While Eurohost’s website doesn’t say when it was established, the copyright notice suggests that this Estonian company started (or stopped) operating in 2016. You can switch the website between the English and Russian languages, to see the offered services that include shared hosting, VPS, domain services, SSL certificates, and a few more things.
Features and Ease of Use
Eurohost offers four shared hosting packages (named Pico, Nano, Mega, and Giga) and three VPS packages, but you can’t purchase virtual servers directly from the website, so you have to contact the company — if you can — instead.
The shared hosting packages, which you can buy online, come with:
- 99.9% uptime guarantee
- 200 MB to 50 GB storage
- 2 GB to 500 GB traffic
- Unlimited websites
- cPanel control panel
- Unlimited databases
- Unlimited emails
- HTTP/2
- Free spam filters and antivirus
Hosting packages provide Edge Side Includes (ESI) for enhanced availability and performance, and SPDY support for faster page loading. These inclusions are interesting because the first one is rarely mentioned on hosting websites, and the second one was deprecated by Google in 2016 (which is when Eurohost’s website is dated).
Two of the VPS packages include a free SSL certificate to secure your website. For e-commerce, you can use Eurohost’s Zendesk subscription to service your customers. And for a WordPress website, the WP-Rocket plugin will make your content load much faster.
Pricing and Support
Eurohost offers dirt-cheap shared hosting packages that can be paid for in euros through bank transfer or PayPal, with the option for monthly or annual billing cycles. The Mega and Giga packages allow yearly billing. It’s worth noting that there is no money-back guarantee (as far as I can see), so if you’re not completely satisfied, there might not be an option to get out early.
Contact Eurohost’s customer support team by telephone, ticket, email, or online contact form, but bear in mind that my contact form submissions seemed to fall on deaf ears. If you have to resort to self-support, you’ll be just as disappointed because the knowledge base is bare: