Drupal Hosting Services in Europe (2026) – Top 12 Providers Compared 🇪🇺
One name dropped off this list since the last refresh: Heficed. The brand that European Drupal admins once leaned on now redirects to Hivelocity and sells bare metal only, with no Drupal product left. That churn is the real story of Drupal hosting in Europe right now. Providers get bought, rebranded, and repositioned, and the renewal price you signed up for rarely survives the third year.
Quick answer: For a managed Drupal site with a European audience, SiteGround gives developers the most (Git, Drush, staging across five EU Google Cloud regions). If you want the cheapest long-term renewal, Hostinger wins. If you run your own Linux box, Contabo hands you a German-hosted VPS for EUR 4.50/mo.
Jump to: FastComet | SiteGround | Hostinger | HostPapa | Kamatera | ChemiCloud | Contabo | TMDHosting | Hosting.com | WebHostingPad | Mochahost | IONOS
Last reviewed: May 2026. Prices and features verified.
How We Selected These Providers
This list weights one thing above all others: a verifiable European data center, not a CDN edge node dressed up as "EU coverage." We checked each provider's own infrastructure page and confirmed the city, then ranked Drupal fit on top of that. A provider with a Frankfurt server beats one routing your database queries across the Atlantic, full stop.
Drupal raises the bar past ordinary shared hosting. Drupal 10 and 11 want PHP 8.1 or newer, a sane memory limit, and ideally Composer and Drush (the command-line tools developers use to manage a Drupal site). So we scored each host on PHP version control, SSH access, one-click install, and whether managed Drupal support actually exists. We split the field honestly into three buckets: managed shared hosts where the work is done for you, raw cloud VPS where you build the stack yourself, and the hybrids in between.
We excluded any provider we could not confirm was still trading under its own name, which is how Heficed left the list. We did not run synthetic load tests, and a few renewal figures (Hosting.com's Drupal tier, in particular) are not cleanly published, so we flag those rather than invent a number. Pricing reflects official pages checked in May 2026, with promotional and renewal rates both listed because the gap between them is where most Drupal buyers get burned. For a broader view beyond Drupal, our guide to European web hosting covers the same ground for general sites.
FastComet – Best for Three-City EU Coverage
USD 1.99/mo. That is the FastComet Starter promo, and it is genuinely cheap. Then it renews at USD 9.95/mo, a 5x jump that you need to plan for from day one. The Starter tier gives you 10GB NVMe storage and a single site, which suits one Drupal install and not much else.
What earns FastComet its spot is geography. Three European data centers (Frankfurt, Amsterdam, and London) is more EU presence than most hosts this size bother with. ChemiCloud, by comparison, confirms only Frankfurt, London, and Bucharest on its Drupal page, and HostPapa runs a single EU node. FastComet pairs that footprint with LiteSpeed Enterprise servers, NVMe storage, and free site migration, so moving an existing Drupal site over costs nothing.
The Drupal story is solid without being specialized. You get a one-click app installer, PHP version control in the panel, and SSH access for running Composer. FastComet doesn't advertise preinstalled Drush the way TMDHosting does, so treat this as capable general hosting rather than a Drupal-tuned product. One thing to know: WorldHostGroup acquired FastComet in late 2024, and a few user reviews since then question whether support quality holds.
Pros:
- Three EU data centers: Frankfurt, Amsterdam, London
- LiteSpeed Enterprise plus NVMe storage on every tier
- Free Drupal site migration
- 30-day money-back window
Cons:
- Renewal jumps 5x to USD 9.95/mo
- Starter caps at 10GB and one site
- No preinstalled Drush or managed-Drupal tooling
Pricing: Starter USD 1.99/mo promo, renews USD 9.95/mo; Essential USD 2.99 renewing USD 12.95; Plus USD 3.99 renewing USD 17.95. Migration and SSL included, no setup fees.
Best for: A small Drupal site whose visitors span Germany, the Netherlands, and the UK. Skip if: You need preinstalled Drush, in which case TMDHosting is built for you.
Choose FastComet if your traffic is truly spread across northern and western Europe and you want one host close to all of it. If your audience sits in one country, SiteGround's wider Google Cloud map serves them better, and if you never touch the command line, TMDHosting's managed Drupal removes work FastComet leaves on your plate.
SiteGround – Best for Drupal Developers
SiteGround is the one host here that treats Drupal as a developer platform rather than a checkbox. Git and Drush come pre-installed, Composer works out of the box, and staging environments arrive on the GrowBig tier and up. For anyone deploying Drupal the way Drupal expects to be deployed, that combination is hard to match on shared hosting.
The infrastructure backs it up. SiteGround runs on Google Cloud across five European regions: Frankfurt, London, Eemshaven in the Netherlands, Madrid, and edge points beyond. That spread means a Madrid-based Drupal site doesn't have to phone Frankfurt for every request, which matters for southern European audiences that FastComet's three northern nodes serve less well. Add NVMe storage, the SuperCacher caching stack, and SiteGround's faster PHP setup on GrowBig, and performance is rarely the bottleneck.
Renewal pricing is the real downside here. StartUp opens at EUR 2.99/mo and renews at EUR 15.99/mo, while GrowBig (the tier you actually want for staging) renews at EUR 27.99/mo. That's the steepest standing rate in this comparison, well above Hostinger's USD 16.99 Business renewal for comparable resources. You pay for the developer tooling and the Google Cloud map.
Pros:
- Git and Drush pre-installed, Composer supported
- Staging on GrowBig and GoGeek
- Five EU Google Cloud regions including Madrid and Eemshaven
- NVMe storage and multilevel caching
Cons:
- GrowBig renews at EUR 27.99/mo
- StartUp storage capped at 10GB
- Entry tier blocks staging, the feature developers want
Pricing: StartUp EUR 2.99/mo promo, renews EUR 15.99/mo (10GB, 1 site); GrowBig EUR 5.49 renewing EUR 27.99 (50GB, unlimited sites, staging); GoGeek EUR 8.49 renewing EUR 39.99. 30-day refund on shared plans.
Best for: Developers who deploy Drupal with Git and Drush and want staging. Skip if: Your budget can't absorb a near-EUR 28 renewal, where Hostinger does the basics for USD 16.99.
Pick SiteGround if you're a developer or agency where Git, Drush, and staging save real hours, and the Madrid or Eemshaven regions cut latency to your users. Don't pick it for a brochure site that updates twice a year. At that usage you're renting tooling you'll never open, and Hostinger or FastComet deliver the same uptime for less.
Hostinger – Best for the Lowest Long-Term Cost
Where SiteGround's GrowBig renews at EUR 27.99/mo, Hostinger's Business plan holds at USD 16.99/mo for 50GB of NVMe storage. That roughly 40% gap, measured at renewal rather than the promo, is the entire argument for Hostinger and it's a strong one for any Drupal site you plan to keep past year one.
Hostinger's European coverage is broad: data centers in the Netherlands, Lithuania, France, and the UK give most EU audiences a nearby node. Drupal installs in one click through hPanel, PHP versions are selectable, Git integration is built in, and Business tiers add NVMe storage, free CDN, and automated backups. For the price, the feature sheet is dense.
It's lighter than SiteGround on the developer side, though, and Hostinger's own documentation admits it. Drush isn't pre-installed, and proper staging often means manual setup or stepping up to a VPS plan. The entry Premium plan also ships on SSD rather than NVMe, so Business is the real starting point for Drupal. If you outgrow shared hosting, a self-managed VPS is the next step up.
Pros:
- Lowest renewal of the managed group: USD 16.99/mo Business
- Four EU data centers (NL, Lithuania, France, UK)
- One-click Drupal, Git integration, free CDN
- Automated backups on Business and up
Cons:
- No pre-installed Drush; lighter Drupal tooling than SiteGround
- Premium tier is SSD, not NVMe
- Staging needs manual work on shared plans
Pricing: Premium USD 2.99/mo promo, renews USD 10.99/mo (20GB SSD); Business USD 3.99 renewing USD 16.99 (50GB NVMe); Cloud Startup USD 7.99 renewing USD 25.99 (100GB NVMe). 30-day money-back.
Best for: A small-to-mid Drupal site you'll renew for years and want cheap to keep. Skip if: You need built-in staging and Drush, where SiteGround earns its higher renewal.
Go with Hostinger Business if total three-year cost is your deciding factor and your Drupal needs are mainstream. Avoid it if you're a developer who wants staging and Drush on day one. That's SiteGround's territory, and trying to bolt those onto Hostinger's shared tier wastes the savings you came for.
HostPapa – Best for a cPanel PHP 8 Stack
Start with the limitation, because it's the one that matters for this article: HostPapa runs a single European data center, in Amsterdam. Against Kamatera's six EU cities or SiteGround's five Google Cloud regions, that's thin coverage. A Drupal site serving southern or eastern Europe will feel the distance.
If your audience sits in or near the Benelux, though, HostPapa's stack is well-suited to Drupal. The Amsterdam node runs cPanel with selectable PHP 8.0 through 8.3, MySQL 8.0 on InnoDB, and NVMe storage, and it's confirmed compatible with Drupal 10 and 11. One-click install comes via Softaculous, migration is free, and support runs 24/7. This is a clean, current LAMP environment without the hand-tuning a VPS demands.
Pricing is where HostPapa gets murky. The US entry sits at USD 2.95/mo on a three-year term, but the EU promotional rate wasn't cleanly published when we checked, and the EU renewal figures we could verify work out to roughly EUR 16.19/mo on the Starter tier annually. That renewal lands well above FastComet's USD 9.95 for broadly similar shared resources, so read the EU checkout total carefully before committing.
Pros:
- cPanel with PHP 8.0–8.3 selectable
- MySQL 8.0, NVMe storage, Drupal 10/11 ready
- Free migration and 24/7 support
- 30-day money-back
Cons:
- Only one EU data center (Amsterdam)
- EU promo pricing opaque; renewals around EUR 16/mo
- Weakest geographic reach here for non-Benelux audiences
Pricing: Entry from USD 2.95/mo (3-year US term); EU Starter renewal approximately EUR 16.19/mo, Business approximately EUR 21.59/mo. Verify the EU checkout total, as the promo rate isn't published cleanly.
Best for: A Drupal site with a Benelux or western-European audience that wants cPanel and a modern PHP stack. Skip if: Your visitors are in Italy, Spain, or eastern Europe, where SiteGround's Madrid region or Kamatera's Milan node cut real latency.
Choose HostPapa if cPanel familiarity and a current PHP 8.x setup matter more than map coverage, and your users are close to Amsterdam. Look elsewhere if reach is the priority. For a multi-country European audience, SiteGround and Kamatera both put a server nearer more of your visitors.
Kamatera – Best for the Widest EU Footprint
Picture this: you're a developer comfortable on the command line, you want a Drupal staging server live for a week of testing, and you'd rather not sign a contract. Kamatera fits that exactly. It bills hourly, opens at USD 4.00/mo flat (no promo, no renewal jump), and throws in a 30-day trial with up to USD 100 in credit so you can build and tear down without committing a cent.
The European footprint is the widest in this comparison: Amsterdam, Frankfurt, London, Stockholm, Milan, and Madrid. That's six EU cities against ChemiCloud's three and HostPapa's one, and the Amsterdam node sits right on AMS-IX. For a Drupal site that needs a Milan or Stockholm presence specifically, no managed shared host here matches that map.
The honest catch: Kamatera is raw cloud infrastructure, unmanaged by default. There's no one-click Drupal installer and no preinstalled Drush or Composer. You provision the OS, build the LAMP or LEMP stack, set the PHP version, and maintain it yourself. The entry config (1 vCPU, 1GB RAM, 20GB SSD) is also lean. Contabo hands you 8GB of RAM for nearly the same EUR 4.50, so Kamatera's draw is the data center map and the billing model, not raw value. Our European cloud hosting guide digs deeper into providers like this.
Pros:
- Six EU data centers including Milan and Stockholm
- Flat USD 4.00/mo, no renewal hike
- 30-day trial with up to USD 100 credit
- Fully configurable CPU, RAM, and storage
Cons:
- Unmanaged: no installer, no Drush, no Composer preset
- Entry config is just 1GB RAM
- Wrong choice for non-technical site owners
Pricing: From USD 4.00/mo (1 vCPU, 1GB RAM, 20GB SSD, 5TB traffic), billed hourly or monthly with no contract. 30-day free trial instead of a money-back guarantee.
Best for: Developers who want a Drupal server in Milan, Stockholm, or Madrid and will manage it themselves. Skip if: You want Drupal installed for you, where TMDHosting or SiteGround do the heavy lifting.
Kamatera is the right call when you need a specific European city and you're fluent enough in Linux to run your own stack. It's the wrong call for anyone who expects a control panel and one-click install. If that's you and you still want raw cloud value, Contabo gives far more RAM per euro; if you want it all managed, SiteGround is the answer.
ChemiCloud – Best for a Long Refund Window
ChemiCloud gives you 45 days to change your mind, the longest refund window in this group by a clear margin (most rivals here stop at 30). For a CMS like Drupal, where you might not finish building and stress-testing the site for weeks, that extra runway has real value.
The hosting underneath is a tidy managed-shared package. LiteSpeed servers with LiteSpeed Cache, NVMe storage, and free Cloudflare CDN sit behind a 99.99% uptime guarantee, the highest stated figure in this comparison. Drupal installs through Softaculous, and you can select PHP versions down from 8.2, with SSH available for Composer work. European data centers cover Frankfurt, London, and Bucharest, the Bucharest node being a useful eastern-European option that few competitors here offer.
Renewal is the familiar trap. Starter opens at USD 2.49/mo and renews at USD 11.95/mo, a 4.8x climb. That entry beats FastComet's USD 1.99 by a hair on monthly cost only until renewal, when ChemiCloud's USD 11.95 lands above FastComet's USD 9.95. So the long refund window and the 99.99% uptime line are the genuine reasons to pick it, not the headline price.
Pros:
- 45-day money-back guarantee
- LiteSpeed plus NVMe and free Cloudflare CDN
- 99.99% uptime guarantee
- Bucharest data center for eastern Europe
Cons:
- Starter renews 4.8x to USD 11.95/mo
- Only three confirmed EU data centers
- Drush not advertised; Composer via SSH only
Pricing: Starter USD 2.49/mo promo, renews USD 11.95/mo (20GB NVMe, 2GB RAM); Pro USD 3.49 renewing USD 17.95; Turbo USD 4.49 renewing USD 21.95 with HTTP/3. 45-day refund.
Best for: A Drupal builder who wants weeks to test before committing, ideally serving eastern Europe via Bucharest. Skip if: Renewal cost is your priority, where Hostinger's USD 16.99 Business beats ChemiCloud's tiers at comparable resources.
Pick ChemiCloud if the 45-day window and 99.99% uptime promise outweigh the renewal climb, or if Bucharest puts you closer to your users. Don't pick it purely on the USD 2.49 sticker. Once renewal hits, FastComet is cheaper at USD 9.95 and Hostinger gives more storage per dollar.
Contabo – Best for Raw German-Hosted Power
Contabo doesn't sell Drupal hosting at all. It sells a raw German VPS, and for the right buyer that's the point. EUR 4.50/mo (roughly USD 3.60 to USD 4.90 depending on the rate) buys 4 vCPU and 8GB RAM with 75GB of NVMe, and that price holds flat with no renewal gimmick. Set that against Kamatera's USD 4.00 entry of 1 vCPU and 1GB RAM, and Contabo gives you eight times the memory for nearly the same money.
For GDPR-minded European businesses, the data-sovereignty story is clean. Contabo is German-owned and runs its own data centers in Munich and Nuremberg, with no location surcharge on the EU regions. Your Drupal database and your customers' data sit on German soil under German operation, which is a tidier compliance answer than a US firm leasing Frankfurt rack space. Our German hosting guide covers more options in that vein.
The trade is total: this is unmanaged. No installer, no Drush, no Composer preset. You get root access and you build everything, from the LAMP stack to the security hardening. The refund window is also short at 14 days (not the 30 some third-party sites claim), and the 200 Mbit/s port is modest. Contabo rewards sysadmins and punishes everyone else.
Pros:
- 4 vCPU and 8GB RAM from EUR 4.50/mo
- German-owned, German data centers (Munich, Nuremberg)
- Flat pricing, no renewal jump
- Always-on DDoS protection, root access
Cons:
- Fully unmanaged; you build the entire Drupal stack
- Only a 14-day refund window
- 200 Mbit/s port; reviews note slow refund handling
Pricing: Cloud VPS 10 from EUR 4.50/mo (4 vCPU, 8GB RAM, 75GB NVMe or 150GB SSD), 12-month term, price holds at renewal. No EU location fee. 14-day money-back.
Best for: A developer or sysadmin who wants maximum RAM per euro and German data sovereignty. Skip if: You've never configured a LAMP stack, where TMDHosting installs and manages Drupal for you.
Contabo is the clear winner for technical buyers who want GDPR-friendly German hosting and the most resources per euro on this list. It's the clear wrong answer for anyone who wants a control panel. If you like the German-DC idea but not the command line, IONOS gives you a managed Drupal product on German infrastructure instead.
TMDHosting – Best for Fully Managed Drupal
TMDHosting is the most expensive entry here at USD 9.52/mo, nearly 4x ChemiCloud's USD 2.49 promo. It's also the only host in this comparison that ships Drupal genuinely tuned, so the premium buys something concrete rather than marketing.
The Drupal package is the real article. Drush comes pre-installed, Drupal updates are automated, plugin installation is free, and 24/7 support is staffed by people who actually know Drupal. The stack runs the latest PHP 8 on MariaDB 10.6, with LiteSpeed Web Server, LiteSpeed Cache, all-SSD RAID-10 storage, and free Cloudflare CDN. European data centers cover London and Amsterdam. For a non-technical owner who wants Drupal handled end to end, nothing else on this list comes close to that level of hands-off management.
The downsides are price and reach. USD 9.52/mo is a lot next to Hostinger's USD 3.99 promo, the two EU data centers trail the wider maps here, and the 99.9% uptime guarantee is the lowest stated figure in the group (ChemiCloud promises 99.99%). TMDHosting also publishes term pricing rather than a clear promo-versus-renewal split, so confirm your standing rate at checkout.
Pros:
- Drush pre-installed, automated Drupal updates
- 24/7 Drupal-specialist support
- LiteSpeed, RAID-10 SSD, latest PHP 8, MariaDB 10.6
- Free Drupal transfer and plugin installation
Cons:
- Most expensive entry: USD 9.52/mo
- Only two EU data centers (London, Amsterdam)
- 99.9% uptime, the lowest guarantee here
Pricing: Starter USD 9.52/mo (3-year term, 50GB SSD); Business USD 12.72 (100GB); Enterprise USD 19.12 (unlimited). 30-day money-back per the official Drupal page.
Best for: A non-technical owner who wants Drupal installed, updated, and supported for them. Skip if: You can run Drush yourself, where Contabo gives 8GB RAM for half the entry price.
Buy TMDHosting if you want Drupal fully managed and you'll pay for the privilege. Skip it if you're technical or budget-bound. Developers get more control from Contabo or Kamatera at lower cost, and value hunters get more storage per dollar from Hostinger.
Hosting.com (formerly A2 Hosting) – Best for LiteSpeed Speed With an Amsterdam Node
The A2 Hosting you may remember is gone in name. World Host Group acquired it in January 2025 and rebranded it to Hosting.com that April. The infrastructure and the Drupal hosting carry on, but the brand transition is still settling, and a few billing and support inconsistencies during the handover are worth knowing before you sign.
The product itself remains a capable speed play. Turbo plans pair NVMe storage with LiteSpeed for the "20x faster" claim A2 always marketed, and the Amsterdam data center keeps that speed close to European users. Drupal installs in one click via Softaculous in cPanel, with SSH for Composer on higher tiers. It's solid general hosting that runs Drupal well rather than a Drupal-specific build.
Pricing is the soft spot, partly because the rebrand muddied the published figures. The Drupal page teases entry rates around USD 2.99/mo, but renewals climb roughly 2x to 3x, and the exact Drupal-tier renewal isn't cleanly listed, so we won't invent one. What's clear: that entry sits above FastComet's USD 1.99, and FastComet gives you three EU data centers against Hosting.com's single Amsterdam node. The speed tech is the reason to choose it, not the geography or the price.
Pros:
- Turbo plans: NVMe plus LiteSpeed
- Amsterdam EU data center
- One-click Drupal install, cPanel, SSH on higher tiers
- 99.9% uptime guarantee
Cons:
- Renewals climb roughly 2x–3x; exact Drupal-tier figure unclear
- Brand transition still creating billing ambiguity
- Single EU data center
Pricing: Entry around USD 2.99/mo promo; renewals rise an estimated 2x–3x (exact Drupal-tier renewal not cleanly published, verify at checkout). Turbo tiers add NVMe and LiteSpeed. Refund terms stated as "risk-free" without a clear day count.
Best for: Buyers who want LiteSpeed speed on an Amsterdam node and aren't rattled by the rebrand. Skip if: You want multi-city EU coverage, where FastComet's three data centers beat one for the same money.
Choose Hosting.com if the Turbo NVMe-plus-LiteSpeed stack is the exact speed profile you want and Amsterdam serves your audience. Avoid it if pricing transparency or geographic reach rank high. FastComet covers three EU cities at a lower entry, and IONOS publishes its renewal numbers honestly where Hosting.com currently doesn't.
WebHostingPad – Best for Flat-Renewal Budget Hosting (US Only)
Here's the disqualifier first, because for a European audience it's decisive: WebHostingPad runs a single data center in Chicago and has no European node at all. Every request from an EU visitor crosses the Atlantic. For a Drupal site whose readers are in Europe, that latency is a real cost FastComet's Frankfurt server simply doesn't impose.
If you can look past location, the budget story is honest in a way few hosts manage. The Power Plan opens at USD 3.99/mo and renews at only USD 6.49, and the Mini plan renews flat at USD 3.50/mo, the same as its entry rate. No renewal trap, no 5x surprise. After two decades in business, the company is stable. Compare that to ChemiCloud, where USD 2.49 becomes USD 11.95, and the appeal of a flat USD 3.50 is obvious.
But Drupal support isn't promoted here. The site doesn't advertise a Drupal installer (cPanel plus Softaculous historically made Drupal installable, but it's not a featured product), and there's no EU-specific tuning. For this article's purpose, WebHostingPad is the honest "probably not" unless your real audience is in North America despite the European framing.
Pros:
- Flat renewal: Mini holds at USD 3.50/mo
- Power Plan renews gently to USD 6.49
- 30-day full refund
- Stable, 20-plus-year company
Cons:
- No EU data center (Chicago only)
- Drupal not advertised or tuned
- Transatlantic latency for European visitors
Pricing: Power Plan USD 3.99/mo promo, renews USD 6.49/mo; Mini USD 3.50/mo flat at entry and renewal. 30-day money-back.
Best for: A budget site whose audience is actually in North America, wanting no renewal surprises. Skip if: Your visitors are in Europe, full stop. Any EU-based host here, starting with FastComet, will serve them faster.
WebHostingPad earns a place only for its rare flat-renewal honesty. For a truly European Drupal site, skip it: the Chicago-only footprint makes it the wrong tool regardless of price, and FastComet or Hostinger put a server on the right continent for similar money.
Mochahost – Best for Dual NL and UK Data Centers
Treat Mochahost's marketing with a raised eyebrow. The "100% uptime" line and the "Lifetime Discount Guarantee" of locked renewals are aggressive claims that independent reviews don't fully back, and third-party pricing data shows renewals rising despite the lock promise. Read past the slogans, though, and there's a legitimate European fit underneath.
The draw is two EU data centers: the Netherlands and the United Kingdom, part of an eight-country network. That dual-node coverage beats the single EU location at HostPapa or Hosting.com and gives you a choice of NL or UK proximity. Drupal installs through the cPanel one-click installer, NVMe servers back the plans, and SSH on higher tiers handles Composer and Drush work.
On price, the Soho plan is advertised around USD 3.99/mo with renewal reported near USD 12.99/mo, roughly a 3x climb (some listings show a higher USD 6.35 entry, likely an older term rate). That renewal sits just above ChemiCloud's USD 11.95 for a comparable managed-shared package, and ChemiCloud's published 99.99% uptime is a firmer promise than Mochahost's unverifiable "100%." Mochahost's edge is the second EU node, not its numbers.
Pros:
- Two EU data centers: Netherlands and UK
- NVMe servers, cPanel one-click Drupal install
- SSH for Composer and Drush on higher tiers
- 30-day money-back
Cons:
- Renewal roughly 3x to USD 12.99/mo
- "100% uptime" and "lifetime discount" claims unverified
- Conflicting entry-price figures across sources
Pricing: Soho around USD 3.99/mo promo, renews near USD 12.99/mo (30GB NVMe, single site); higher tiers 50GB to unlimited. 30-day money-back. Treat the "lifetime discount" claim with caution.
Best for: A Drupal site that wants a choice between Dutch and UK proximity in one provider. Skip if: Verifiable uptime guarantees matter to you, where ChemiCloud's documented 99.99% beats Mochahost's marketing.
Pick Mochahost if the NL-plus-UK dual coverage actually fits your audience split and you'll judge it on delivered performance, not slogans. Skip it if you want firm, documented guarantees. ChemiCloud states a real 99.99% uptime figure, and Hostinger publishes renewal pricing you can trust without a footnote.
IONOS – Best for a Native German Drupal Product
IONOS is the European-native answer this list was missing. Owned by United Internet and headquartered in Germany, it runs data centers in Germany, France, and the UK, and it sells an actual dedicated Drupal hosting product rather than generic shared hosting with a Drupal installer bolted on.
The entry maths are friendly by Drupal-hosting standards. The Drupal plan opens at USD 4/mo and renews at USD 8/mo, a mere 2x climb against the 4.8x you face on ChemiCloud's Starter. You get one-click Drupal install, SSH and SFTP access, WP-CLI tooling, daily backups, a free domain for the first year, and a free wildcard SSL. A managed Drupal option exists for buyers who want the work taken off their hands.
One caveat to flag honestly: IONOS rolled out a 2026 price adjustment that raised renewals for some existing customers, communicated by emailed PDF rather than openly. The deepest teaser tiers (a USD 1/mo unlimited plan renewing at USD 14/mo) carry the steepest jumps, so stick to the straightforward USD 4-to-USD 8 Drupal plan and read your renewal terms. Even with that asterisk, IONOS's 2x renewal is gentler than most managed hosts here. A managed Drupal option exists for buyers who want the work taken off their hands entirely.
Pros:
- Native German company, EU data centers (DE, FR, UK)
- Dedicated Drupal product, gentle 2x renewal on the main plan
- Managed Drupal option available
- Free domain (1 yr) and wildcard SSL
Cons:
- 2026 price adjustment raised some existing renewals
- Deep teaser tiers renew far higher (avoid the USD 1/mo plan)
- Renewal changes communicated quietly, not openly
Pricing: Drupal plan USD 4/mo promo, renews USD 8/mo; Premium USD 6 renewing USD 10. Avoid the USD 1/mo unlimited teaser, which renews at USD 14/mo. Free domain (1 yr) and wildcard SSL included.
Best for: Buyers who want a German-native host with an honest 2x renewal and a real Drupal product. Skip if: You want the absolute most RAM per euro, where Contabo's 8GB at EUR 4.50 wins for self-managed setups.
Choose IONOS if you want EU data sovereignty without running your own server and you value a renewal you can predict. Skip it if you're a sysadmin chasing raw value. Contabo gives more hardware per euro on German soil, and Kamatera offers more EU cities to choose from. For everyone in between, IONOS is the most balanced European pick on this list.
1 Most Reviewed Drupal Hosting Providers in Germany (May 2026)
| Hosting Name |
User Satisfaction In % |
Number of Reviews |
Promotions |
Supporthost for Germany |
100% (less than 25 reviews) |
7 |
Visit Site |