A VPS (Virtual Private Server) is a type of hosting where you get your own virtual server with dedicated resources, instead of sharing everything with many other websites.
Think of it like this:
- Shared Hosting = renting a room in a crowded apartment
- VPS Hosting = renting your own apartment inside a building
- Dedicated Server = owning the entire building
How VPS Works
A physical server is divided into multiple virtual servers using virtualization technology.
Each VPS gets:
- its own CPU resources
- RAM
- storage
- operating system
- root/admin access
So even though the hardware is shared, your VPS behaves almost like an independent server.
Why People Use VPS
Better Performance
Your website gets more stable resources.
Good for:
- growing traffic
- WordPress sites
- affiliate SEO websites
- WooCommerce stores
More Control
You can:
- install software
- configure server settings
- use custom applications
- access terminal/SSH
Better Security
Other users on the same machine affect you less compared to shared hosting.
Scalability
You can upgrade:
- CPU
- RAM
- storage
more easily as traffic grows.
VPS vs Shared Hosting
| Feature | Shared Hosting | VPS |
|---|---|---|
| Speed | Basic | Faster |
| Control | Limited | Full control |
| Security | Lower | Better |
| Cost | Cheap | Medium |
| Technical Skill | Beginner | Intermediate |
Types of VPS
Managed VPS
The hosting company handles:
- updates
- security
- server maintenance
Best for beginners.
Unmanaged VPS
You manage everything yourself.
Best for:
- developers
- sysadmins
- advanced users
Common VPS Uses
People use VPS for:
- hosting websites
- WordPress
- game servers
- VPNs
- automation tools like n8n
- Docker containers
- AI tools
- email servers
Popular VPS Providers
Some well-known VPS companies include:
- DigitalOcean
- Vultr
- Linode (Akamai)
- Contabo
- Cloudways
Simple Recommendation
Choose:
- Shared Hosting → if you’re starting your first small website
- VPS → when you need better speed, more traffic capacity, or full control
For affiliate SEO sites, many people upgrade to VPS once they reach:
- higher traffic,
- many WordPress plugins,
- or multiple websites on one server.

