Best Web Hosting in Colombia (2026): 12 Providers Ranked by Where Servers Actually Sit
AWS switched on its Bogotá Local Zone (zone name us-east-1-bog-1a), and most hosting guides still tell Colombian buyers their only realistic option is a box in Miami. That advice aged badly. Colombia runs more submarine cables to the United States than Brazil does, Bogotá holds roughly 80% of the country's data centers, and a Tier IV facility in Tocancipá now serves local visitors in single-digit milliseconds. This guide ranks 12 hosts by three things that move the needle for a Colombian site: where the server physically lives, what you pay at renewal (not just the promo), and whether you can settle the bill in pesos.
Quick answer: For a budget Colombian site, Hostinger (São Paulo data center, peso billing) is the value pick. If you need data on Colombian soil with a certified facility, HostDime Colombia runs the only Tier IV building in the country. For managed WordPress, Kinsta wins thanks to its Santiago region, the closest mainstream data center to Bogotá.
Jump to: SiteGround · Hostinger · Kinsta · Cloudways · Apex Hosting · ASPHostPortal · Latinoamerica Hosting · Onlive Server · HostDime Colombia · UltaHost · ColombiaHosting · WinkHosting
Last reviewed: May 2026. Prices and features verified.
How We Selected These Providers
Ranking hosting for Colombia means refusing to treat "LATAM coverage" as a checkbox. Plenty of global hosts slap a Cloudflare node on a US server and call it regional. We didn't. The heaviest weight went to server geography: a real data center in Colombia scored highest, a São Paulo or Santiago region scored well, and US-only origins lost points unless the host offered something a Colombian buyer genuinely needs (Windows stacks, game servers, managed WordPress).
Second came pricing honesty. We pulled entry AND renewal figures from official pages and flagged any host that hides the renewal rate. A plan that triples at renewal got marked down against one that holds flat. Third, we checked for Spanish-language support and Colombian peso (COP) billing, since a Bogotá business shouldn't have to argue with a chatbot in English about a dollar invoice.
What we did not do: run synthetic load tests or claim months of hands-on use. Pricing for two local hosts (ColombiaHosting, and some HostDime tiers) isn't published without reaching checkout, so we say so rather than guess. Sources were official provider pages, the AWS infrastructure registry, Colombian data-protection statutes, and aggregated user reviews. Where a renewal price couldn't be confirmed, you'll see it called out.
| Hosting Provider | Reviews | Overall Rating | Cheap Plans from |
|---|---|---|---|
1 SiteGround
|
29.1k+ |
|
$3.41 / mo. NOW -81% |
2 Hostinger
|
63.2k+ |
|
$1.95 / mo. 80% Off |
3 Kinsta
|
1k+ |
|
No data / mo. |
4 Cloudways
|
3.4k+ |
|
$11.00 / mo. |
5 Apex Hosting
|
742 |
|
No data / mo. |
6 ASPHostPortal.com
|
510 |
|
$1.00 / mo. |
7 Latinoamerica Hosting Colombia
|
10 |
|
$1.55 / mo. |
8 Onlive Server
|
176 |
|
$2.00 / mo. |
9 Ultahost
|
854 |
|
$3.80 / mo. Flash Sale -40% |
1. SiteGround
29.1k+
4.8
Positive
Positive
| Storage | Bandwidth | Panel | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 GB | Unlimited | cPanel | $3.41 / mo. | View Plan |
| 20 GB | Unlimited | cPanel | $5.69 / mo. | View Plan |
| 40 GB | Unlimited | cPanel | $9.11 / mo. | View Plan |
SiteGround – Best for managed shared hosting with no local data center
Start with the bad news, because it matters here: SiteGround has no data center anywhere in South America. Your dynamic requests route to Google Cloud in the United States, with Dallas and Los Angeles the nearest origins to Bogotá. São Paulo exists in their network only as a Cloudflare CDN edge, which caches static files but does nothing for the database calls behind a logged-in WooCommerce cart.
So why include it? Because the managed layer is good, and a chunk of Colombian buyers care more about hands-off WordPress than raw latency. SiteGround's caching (SuperCacher), daily backups, and staging are cleaner than most budget hosts bother with. The free Cloudflare integration does shave load times for Colombian visitors fetching cached images.
The pricing, though, is the part most reviews soft-pedal. Entry is USD 2.99/month on a 12-month upfront term, and renewal jumps to USD 17.99/month. That renewal is 2.3x what Hostinger charges to renew its São Paulo plan, and Hostinger actually has a closer server. If latency to Colombia is your priority, you're paying SiteGround a premium for a worse geographic position.
- Pros: clean managed WordPress tooling, free CDN, daily backups, real 30-day refund
- Cons: no South American server, renewal hits USD 17.99/month, no COP billing
Pricing: USD 2.99/month intro (12 months upfront), renewal USD 17.99/month. CDN and SSL included; email included.
Best for: Colombian agencies managing client WordPress sites who value tooling over milliseconds. Skip if: your traffic is local and latency-sensitive.
Verdict: Choose SiteGround if you run managed WordPress for clients and treat the US origin as acceptable. If your audience is overwhelmingly Colombian, don't: Hostinger gives you São Paulo at a third of the renewal, and Kinsta gives you Santiago if budget allows.
2. Hostinger
63.2k+
4.6
Positive
Positive
| Storage | Bandwidth | Panel | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100 GB | Unlimited | cPanel | $1.95 / mo. | View Plan |
| 200 GB | Unlimited | cPanel | $2.95 / mo. | View Plan |
| 200 GB | Unlimited | cPanel | $3.49 / mo. | View Plan |
Hostinger – Best budget pick with São Paulo and peso billing
Picture a Bogotá small-business owner with a 15,000-visitor WordPress site and a budget under USD 10 a month. That's the buyer Hostinger fits better than anyone here. It runs a real São Paulo data center (not a CDN node), it has a dedicated Colombian storefront at hostinger.com/co, it bills in pesos, and its support answers in Spanish.
São Paulo sits roughly 50 to 70 ms from Bogotá, against the 40 to 70 ms you'd see hitting a US-East box, so the gap is modest, but Hostinger's NVMe storage and LiteSpeed stack make the practical page loads quick. For a content site or a small store, this is the sweet spot of price and proximity.
Here's the honest part. The headline rate needs a 48-month commitment, and renewal lands around USD 7.99 to 11/month depending on plan, roughly 3 to 5x the promo. That's still far gentler than SiteGround's 6x jump, and a São Paulo origin beats SiteGround's US routing for your visitors. For more on the region around it, our Brazil hosting guide covers the same São Paulo facilities in depth.
- Pros: real São Paulo data center, COP billing, Spanish support, NVMe + LiteSpeed
- Cons: 48-month term for best price, renewal 3 to 5x intro, no server inside Colombia
Pricing: from USD 2.99/month (48-month term), renewal roughly USD 7.99 to 11/month. 30-day money-back. Free SSL, email, weekly or daily backups by plan.
Best for: budget Colombian sites and small stores wanting the closest mainstream server plus peso billing. Skip if: you need data physically in Colombia for procurement or compliance reasons.
Verdict: Buy Hostinger if you want the cheapest credible option with a South American server and Spanish billing. If you need Colombian soil, go HostDime instead; if you want zero renewal surprises, Kinsta holds its price flat where Hostinger climbs.
3. Kinsta
1k+
4.8
Positive
Positive
Kinsta – Best managed WordPress, only host here with Santiago
USD 35/month, flat, forever. No promo, no renewal trap. That single fact reframes how you read Kinsta against everyone cheaper on this page. SiteGround starts at USD 2.99 and renews at USD 17.99; Kinsta starts and stays at USD 35/month, so by year two the gap is smaller than the sticker suggests, and Kinsta gives you something none of the budget hosts can: a Google Cloud region in Santiago, Chile.
Santiago is geographically the closest mainstream data center to Colombia, and Kinsta also offers São Paulo. Both ride Google Cloud's premium network, which Kinsta says cuts regional round-trip latency sharply versus US origins. You also get edge caching, free CDN, staging, and genuinely fast support. Our Chile hosting guide digs into that Santiago region if you want the latency picture for the Southern Cone.
The trade-off is obvious: this is managed WordPress only. No cPanel, no generic PHP hosting, no email accounts. And it bills in USD, not pesos. For a 25,000-visit business site where downtime costs real money, that's fine. For a hobby blog, it's overkill.
- Pros: flat USD 35 renewal, Santiago + São Paulo regions, Google Cloud network, strong support
- Cons: WordPress only, no email, USD billing, pricey entry
Pricing: USD 35/month (Starter, 1 site, 25,000 visits), no renewal increase. Annual billing saves about two months. 30-day money-back.
Best for: Colombian businesses on WordPress that want the closest server and predictable cost. Skip if: you need cPanel, email, or a sub-USD-10 bill.
Verdict: Pick Kinsta if managed WordPress plus Santiago latency justifies USD 35/month for you. If price rules the decision, Hostinger at a third the cost with São Paulo is the call; if you want general hosting with cPanel, look at UltaHost or the local hosts below.
4. Cloudways
3.4k+
4.5
Positive
Positive
| Storage | Bandwidth | Panel | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 GB | 1 TB | cPanel | $11.00 / mo. | View Plan |
Cloudways – Best for agencies, but read the São Paulo fine print
Cloudways gets recommended for Latin America constantly, and the recommendation usually skips the part that matters. The cheap entry plan (DigitalOcean or Vultr, USD 14/month for 1 GB RAM) does not include the São Paulo region. To put a server in São Paulo through Cloudways, you pick the AWS backend, and that tier starts around USD 38 to 39/month. So the "USD 14 LATAM host" framing is misleading.
What you actually get is a managed control layer over five clouds, billed hourly with no contract and no renewal hike. The price you start at is the price you keep, which beats SiteGround's climb to USD 17.99. On the cheap DigitalOcean tier you can deploy to Miami for decent Colombian latency, just not São Paulo. For a developer or agency comfortable choosing infrastructure, that flexibility is the draw.
There's no money-back guarantee, only a 3-day free trial. For comparison, Hostinger and Kinsta both give 30 days. So you commit faster here, which is a real downside if you're testing fit.
- Pros: five cloud backends, flat hourly pricing, no contract, Miami option on cheap tier
- Cons: São Paulo only on USD 38+ AWS tier, no money-back, USD billing, no managed email
Pricing: from USD 14/month (DigitalOcean/Vultr), São Paulo via AWS from about USD 38 to 39/month. No renewal increase; 3-day trial only.
Best for: technical agencies wanting to hand-pick a cloud and region for Colombian clients. Skip if: you want São Paulo cheaply or need a refund window.
Verdict: Choose Cloudways if you're technical and want multi-cloud control with a Miami or São Paulo option. If you just want a cheap São Paulo site without the AWS markup, Hostinger at USD 7.99 renewal beats the USD 38 Cloudways AWS tier handily.
5. Apex Hosting
742
4.7
Positive
Positive
Apex Hosting – Best (and only) game-server option here
Apex isn't a website host, and pretending otherwise would mislead you. It's a Minecraft and game-server specialist, included because Colombian gaming communities ask about it constantly and the latency math is brutal for them. Apex runs nodes in the US and EU, with no South American location confirmed, so a Bogotá player connects to a US server with all the lag that implies for real-time play.
For what it does, the product is good. Unlimited player slots and storage on every plan, instant setup, a one-click modpack installer, and automated backups. The 2 GB plan runs USD 5.99/month intro and renews at USD 7.99/month. That renewal undercuts Onlive Server's USD 9/month VPS entry, though Onlive at least has a São Paulo option for players who'd rather self-host a game server closer to home. Our game server hosting guide compares the broader field if ping is your dealbreaker.
The refund window is tight at 7 days from server creation, against the 30 days most web hosts here offer. Test your modpack fast.
- Pros: unlimited slots and storage, one-click modpacks, instant setup, USD 7.99 renewal stays low
- Cons: no South American node, US latency for Colombian players, 7-day refund only
Pricing: 2 GB plan USD 5.99/month intro, USD 7.99/month renewal. Larger modpack tiers USD 20 to 50/month. 7-day money-back.
Best for: Colombian Minecraft communities that accept US latency for Apex's ease of use. Skip if: low ping is non-negotiable.
Verdict: Pick Apex if you want the simplest managed Minecraft setup and can live with US-routed ping. If latency to Colombia is the whole point, a São Paulo VPS from Onlive Server or a self-managed box at UltaHost Bogotá will serve players better.
6. ASPHostPortal.com
510
4.6
Positive
Positive
| Storage | Bandwidth | Panel | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 GB | 10.04 GB | cPanel | $1.00 / mo. |
| 5 GB | 14.95 GB | cPanel | $2.00 / mo. |
| 5 GB | 659.97 GB | cPanel | $3.81 / mo. |
ASPHostPortal – Best for Windows and .NET workloads
Most hosts on this page run Linux. ASPHostPortal is here for the Colombian developer who needs Windows, ASP.NET Core, and SQL Server, which is a real underserved niche. It supports ASP.NET Core 10.0 and current .NET builds, and offers a free trial, both rare in this corner of the market.
The geography is the weak spot. ASPHostPortal lists 12 data centers across the US, Europe, Asia, and Australia, with the nearest to Colombia being Washington or Seattle. There's no Latin American facility, so a Bogotá .NET app pays a US-latency tax. If your users are internal or your app is async, that's tolerable; for a customer-facing Windows site, less so.
Entry pricing advertises from USD 0.99/month, but that rate leans on long quarterly or multi-year terms, and the renewal rate isn't published, which we won't pretend to know. For context, UltaHost's Linux shared entry sits near USD 2.80/month with a documented renewal, so ASPHostPortal's headline looks cheaper but is harder to verify over the full term.
- Pros: real Windows / ASP.NET stack, SQL Server, free trial, 12 global locations
- Cons: no LATAM data center, renewal price unpublished, Windows-only niche, English support
Pricing: from USD 0.99/month (longer terms for best rate); renewal not published. 30-day money-back (setup fee excluded).
Best for: Colombian teams running .NET or SQL Server apps that need true Windows hosting. Skip if: you run WordPress or PHP, where cheaper Linux hosts with closer servers win.
Verdict: Choose ASPHostPortal only if a Windows/.NET stack is a hard requirement. For anything PHP or WordPress, the US latency and opaque renewal make it the wrong tool; Hostinger or UltaHost serve Colombian Linux sites better and closer.
7. Latinoamerica Hosting Colombia
10
3.9
Positive
Positive
| Storage | Bandwidth | Panel | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 GB | 199.99 GB | cPanel | $1.55 / mo. |
| 30 GB | 300.03 GB | cPanel | $3.31 / mo. |
| 50 GB | 500.02 GB | cPanel | $4.86 / mo. |
Latinoamerica Hosting – Best in-country shared host on a budget
Want a Colombian company, Colombian servers, Spanish support, and peso billing in one package? This Medellín-based host (operating since 2007) is the value answer. Its servers sit in Colombia, so local visitors get the kind of single-digit latency no São Paulo or US option can match. Every plan ships 2 vCPU and 4 GB RAM, free SSL, thrice-weekly backups with long retention, and free cPanel migration.
Pricing is where it surprises. The H1 plan is COP 90,000/year (about USD 22), which works out near USD 1.85/month equivalent. Compare that to HostDime's VPS Cloud at roughly COP 31,680/month (about USD 8): for a standard website, Latinoamerica Hosting is close to 4x cheaper per year while still keeping your data on Colombian soil. That's a strong combination for a small local business.
The honest limits: this is a regional player, not a global brand, so the network has less geographic redundancy outside Colombia, and pricing shows in COP only (no native USD view). For a Colombian-audience site, none of that hurts you. For a business serving the wider region from one box, it might.
- Pros: servers in Colombia, COP billing, Spanish support, free migration, COP 90,000/year entry
- Cons: small network, limited non-Colombia redundancy, COP-only pricing, lighter brand recognition
Pricing: H1 COP 90,000/year (about USD 22), tiers up to COP 350,000/year. 30-day satisfaction guarantee.
Best for: Colombian small businesses and bloggers wanting in-country hosting at the lowest local price. Skip if: you serve a multi-country LATAM audience needing distributed infrastructure.
Verdict: Buy Latinoamerica Hosting if your visitors are in Colombia and you want local servers without enterprise pricing. If you need certified Tier IV infrastructure for compliance, step up to HostDime; if you serve the whole region, Kinsta's dual South American regions fit better.
8. Onlive Server
176
4.7
Positive
Positive
| Storage | Bandwidth | Panel | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 GB | Unlimited | cPanel | $2.00 / mo. |
| 2 GB | Unlimited | cPanel | $3.00 / mo. |
| 60 GB | Unlimited | cPanel | $5.00 / mo. |
Onlive Server – Cheap VPS, but verify before you trust it
Onlive Server markets a "Colombia VPS," and the first thing worth knowing is that the dedicated Colombia product page returns a 404. There's no Colombia data center behind it. What Onlive actually offers Colombian buyers is a São Paulo (Brazil) region, its best Americas option, plus US and Canada nodes. São Paulo gives reasonable LATAM latency, so it's not useless, just not local.
VPS pricing starts at USD 9/month standard, with location-specific promos advertised as low as USD 3.60 elsewhere (not Colombia). At USD 9, it's pricier than Hostinger's São Paulo shared renewal of USD 7.99, and Hostinger gives you peso billing and Spanish support that Onlive doesn't. The renewal rate is published nowhere, a real transparency gap.
Support runs out of India in English, payments include crypto and PayPal, and the broad global footprint (30-plus locations) is the genuine selling point. Just treat the cheap headline rates as promos that likely rise, and don't expect a Colombian experience.
- Pros: São Paulo region, 30+ global locations, crypto/PayPal payments, low entry rate
- Cons: no Colombia server (page 404s), renewal unpublished, English-only support, no COP billing
Pricing: VPS from USD 9/month; promo rates elsewhere from USD 3.60. Renewal not published. 7-day guarantee confirmed on some regions only.
Best for: technical buyers wanting a cheap São Paulo VPS who'll verify terms at checkout. Skip if: you want transparency, Spanish support, or genuine Colombian hosting.
Verdict: Consider Onlive only if you want a bargain São Paulo VPS and will confirm renewal yourself. For a managed Colombian experience, Latinoamerica Hosting at COP 90,000/year is local and transparent; for budget São Paulo with support, Hostinger wins.
HostDime Colombia – Best for certified Colombian-soil infrastructure
One number defines HostDime here: it owns and operates the only Uptime Institute Tier IV certified data center inside Colombia, a 70,000-square-foot, 800-rack, 6 MW facility in Tocancipá near Bogotá, also rated ICREA Level V. No other provider on this page can claim certified Colombian soil. For a business that needs data residency, real local latency, and a 99.999% SLA, that's the entire argument.
VPS Cloud starts around COP 31,680/month (about USD 8), with dedicated servers and colocation above that. Against Latinoamerica Hosting's COP 90,000/year, HostDime costs roughly 4x more annually, and that premium buys certification, SLA guarantees, and enterprise support a budget shared host simply doesn't offer. You're paying for the building, not just the bytes.
Who shouldn't bother? Bloggers and tiny sites. There's no cheap shared tier, no consumer-style money-back guarantee (the 99.999% SLA replaces it), and the whole operation is built for businesses that treat downtime as a line-item cost. Support is 24/7 in Spanish with real engineers, and pricing shows in pesos.
- Pros: Tier IV Bogotá data center, 99.999% SLA, Spanish engineers, COP billing, true data residency
- Cons: no cheap shared plan, no money-back guarantee, enterprise focus, management overhead
Pricing: VPS Cloud from COP 31,680/month (about USD 8); dedicated and colocation higher. No consumer refund; backed by SLA.
Best for: Colombian companies needing certified local infrastructure, data residency, or hard uptime guarantees. Skip if: you run a small site on a tight budget.
Verdict: Choose HostDime if Colombian-soil certification and a 99.999% SLA are real requirements for your business. If you just want local servers cheaply, Latinoamerica Hosting is 4x less per year; if you want managed WordPress, Kinsta's Santiago region is the better tool.
9. Ultahost
854
4.6
Positive
Positive
| Storage | Bandwidth | Panel | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30 GB | Unlimited | cPanel | $3.80 / mo. | View Plan |
| 60 GB | Unlimited | cPanel | $4.80 / mo. | View Plan |
| 80 GB | Unlimited | cPanel | $8.80 / mo. | View Plan |
UltaHost – Best budget VPS with a Bogotá option and flat renewal
Where SiteGround climbs from USD 2.99 to USD 17.99 at renewal, UltaHost holds close to its entry rate, and that's the reason it earns a spot. Shared hosting starts near USD 2.80/month on a three-year term and renews around USD 3.80/month, a small bump instead of a 6x leap. For a buyer who hates renewal traps, that pricing discipline matters more than the headline number.
UltaHost also markets a Bogotá data center for its VPS Colombia product, with NVMe storage, so you can get local-ish latency without committing to a purely local brand. One caveat we'll be straight about: whether the cheapest shared plans actually deploy to the Bogotá facility isn't confirmed, and that distinction is worth checking before you buy if latency is the goal.
It bills in USD, not pesos, and Spanish-language support isn't confirmed, so it's less "Colombian" than Latinoamerica Hosting or HostDime despite the Bogotá VPS marketing. For a price-sensitive buyer who wants flat renewals and an international brand, though, it's a sensible middle ground.
- Pros: flat-ish renewal near USD 3.80, Bogotá VPS option, NVMe, 30-day refund
- Cons: USD billing only, Spanish support unconfirmed, cheap tiers' server location unclear
Pricing: shared from USD 2.80/month (3-year term), renewal about USD 3.80/month; VPS Colombia priced higher. 30-day money-back.
Best for: budget buyers who want predictable renewals and an optional Bogotá VPS. Skip if: peso billing or guaranteed in-country shared hosting is essential.
Verdict: Pick UltaHost if flat renewal pricing and a Bogotá VPS option appeal and you don't need peso billing. If you want a confirmed Colombian operation, Latinoamerica Hosting bills in COP and runs local servers; for certified residency, HostDime is the answer.
ColombiaHosting – Best Colombian-branded shared host (if you check the price)
ColombiaHosting hides its prices behind checkout, and that's the first thing to flag honestly. The exact COP plan figures aren't published on the site, so we won't invent them. What is verifiable: it's a genuine Colombian company (not a reseller) running its own LiteSpeed servers, with free SSL, cPanel, a free domain for the first year on annual plans, and Spanish support over WhatsApp and phone.
The headline draw is the guarantee. ColombiaHosting offers a 60-day money-back window, double the 30 days from SiteGround, Hostinger, and Kinsta, though still shy of WinkHosting's 90 days. That long trial reduces the risk of the opaque pricing somewhat, since you can sign up, test real performance, and bail if it disappoints.
One thing the site doesn't clearly confirm is whether servers physically sit in Colombia; the data-center language is vague ("strategic zones"). For a buyer who wants a local company and Spanish billing, it delivers. For one who specifically needs Colombian-soil hosting, the lack of confirmation is a reason to ask before paying.
- Pros: Colombian company, LiteSpeed servers, 60-day guarantee, free domain year one, WhatsApp support
- Cons: prices not public, server location unconfirmed, renewal opaque
Pricing: not published without reaching checkout (Colombian market shared plans typically run COP 89,900 to 499,900/year). 60-day money-back.
Best for: buyers wanting a local Colombian brand with a long trial and LiteSpeed. Skip if: you need upfront pricing or confirmed in-country servers.
Verdict: Choose ColombiaHosting if a 60-day trial and a local brand outweigh the pricing opacity. If you want published peso prices, Latinoamerica Hosting shows them openly; if you want the longest safety net, WinkHosting's 90 days beats it.
WinkHosting – Best refund window of any host here
Ninety days. That's WinkHosting's money-back guarantee, and it's the longest on this page by a wide margin: triple SiteGround's, Hostinger's, and Kinsta's 30 days, and a month longer than ColombiaHosting's 60. For a buyer nervous about committing, that window alone makes Wink worth a look. The company is Bogotá-based with 15-plus years in business and Spanish support over WhatsApp and phone.
Plans are clear: Emprendedor at USD 4.99/month, Negocio at USD 7.99, Empresa at USD 10.99, and Platino at USD 25.99, with annual billing cutting 50% and three-year terms cutting 70%. The entry Emprendedor at USD 4.99 sits above UltaHost's USD 2.80 shared start, but Wink counters with that 90-day refund and a fully Colombian, Spanish-first operation.
Two honest gaps: prices display in USD rather than COP, and despite "Tier IV" branding the page doesn't clearly confirm servers are physically in Colombia. The renewal rate after the multi-year discount also isn't spelled out, so expect it to drift toward the monthly list price.
- Pros: 90-day money-back, clear plan pricing, Colombian company, generous multi-year discounts
- Cons: USD pricing not COP, server location unconfirmed, renewal after discount unclear
Pricing: Emprendedor USD 4.99/month up to Platino USD 25.99/month; annual 50% off, 3-year 70% off. 90-day money-back.
Best for: cautious buyers wanting the longest possible trial from a Colombian company. Skip if: you want peso billing or confirmed Colombian-soil servers.
Verdict: Pick WinkHosting if a 90-day safety net and a local Spanish-first host matter most. If you want the cheapest entry, UltaHost undercuts it; if you want published peso pricing on local servers, Latinoamerica Hosting is the better Colombian fit.
10 Most Reviewed Web Hosting Brands in Colombia (Jun 2026)
| Hosting Name | User Satisfaction In % | Number of Reviews | Promotions |
|---|---|---|---|
Hostinger for Colombia |
95% | 1465 | 80% Off |
000webhost for Colombia |
95% | 294 | |
Wix Hosting for Colombia |
98% | 211 | |
Sered for Colombia |
99% | 201 | Visit Site |
Namecheap for Colombia |
90% | 224 | -61% (.Com) |
IONOS | ionos.com for Colombia |
79% | 279 | Visit Site |
GoDaddy for Colombia |
71% | 218 | WB Free Trial |
Hostgator for Colombia |
82% | 156 | -73% NOW |
SiteGround for Colombia |
94% | 129 | NOW -81% |
SmarterASP.NET for Colombia |
93% | 118 | 60 days FREE |
5 Cheapest Hosting Plans for Colombia (from $1.04 to $1.39)
| Starting Price | Plan Type | Plan Name | Promotions | Hosting Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $1.04 / mo. | Shared | Starter Plan | Visit Site
|
OVHcloud |
| $1.07 / mo. | Shared | Starter | SKB Enterprise |
|
| $1.20 / mo. | Shared | Startup WP SSD | 82% OFF
|
Hostpoco |
| $1.33 / mo. | VPS | OPENVZ- PLAN! | -50% NOW
|
Hostripples - Managed Web Hosting |
| $1.39 / mo. | Shared | Single Shared Hosting | 000webhost |
How to Choose Web Hosting from Colombia
Forget feature checklists. The right host depends on who your visitors are, how much downtime costs you, and whether your data has to stay in Colombia. Here are concrete scenarios with real thresholds.
Budget under USD 10/month, audience 90% Colombian, content site or small store → Hostinger's São Paulo plan (USD 2.99 intro, USD 7.99 renewal) with peso billing. Skip SiteGround here: its US origin adds latency to every dynamic request, and it renews at USD 17.99, more than double Hostinger, for a worse server position.
You need data on Colombian soil for procurement, government, or compliance reasons → HostDime Colombia's Tier IV Bogotá facility, from about COP 31,680/month. Nothing else here offers certified in-country infrastructure. If certification isn't required and you just want local servers cheaply, Latinoamerica Hosting at COP 90,000/year does the job for roughly a quarter of the annual cost.
Managed WordPress business site, 20,000+ monthly visits, downtime costs money → Kinsta at USD 35/month flat, using the Santiago region for the closest mainstream latency to Bogotá. Skip Cloudways for this unless you're technical: its São Paulo option lives on the USD 38 AWS tier, so you'd pay more than Kinsta and manage more yourself.
Smallest commitment risk → WinkHosting's 90-day refund or ColombiaHosting's 60 days, both local Colombian companies. A long trial matters more than a few dollars when you can't verify real-world performance up front. For VPS-level needs specifically, our Colombia VPS hosting guide breaks down the local virtual-server options in detail.
One legal note that saves confusion: Colombia's Ley 1581 (Habeas Data) does not require you to host inside Colombia. It regulates international data transfers, and the US sits on the SIC's adequacy list. So US or Brazilian hosting is legal with proper consent; local hosting just sidesteps the transfer paperwork entirely.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which hosts here actually keep my data inside Colombia?
Only HostDime Colombia runs a verified, Tier IV certified data center on Colombian soil (Tocancipá, near Bogotá). UltaHost markets a Bogotá VPS, and Latinoamerica Hosting states its servers are in Colombia, though as a smaller regional brand. ColombiaHosting and WinkHosting are Colombian companies but don't clearly confirm their servers' physical location, so ask before buying if residency matters.
Is Hostinger's São Paulo server fast enough for a Bogotá audience?
For most content sites and small stores, yes. São Paulo sits roughly 50 to 70 ms from Bogotá, close enough that Hostinger's NVMe and LiteSpeed stack delivers quick page loads. If you need single-digit local latency for a real-time app or checkout-heavy store, a Colombian-soil host like HostDime or Latinoamerica Hosting will beat it.
Now that AWS has a Bogotá Local Zone, does that change my options?
It helps developers building directly on AWS, since the Bogotá Local Zone (us-east-1-bog-1a) parents to US East and serves low-latency compute locally. But none of the mainstream shared hosts here run on it yet, so for off-the-shelf hosting, HostDime's Tier IV facility remains the practical Colombian-soil choice. A full AWS region in Colombia still doesn't exist.
Is HostDime's roughly USD 8/month VPS worth it over a USD 2 to 3 shared plan?
It comes down to what downtime costs you. HostDime buys certified Tier IV infrastructure, a 99.999% SLA, and true data residency that budget hosts can't match. For a business, that's cheap insurance. For a blog or hobby site, Latinoamerica Hosting at COP 90,000/year or UltaHost near USD 3.80 renewal gives you working hosting for far less.
Final Verdict
For most Colombian sites, Hostinger is the practical winner: a real São Paulo server, peso billing, Spanish support, and a renewal (USD 7.99) that won't ambush you the way SiteGround's USD 17.99 will. If your data has to live in Colombia, HostDime Colombia is the only certified Tier IV answer, worth the premium for businesses that treat downtime as a cost. For managed WordPress, Kinsta's flat USD 35 and Santiago region make it the low-risk choice. On the smallest budget with local servers, Latinoamerica Hosting at COP 90,000/year is hard to beat, and the cautious should lean on WinkHosting's 90-day refund.
Hosting near Colombia rarely means hosting in Colombia, so weigh São Paulo and Santiago options too. If you're comparing across the region, our guides to web hosting across South America, Panama hosting, and Peru hosting cover the neighboring markets and the same São Paulo facilities many of these providers share.










