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Vultr

33-region developer cloud with hourly billing, transparent pricing, and a 100% network SLA — DigitalOcean ergonomics with broader geographic reach

Pick when you want a DO-style developer experience but need a datacenter where DO doesn't (Mexico City, Stockholm, Manchester, Tel Aviv, Johannesburg). Avoid if you want raw price-per-resource (Hetzner wins), free DDoS at the L3/L4 level (paid $10/IP at Vultr), or a refund safety net — Vultr explicitly does not offer money-back.

76 AI-generated estimate This score is generated by AI based on multiple factors and is an estimation — it may not perfectly reflect reality. See the full breakdown below.
Trust score
Starts at
$2.50/mo
1 vCPU, 0.5 GB RAM, 10 GB SSD, 0.5 TB transfer (IPv6 only — IPv4 variant is $3.50/mo)
Datacenters
33
global locations
Uptime SLA
100%
Management
Unmanaged

Overview

Vultr is a privately-held US developer cloud that sits in the same competitive bracket as DigitalOcean and Akamai/Linode — KVM VPS on NVMe storage, hourly billing, an API-first control plane, and a Marketplace of one-click apps. It runs the largest geographic footprint of the three (33 cities across 6 continents as of 2026) with a flat $2.50/mo IPv6-only entry tier and a 100% uptime SLA on network and host node availability. The trade-offs: DDoS protection is a paid $10/mo per-IP add-on (not bundled like DO's free L3/L4), Trustpilot sentiment is mixed driven by aggressive fraud-check account suspensions on signup, support is ticket-only with no live chat or phone, and there is no refund policy — once you fund credit, all sales are final.

Trust score breakdown

Ease of Use 85/100

The Customer Portal is clean and DigitalOcean-class — one-screen instance creation, sensible defaults, real-time billing visibility, 60-second deploy times. vultr-cli, Terraform / Ansible / Packer providers, and a stable REST API cover IaC workflows. The Marketplace surfaces 80+ one-click apps including WordPress, Docker, OpenLiteSpeed, cPanel, Plesk, GitLab. Slightly less polish than DO and a smaller marketplace, but the overall onboarding-to-running-server experience is in the top tier.

Performance 75/100

High Performance and Optimized tiers run on modern AMD EPYC / Intel Xeon CPUs with NVMe SSD and up to 10 Gbps networking — VPSBenchmarks shows competitive Geekbench 6 scores (~1100-1300 single-core on High Performance AMD, ~1500+ on High Frequency Intel). The Regular tier is older hardware and trails noticeably. Long-standing community concerns about CPU steal and noisy neighbors persist on shared plans; performance also varies by datacenter (Tokyo and Frankfurt benchmarks differ on identical plans). Optimized Cloud Compute (dedicated vCPU) addresses this for production workloads.

Reliability 75/100

Vultr publishes a 100% uptime SLA on network and host node availability, with credits issued for breaches — strong on paper. Real-world track record is solid in the 12 years since 2014, but Trustpilot and LowEndTalk surface periodic regional issues (Sydney/Melbourne packet loss, Tokyo network instability, occasional control-plane outages) that don't always trigger SLA credits. DDoS attacks are explicitly excluded from the uptime guarantee, which matters since enhanced DDoS protection is a paid add-on rather than included by default.

Support Quality 65/100

Ticket-only support with no live chat or phone at any price tier — a clear gap vs DigitalOcean's $99 chat or Linode's included phone. 24/7 staffing exists for technical tickets and reported response times average 20-60 minutes, but Trustpilot is full of complaints about canned responses, slow billing-team handling, and difficulty getting account suspensions reviewed. Documentation is solid, the community forum is moderately active. Acceptable for self-sufficient developers, weak for anyone who expects to talk to a human in an incident.

Transparency 78/100

Pricing page is genuinely complete — every tier, every plan, hourly + monthly side by side, public bandwidth overage rate, public 100% SLA, public docs, public ToS. The biggest transparency knocks are: no money-back guarantee (all sales final, explicitly stated), aggressive fraud-detection that can suspend new accounts within 24 hours of signup with little explanation, and the SMTP-25-unblock policy that became more discretionary over time without a clear documented bar. Honest about what they charge, less honest about what's certain to be approved.

Value for Money 80/100

The $2.50/mo IPv6-only entry tier is the cheapest among credible developer clouds and a genuine differentiator for hobby projects. Flat-rate pricing with no first-term/renewal trickery, generous transfer allowances (0.5-15 TB), and a worldwide flat $0.01/GiB overage rate are honest. Hetzner still wins on raw resources-per-dollar for European workloads, and DDoS-as-paid-add-on adds $10/mo to anything public-facing — but for the geographic reach (33 cities), GPU access, and developer ergonomics, the price-to-value is strong.

Plans

Plan vCPU RAM Storage Transfer Monthly
Cloud Compute Regular 1 vCPU / 0.5 GB (IPv6) 1 0.50 GB 10 GB SSD 0.50 TB $2.50
Cloud Compute Regular 1 vCPU / 1 GB 1 1.00 GB 25 GB SSD 1.00 TB $5.00
Cloud Compute Regular 2 vCPU / 4 GB 2 4.00 GB 80 GB SSD 3.00 TB $20.00
High Performance AMD 1 vCPU / 1 GB 1 1.00 GB 25 GB NVMe 2.00 TB $6.00
High Performance AMD 2 vCPU / 4 GB 2 4.00 GB 100 GB NVMe 5.00 TB $24.00
High Performance AMD 4 vCPU / 8 GB 4 8.00 GB 180 GB NVMe 6.00 TB $48.00
High Frequency 1 vCPU / 2 GB 1 2.00 GB 64 GB NVMe 2.00 TB $12.00
High Frequency 2 vCPU / 4 GB 2 4.00 GB 128 GB NVMe 3.00 TB $24.00
Optimized Cloud Compute General Purpose 1 vCPU / 4 GB 1 4.00 GB 30 GB NVMe 4.00 TB $30.00
Optimized Cloud Compute CPU-Optimized 2 vCPU / 4 GB 2 4.00 GB 50 GB NVMe 5.00 TB $40.00
Optimized Cloud Compute Memory-Optimized 1 vCPU / 8 GB 1 8.00 GB 50 GB NVMe 5.00 TB $40.00

$2.50-$640/mo Cloud Compute (Regular/High Performance/High Frequency), $28-$3,840/mo Optimized Cloud Compute, VX1 hourly-only from $0.060/hr (~$44/mo) — flat-rate, hourly billing rounded up, no first-term/renewal split

Performance & infrastructure

Storage
NVMe SSD on High Performance / High Frequency / Optimized / VX1; SSD on Regular tier
Network
Up to 10 Gbps on High Performance and Optimized tiers; 1-2 Gbps typical on Regular tier
DDoS protection
Paid add-on
IPv6
Included
Uptime SLA
100%
Control panel
Vultr Customer Portal (own); vultr-cli; Terraform / Ansible / Packer providers; cPanel and Plesk available as paid Marketplace add-ons
Root access
Yes
Management
Unmanaged

Capabilities at a glance

GPU instances
Vultr Cloud GPU offers NVIDIA HGX H100 (8-GPU clusters from ~$2.99/GPU/hr on-demand), H200, GB200, L40S, A100, A40, A16, plus AMD MI300X. Fractional GPU plans available on A100/A40/A16. 1-year and multi-year reserved pricing offers significant discounts; bulk cluster reservations also available. Hourly billing, deploy in 60 seconds.
Free tier
No always-free tier. The closest equivalent is the periodic $300 / 30-day signup credit promotion (formerly $100), which is one-time and expires if unused. Not comparable to Oracle Always Free or AWS Lightsail's recurring free allowances.
Windows OS
Windows Server licensed per-instance with a separate ~$16/mo surcharge added on top of the Linux plan price. Larger instances scale higher. Available on Cloud Compute and Bare Metal.
macOS
ARM CPU
No ARM/Ampere/Graviton instances as of April 2026. All Vultr Cloud Compute is x86_64 (Intel Xeon, AMD EPYC). Pick Hetzner CAX, AWS Graviton, or Oracle Ampere if you need ARM economics.
Hourly billing
Pay-as-you-go available
Crypto payment
Accepts crypto
No setup fees
No setup fees, no minimum commitment. Hourly billing rounded up to the next full hour, capped at the monthly rate (672 hours/month for standard instances, 730 hours/month for GPU and VX1 plans).
Bandwidth: Metered with overage billing
0.5 TB to 15 TB outbound included by plan, plus a 2 TB monthly free-egress allowance pooled across all your instances. Overage billed at a flat $0.01/GiB worldwide (no regional premium). Inbound is always free. Unused allowance does not carry over month to month.

SMTP port 25 (outbound mail)

UNBLOCK ON REQUEST

Vultr blocks outbound SMTP port 25 on all new accounts to prevent spam abuse. The block can be lifted by opening a support ticket — but approval is discretionary and the documented requirement is roughly 60 days of normal account usage in good standing before they will review the request. Newer reports on emailwiz/Mail-in-a-Box forums indicate Vultr has become more reluctant to unblock for hobby/self-hosted mail use cases compared to a few years ago. If self-hosted mail is non-negotiable, validate the unblock works on a fresh account before committing — or pick a provider with documented same-day unblocking like Hetzner or OVH.

Source

Datacenter locations

ZA Johannesburg, South Africa
IN Bangalore, India
IN Delhi NCR, India
IN Mumbai, India
IL Tel Aviv, Israel
JP Osaka, Japan
JP Tokyo, Japan
SG Singapore, Singapore
KR Seoul, South Korea
FR Paris, France
DE Frankfurt, Germany
IT Milan, Italy
NL Amsterdam, Netherlands
PL Warsaw, Poland
ES Madrid, Spain
SE Stockholm, Sweden
GB London, United Kingdom
GB Manchester, United Kingdom
CA Toronto, Canada
MX Mexico City, Mexico
US Atlanta, United States
US Chicago, United States
US Dallas, United States
US Honolulu, United States
US Los Angeles, United States
US Miami, United States
US New York Area, United States
US San Francisco Bay Area, United States
US Seattle, United States
AU Melbourne, Australia
AU Sydney, Australia
BR São Paulo, Brazil
CL Santiago, Chile

Support

24/7 ticket (technical) email billing M-F 9-5 GMT-5

Response SLA: No published SLA. User reports cluster around 20-60 minutes for technical tickets; billing tickets occasionally take 1-2 business days. Quality varies per Trustpilot reviews.

No live chat and no phone support at any tier — ticket-based only. This is the biggest support-experience gap vs DigitalOcean (which sells 24/7 chat at $99/mo) or Linode (which includes phone support). Documentation and the Vultr Docs site are reasonably comprehensive; the Vultr Discussions community forum is moderately active.

OS & apps

Supported OS

Ubuntu Debian Rocky Linux AlmaLinux FreeBSD OpenBSD Fedora Fedora CoreOS VzLinux Windows Server

One-click apps

WordPress Docker LAMP LEMP OpenLiteSpeed cPanel Plesk Joomla Drupal GitLab Plex Pi-hole Node.js

What to watch out for in pricing

  • Bandwidth overage billed at $0.01/GiB worldwide (no regional surcharge). Each instance ships with included outbound transfer (0.5 TB to 15 TB depending on plan) plus a 2 TB free-egress monthly allowance pooled across all your instances. Excess outbound is billed at a flat $0.01/GiB regardless of region — Vultr explicitly does not charge premium rates for Asia or LATAM the way some competitors do. Inbound is free. Unused bandwidth does not carry over month to month.
  • DDoS protection is a paid add-on, not bundled. Cloud Compute instances ship with basic upstream filtering only. Enhanced DDoS Protection (10 Gbps Layer 3/4 mitigation, ~60-second activation) costs $10/mo per protected IP and must be enabled per-instance during deployment. By contrast, DigitalOcean and Hetzner include free L3/L4 DDoS scrubbing on every Droplet/Cloud server. Budget the surcharge if you're hosting public services that attract attacks.
  • Backups add 20% on top of instance price. Automatic weekly backups cost 20% of the instance's hourly/monthly rate. Snapshots are billed separately at $0.05/GB/month. Cheap in absolute terms, but easy to forget on the $2.50 entry tier where the surcharge is nearly half a dollar a month.
  • Windows Server license is a separate ~$16/mo surcharge. Linux is included in the base plan price; Windows Server is licensed per-instance and added on top. The exact surcharge varies by plan (smaller instances ~$16/mo, larger instances scale up). cPanel and Plesk control panels are also charged separately.
  • No money-back guarantee — all sales final. Vultr's Terms of Service explicitly state that payments and pre-loaded credits are non-refundable. Cancelling a pre-paid plan does not return remaining funds. The closest thing to a free trial is the periodic $300 / 30-day signup credit promotion (was $100 historically) — it expires and converts to nothing if unused. Compare to providers offering a 30-day refund window if you need a clean exit.

Known pitfalls

  • Aggressive fraud detection can suspend new accounts on signup

    Vultr enforces strict fraud checks on new sign-ups, and Trustpilot has a steady stream of complaints from users whose accounts were suspended within 24 hours of funding — sometimes with promotional credit confiscated, sometimes after a document verification request. Reviews indicate this hits VPN/proxy users, payment cards from regions Vultr considers high-risk, and accounts that don't match name-on-card to ID document. If you're signing up from outside the US/EU, fund with a card matching your verified name, expect a manual review, and don't pre-load more credit than you're willing to wait on.

    Source
  • DDoS protection is a paid add-on, not bundled like at DO/Hetzner

    Cloud Compute instances ship without enhanced DDoS protection. Enabling it costs $10/mo per protected IP and provides 10 Gbps Layer 3/4 mitigation with ~60-second activation. Without it, the network drops malicious traffic at the upstream level only — and DDoS attacks against your instance are explicitly excluded from the 100% uptime SLA. DigitalOcean and Hetzner both bundle equivalent L3/L4 scrubbing for free. Budget $10/IP/mo extra on anything public-facing if you choose Vultr.

    Source
  • Port 25 unblock has become discretionary and slow

    Outbound SMTP on port 25 is blocked by default. Unblocking requires a support ticket and Vultr's documented bar is 60 days of normal account usage in good standing — but recent self-hosted-mail community reports (emailwiz, Mail-in-a-Box forum) indicate they have become reluctant to unblock for hobby use cases compared to a few years ago. Don't pick Vultr if Mailcow / Mail-in-a-Box / a Postfix relay is your primary use case unless you've validated the unblock works on a test account. Hetzner and OVH document a same-day path.

    Source
  • Ticket-only support with no live chat or phone

    Vultr has no live chat and no phone support at any tier — every support interaction goes through a web ticket. 24/7 staffing exists for technical tickets and response times average 20-60 minutes, but Trustpilot complaints cluster on canned responses, slow billing-team handling, and difficulty escalating account-suspension reviews. If you expect to talk to a human during an incident, DO ($99/mo Standard chat) or Linode (free phone support) are better fits.

    Source
  • No money-back guarantee — all credit is non-refundable

    Vultr's Terms of Service explicitly state that all payments and pre-loaded credits are final and non-refundable, including remaining balance after cancellation. The closest equivalent to a trial is the periodic $300 / 30-day signup credit promotion, which expires unused. If you need a clean exit window, pick a provider with a documented 30-day refund policy and evaluate Vultr only after low-stakes proof-of-concept.

    Source
  • CPU steal and noisy-neighbor reports on shared Cloud Compute

    LowEndTalk and dev community threads going back several years and continuing into 2025-2026 report intermittent CPU steal and disk-latency spikes on shared Regular and High Performance plans, region-dependent. The mitigation is to monitor steal time with monit/Netdata and request migration to a less-loaded host node — Vultr support will move you. For production workloads where consistency matters, jump to Optimized Cloud Compute (dedicated AMD EPYC vCPU) or High Frequency rather than the shared tiers.

    Source

Community pulse

Sentiment in early 2026 is bimodal. The technical developer crowd (Hacker News, r/sysadmin, r/selfhosted, LowEndTalk) generally rates Vultr positively — 33 regions, hourly billing, $2.50 entry tier, and a clean API that mirrors DigitalOcean's are repeatedly cited as strengths. The complaint pattern in this group is narrow and consistent: noisy-neighbor CPU steal on Regular plans, regional inconsistency, port 25 unblock getting harder, and DDoS protection costing extra. Trustpilot and consumer-review sites paint a much rougher picture — account suspensions on signup, promotional-credit clawback, slow ticket support, and aggressive fraud detection drive the negative reviews and pull the public Trustpilot rating well below the technical reputation. The split tracks who's reviewing: power users who pre-fund their account get good service; first-time signups from non-Western payment regions hit the fraud-check wall.

Last full audit: April 27, 2026

Founded 2014 — 12 years in business · Based in West Palm Beach, Florida, USA