 1GB 2.048GB Adjustable Adjustable Adjustable
Inodes 600,000 500,000 500,000 500,000 “Unlimited”
Major incidents Scam reports, fake reviews, 2019 breach 2022 DDoS attack on 3 data centers None 2011 2-day node outage None
Migrations Unlimited (but screws it up) 3 free 200 cPanel + 10 non-cPanel 1 free 1 free
Support F B B B B
TrustPilot rating 4.6/5 (fake) 4.9/5 5/5 4.6/5 4.9/5
Monthly price $3.99 (1-4 years) $5.49 (1-3 years) $5.99 (3 years) $9.98 (3 years) $14.95 (3 years)
Renewals $8.99/mo $21.95/mo $19.95/mo $19.95/mo $24.95/mo
View plan View plan View plan View plan
 
Chemicloud gtmetrix reportNamehero vs siteground feedbackSiteground to namehero support feedbackDivi with namehero
 
Chemicloud vs sitegroundChemicloud pro feedbackChemicloud speed ui supportSiteground vs chemicloud comparisonNamehero vs bluehost feedbackNamehero reviewSiteground to namehero scores

 
If you want a <100ms global TTFB, use Rocket.net.

Rocket. Net 100ms global ttfb

Keycdn global ttfb
KeyCDN tests TTFB in 10 locations

A <100ms TTFB makes a huge improvement to core web vitals since TTFB is 40% of LCP and is also part of FCP/INP. The reason they average 100ms is because it’s cloud hosting with better specs like 32 CPU cores/128GB RAM, NVMe, Redis, and LiteSpeed’s PHP. And since hosting/CDN are 2 key TTFB factors, their free Cloudflare Enterprise is a powerhouse for reducing TTFB with features like full page caching, Argo Smart Routing, and Mirage + Polish for image optimization.

Importance of ttfb
TTFB impacts LCP, FCP, and other core web vital metrics (source: Google)

Rocket.net launched in 2020 and are getting popular in Facebook groups because their performance runs circles around other cloud hosts like SiteGround Cloud, Cloudways, Kinsta, and WP Engine. If you have a global audience or WooCommerce site, you’re not going to beat them. They cost more than shared hosting and are definitely worth it if passing core web vitals is important to you. You can read my full review or test my own TTFB/web vitals. When you’re ready to experience what <100ms is like, they do $1 your 1st month + unlimited free migrations.

SiteGround Cloud Jump Start Plan Kinsta Starter Plan Cloudways Vultr HF (2GB) Rocket.net Starter Plan
Type Cloud Cloud (shared containers) Cloud Private cloud
Server Apache + Nginx Apache + Nginx Apache + Nginx Apache + Nginx
Nginx reverse proxy $50/mo
Cores/RAM 4 cores/8GB 12 cores/8GB 1 core/2GB 32 cores/128GB
Storage 40GB SATA 10GB SATA 64GB NVMe 10GB NVMe
Object cache Memcached $100/mo Redis Redis Pro Redis (Redis Pro on Business plan)
PHP processor FastCGI FastCGI FPM LiteSpeed
PHP workers Not listed, but common CPU limits 2 No limit No limit
Memory limit Adjustable 256MB Adjustable 1GB
Database MySQL MySQL MariaDB MariaDB
Bandwidth + visits 5TB/mo 25k/mo 2TB/mo 50GB + 250k/mo
CDN $14.99/mo SiteGround CDN Cloudflare APO + firewall rules (read) $5/mo Cloudflare Enterprise + challenge pages Free Cloudflare Enterprise (details)
CDN locations 176 285 285 285
Full page caching x
Smart routing Anycast x Argo Argo
Image optimization Limited x Mirage/Polish Mirage/Polish
DNS Blocked by Google (4 days) Amazon Route 53 $5/mo DNS Made Easy Cloudflare
Cache plugin SG Optimizer Use FlyingPress Breeze Use FlyingPress
Data centers 10 35 44 Served from Cloudflare’s edge
Control panel Site Tools MyKinsta Custom (difficult) Mission Control
Email hosting x x x
Support C B C A
Migrations $30/site Unlimited free 1 free + $25/site Unlimited free
TrustPilot rating 4.6/5 4.2/5 4.5/5 4.9/5
How it starts costing more High initial price, CPU limits, CDN, price increases, internal incidents PHP workers, add-ons, monthly visits, bandwidth, price increases CPU limits, CDN, backups, price increases Bandwidth
Monthly price $100 + CDN $29 when paying yearly + add-ons $30 + CDN $25 when paying yearly (no add-ons)
 Siteground to rocket. Net
 Rocket. Net woocommerce elementor
Namehero cloudways rocket. Net
ChemiCloud or NameHero for shared, Cloudways or Scala for cloud, Rocket.net for a <100ms global TTFB

Cheers,
Tom

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56 Comments...

  1. Garbage host. Much better to run your site on EC2 in AWS… very difficult to do anything with their clunky UI.

    And when your hosting runs out, they suspend your account so you’re unable to retrieve your db files. They hold that data hostage unless you pay them to reactivate. Shady company.

    Reply
  2. This hosting provider doesn’t seem to understand how important quality Minecraft servers are. We’ve had countless problems, and their technical team has never been able to resolve them properly. Even if the service doesn’t work, you won’t get your money back. We wouldn’t recommend this provider for anyone who wants reliable hosting for their game server.

    Reply
  3. We are currently hosted on Hostinger and – it doesn’t feel like it’s the worst thing under the sun, but it is lacking.

    Support has been hit or miss (response times are ok, they are very polite, sometimes they help, sometimes they are completely clueless).

    Performance has been an issue, higher traffic and CPU goes crazy, even though the app is heavily optimized. Your remarks about CPU and HDD are interesting and would explain a lot … can you please share what were your sources regarding HW that Hostinger uses? We use Cloud Hosting (Professional tier), I wonder if that still uses HDD or belong to those already migrated to SSD…

    We are currently looking into options where else to move

    Reply
    • They use SSDs on their cloud hosting (listed on their cloud hosting page). If they used NVMe, they would definitely list this like the rest of hosts who use it. Other things are listed on internal pages like this https://www.hostinger.com/tutorials/mariadb-vs-mysql

      It doesn’t paint the whole picture like which version of MariaDB they use, CPU GHz, etc. It’s more of “at a glance.” But I found if a host doesn’t list something critical like CPU GHz on their cloud hosting, it’s usually not good.

      Reply
  4. I made the mistake of subscribing to their “Titan Enterprise Email” plan, but there was no mention that you only get 1 email account with the plan. If you want an additional business email account, you have to fork out another $5.51, presumably added to your existing monthly subscription. Needless to say I won’t be seeking their services any longer.

    Reply

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