Contabo x Hetzner (2026): Qual VPS de orçamento alemão vence após o aumento de preços? - PT
Em junho 15, 2026, A Hetzner quase triplicou o preço de seu servidor em nuvem vCPU dedicado mais barato, de euros 15.99 é EUR 42.99 um mês. Durante anos a resposta reflexa para "Contabo ou Hetzner?" apoiou Hetzner no desempenho por euro. That new price list forces a rerun of the math. Both are German hosts selling unmanaged Linux servers to budget buyers. Yet they now win on different tiers, and one just handed the other a lane it didn't hold a month ago.
Resposta rápida: Pick Contabo for the most RAM, núcleos, and NVMe storage per euro, plus data centers in Asia and Australia: aproximadamente 8 GB de RAM para EUR 5.50/month (sobre USD 5.95) against Hetzner's 4 GB at a matching price. Pick Hetzner for cleaner, more consistent CPU performance, a real cloud platform (API, balanceadores de carga, ARM servers, redes privadas), e 20 TB of included EU traffic. Budget self-hosters chasing raw specs lean Contabo. Teams that want predictable performance and cloud-native tooling lean Hetzner.
Ir para: Como os comparamos | The June 2026 Price Hike | Contabo | Hetzner | Price Per Resource | Performance and Reach | Como escolher | Perguntas frequentes
Última revisão: Julho 2026. Pricing verified against contabo.com and Hetzner's price-adjustment notice on 2026-07-09.
Comparação completa de recursos
Contabo
1. Contabo
9.1k +
Positivo
| Espaço | CPU | RAM | Preço | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 400 GB | 4 núcleos | 6 GB | $4.73 | Ver plano |
| 800 GB | 4 núcleos | 8 GB | $9.98 | Ver plano |
| 2.3 tb | 6 núcleos | 12 GB | $14.71 | Ver plano |
| 3.13 tb | 10 núcleos | 24 GB | $27.31 | Ver plano |
| 1.95 tb | 16 núcleos | 64 GB | $35.19 | Ver plano |
| 180 GB | 3 x 2,8 GHz | 24 GB | $36.13 | Ver plano |
| 240 GB | 4 x 2,8 GHz | 32 GB | $47.06 | Ver plano |
| 2.3 tb | 24 núcleos | 120 GB | $64.60 | Ver plano |
| 360 GB | 6 x 2,8 GHz | 48 GB | $67.22 | Ver plano |
| 480 GB | 8 x 2,8 GHz | 64 GB | $86.55 | Ver plano |
| 720 GB | 12 x 2,8 GHz | 96 GB | $124.99 | Ver plano |
| Espaço | CPU | RAM | Preço | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tb | 12 x 3,7 GHz | 32 GB | $103.99 | Ver plano |
| 1 tb | 12 x 3,7 GHz | 64 GB | $119.74 | Ver plano |
| 2 tb | 12 x 3,7 GHz | 125 GB | $130.25 | Ver plano |
| 1 tb | 24 x 2,5 GHz | 125 GB | $156.50 | Ver plano |
| 2 tb | 24 x 2,5 GHz | 256 GB | $251.04 | Ver plano |
| 2 tb | 24 x 2,5 GHz | 512 GB | $398.09 | Ver plano |
Hetzner
1. Hetzner Online
2.3k +
Neutro
| Espaço | Largura de banda | Preço | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 GB | 10.24 GB | $1.75 | Ver plano |
| 10 GB | Ilimitado | $4.52 | Ver plano |
| 25 GB | Ilimitado | $9.13 | Ver plano |
| 50 GB | Ilimitado | $18.35 | Ver plano |
| Espaço | CPU | RAM | Preço | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 GB | 1 testemunho | 1 GB | $4.28 | Ver plano |
| 50 GB | 2 núcleos | 2 GB | $7.58 | Ver plano |
| 100 GB | 2 núcleos | 4 GB | $13.06 | Ver plano |
| 200 GB | 2 núcleos | 8 GB | $21.85 | Ver plano |
| 400 GB | 4 núcleos | 16 GB | $32.83 | Ver plano |
| 600 GB | 8 núcleos | 32 GB | $54.79 | Ver plano |
| Espaço | CPU | RAM | Preço | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3.91 tb | 4 x 3,4 GHz | 64 GB | $42.82 | Ver plano |
| 3.91 tb | 4 x 3,4 GHz | 32 GB | $45.22 | Ver plano |
| 200 GB | 2 núcleos | 8 GB | $53.80 | Ver plano |
| 480 GB | 4 x 3,4 GHz | 32 GB | $54.43 | Ver plano |
| 3.91 tb | 4 x 3,4 GHz | 32 GB | $63.65 | Ver plano |
| 7.81 tb | 4 x 3,6 GHz | 64 GB | $64.78 | Ver plano |
| 23.4 tb | 4 x 3,4 GHz | 32 GB | $75.75 | Ver plano |
| 480 GB | 4 x 3,4 GHz | 16 GB | $91.33 | Ver plano |
| 480 GB | 6 x 3,5 GHz | 128 GB | $100.57 | Ver plano |
| 7.81 tb | 4 x 3,3 GHz | 32 GB | $119.01 | Ver plano |
| 960 GB | 6 x 3,5 GHz | 64 GB | $119.67 | Ver plano |
| 960 GB | 6 x 3,5 GHz | 256 GB | $128.24 | Ver plano |
| 960 GB | 8 x 2,1 GHz | 64 GB | $141.63 | Ver plano |
| 1000 GB | 6 x 3,2 GHz | 64 GB | $146.69 | Ver plano |
| 58.6 tb | 6 x 3,5 GHz | 64 GB | $185.54 | Ver plano |
| 960 GB | 8 x 2,1 GHz | 128 GB | $207.36 | Ver plano |
| 87.89 tb | 6 x 3,5 GHz | 128 GB | $273.38 | Ver plano |
Pontuações gerais
ContaboPontuação de revisão
Suporte ao cliente
HetznerPontuação de revisão
Suporte ao cliente
How We Compared Contabo and Hetzner
Two German hosts, one billing currency, and a price list that moved four times this year. So we pinned every figure to a date. Prices come from contabo.com and Hetzner's own price-adjustment notice, checked on July 9, 2026, com taxa de entrada, prazo de cobrança, and post-June pricing logged apart. Both firms bill in euros, so the US-dollar figures here are approximate conversions that drift with the exchange rate.
We weighted this toward how the two are actually bought: resources per euro (RAM, vCPU, NVMe), CPU consistency under load, network and traffic terms, proximidade do data center, e política de reembolso. Sources were the vendors' own pricing pages, published specs, and review aggregators that show how many ratings back a score, ignoring anything under 4.0 across fewer than 50 avaliações. Two honest limits worth stating. We didn't run synthetic load tests on either host. And Hetzner's June 15 increase applies to new orders, so a pre-June server keeps its old rate. If you're new to the category, our primer on VPs gerenciados versus não gerenciados covers who patches the box on each model. Both of these are the unmanaged kind.
What Hetzner's June 2026 Price Hike Actually Did
This is the piece most "Contabo x Hetzner" pages haven't caught up with yet. Em junho 15, 2026, Hetzner repriced its cloud lineup, and the increase was lopsided. The shared Intel line (CX23) rose from EUR 3.99 é EUR 5.49, acima 38%. The ARM line (CAX11) went EUR 4.49 é EUR 5.99, acima 33%. Manageable. The dedicated-vCPU line is where it hurt: the CCX13 jumped 169% é EUR 42.99, and the CCX23 climbed 173% é EUR 85.99.
Leia isso de novo, because it inverts the old advice. Hetzner's dedicated cores were the reason performance-minded buyers paid the small premium over Contabo. After June 15, that premium isn't small. Existing servers keep their old price, so this bites new orders only. If you're spinning up fresh infrastructure this year, the comparison below runs on the new numbers, not the ones cached in two-year-old reviews.
Contabo – Best for Maximum RAM and Storage per Euro
Entrada: Cloud VPS 10 at EUR 5.50/mo (sobre USD 5.95). 8 GB de RAM, 4 vCPU compartilhada, 75 GB NVMe. 99.9% SLA de tempo de atividade. 14-dia de devolução do dinheiro.
Line the two up at the entry tier and the gap is almost comical. For EUR 5.50 um mês, Cloud VPS da Contabo 10 mãos você 8 GB de RAM, 4 shared vCPU cores, e 75 GB de NVMe (fast flash) armazenamento. Hetzner's closest-priced plan, the CX23 at EUR 5.49, te dá 4 GB e 2 cores on 40 GB. Mesmo dinheiro, double the memory, double the cores, nearly double the disk. Prefer capacity over speed? Swap the 75 GB NVMe para 150 GB of SSD at signup, mesmo preço.
Push up the range and Contabo holds the lead. O VPS na Nuvem 30 runs EUR 14 para 24 GB de RAM, 8 vCPU, e 200 GB NVMe. But here's the number that rewrites the old script. Contabo's entry dedicated-core plan, the Cloud VDS S, costs EUR 34.40 para 3 physical AMD cores, 24 GB de RAM, e 180 GB NVMe. Hetzner's cheapest dedicated-vCPU plan after June 15, the CCX13, is EUR 42.99 para 8 GB e 2 núcleos. Contabo comes in EUR 8.59 mais barato and ships three times the RAM. A year ago that comparison went the other way.
What you trade for those specs is consistency. The cheap cores are shared, and Contabo's shared vCPU draws real complaints. User reports put CPU steal (time your server waits for a physical core a neighbor is hogging) às 20-40% during peak hours on busy boxes. O suporte é apenas por ticket, sem bate-papo ao vivo, and reviews flag slow replies, hours on routine tickets and occasionally days on hard ones. The uptime promise is 99.9%, and independent monitoring lands right around there, aproximar 99.91%. None of that dents a staging box or an overnight batch job. It dents a checkout page.
Prós:
- Aproximadamente 2x the RAM and cores per euro versus Hetzner at entry
- NVMe or up to 150 GB SSD incluído, sua escolha, no upcharge
- Preço fixo: the sign-up rate is the renewal rate
- Centros de dados em Tóquio, Sydney, Mumbai that Hetzner lacks
Contras:
- Shared vCPU; 20-40% Roubo de CPU reported at peak
- Ticket-only support with a slow-response reputation
- Porta de entrada limitada em 200 Mbit / s
Preços: Cloud VPS 10 em euros 5.50, VPS 20 em euros 7.50 (12 GB), VPS 30 em euros 14 (24 GB), VPS 40 em euros 25 (48 GB). Dedicated cores begin at the VDS S, EUR 34.40. Object storage from EUR 2.49 para 250 GB. No setup fee on 12-month terms, and Contabo does not raise the price at renewal.
Melhor para: self-hosters who want big memory and disk cheap and can run their own Linux box. Pular se: your workload is latency-sensitive and can't absorb CPU steal, or you need a data center Contabo doesn't operate.
Veredito: Contabo wins when the spec sheet is the whole point and you own the sysadmin work. If your traffic is latency-critical or you want per-second cloud primitives, that's a Hetzner job, and no amount of cheap RAM changes it.
Hetzner – Best for Consistent Performance and Cloud Tooling
Entrada: CX23 at EUR 5.49/mo (sobre USD 5.93). 4 GB de RAM, 2 Intel vCPU, 40 GB SSD, 20 TB EU traffic. ARM and dedicated-vCPU lines. Faturamento por hora.
Comece com as más notícias, since it reshapes everything else. Em junho 15, 2026, Hetzner's dedicated-vCPU line stopped being a bargain. The CCX13 went EUR 15.99 é EUR 42.99, the CCX23 EUR 31.49 é EUR 85.99. The shared lines rose more gently, but the plans people came to Hetzner for, guaranteed cores at low prices, took the full hit. If dedicated cores are your reason to switch, Contabo's VDS S now undercuts the CCX13 by EUR 8.59 with triple the RAM.
So why still pick it? Because within a tier, Hetzner behaves. Its shared vCPU shows far less steal than Contabo's, and the network is faster and more even. The platform underneath is a real cloud, not a plain server rental. You get an API, Suporte Terraform, managed load balancers, redes privadas, firewalls, IPs flutuantes, and free snapshots. Hourly billing means you can spin a server up for an afternoon and delete it when you're done. Contabo has none of that cloud-native layer. If your mental model is closer to a small AWS than a cheap box, browse the wider field of cloud hosting platforms and you'll see where Hetzner sits.
The value pick in Hetzner's 2026 catalog is ARM. The CAX11 gives 4 GB e 2 Ampere ARM cores for EUR 5.99, and if your stack runs on ARM (most modern Linux software does), it runs cooler and often faster than the Intel CX23 at nearly the same price. Contabo offers no ARM at all. One number to watch, Apesar. Hetzner's headline 20 TB of included traffic only applies in Europe. US servers include 1 tb and Singapore just 0.5 tb, with overage at EUR 1/TB in the US and a steep EUR 7.40/TB in Singapore. Contabo's traffic is unlimited (fair-use throttled). For a busy site outside the EU, that one line can flip the entire cost comparison toward Contabo.
Prós:
- Real dedicated-vCPU option with little CPU steal
- Cloud-native stack: API, balanceadores de carga, BRAÇO, redes privadas
- 20 tb included EU traffic, EUR 1/TB overage
- Hourly billing and free snapshots
Contras:
- Dedicated-vCPU line up 169-173% since June 15, 2026
- US and Singapore traffic cut to 1 tb / 0.5 tb
- Half the RAM of Contabo at the same entry price
One more thing before you commit. Hetzner has no money-back guarantee. Hourly billing is the safety net instead, so you delete a server and charges stop. And new accounts, especially outside Germany, sometimes need an ID scan before the first server boots. Neither is a dealbreaker, but both catch people off guard who expect a one-click signup.
Preços: CX23 em EUR 5.49 (4 GB Intel), CX33 (8 GB), CAX11 at EUR 5.99 (4 GB ARM), CAX21 at EUR 10.49 (8 GB ARM), CCX13 at EUR 42.99 (8 GB, dedicada). Servers ordered before June 15 keep their pre-hike rate. Watch the extras: automatic backups add 20% to the monthly rate, each IPv4 runs about EUR 0.50/mo, and some newer orders carry a setup fee. Contabo, em contraste, folds an IPv4 and one snapshot into its sticker price.
Melhor para: developers who want consistent cores, ARM options, and cloud primitives in an EU region. Pular se: you need dedicated cores on the cheap (Contabo's VDS is now cheaper) or you deploy heavy traffic in the US or Singapore.
Veredito: Hetzner earns its keep for EU-region apps that value predictable performance and real tooling over headline RAM. If you're buying dedicated cores or serving Asia and Australia, Contabo now wins the same money, so don't pay Hetzner's June prices out of habit.
Price Per Resource: Where the Euro Goes Further
Strip away the branding and match tier for tier. Na entrada, EUR 5.50 compra 8 GB e 4 cores at Contabo or 4 GB e 2 cores at Hetzner. Contabo doubles you on both. Por aí 24 GB de RAM, Cloud VPS da Contabo 30 is EUR 14 with shared cores. To match that memory on Hetzner you'd climb well up its shared lines, and its dedicated 16 GB CCX23 alone now runs EUR 85.99.
The dedicated-core tier is the headline flip. Contabo VDS S at EUR 34.40 dá 3 physical cores and 24 GB de RAM. Hetzner CCX13 at EUR 42.99 dá 2 vCPU e 8 GB. On raw allocation, Contabo wins that matchup by a wide margin after June 15. Where Hetzner claws value back is ARM: the CAX11 at EUR 5.99 has no Contabo equivalent, and for ARM-native workloads it's cheap, eficiente, and consistent. So the price answer isn't "one is cheaper." It's Contabo for memory and dedicated cores, Hetzner for ARM and for what a euro buys in stability rather than gigabytes.
Now the twist most buyers miss: true bare metal reverses the dedicated story. Contabo wins cheap dedicated vCPU through its VDS line. But Hetzner owns cheap physical hardware through its Server Auction. These are refurbished machines with no setup fee or minimum term, starting near EUR 35/month. Contabo's cheapest bare-metal server starts around USD 110/month. Want a whole physical box rather than a guaranteed slice? Hetzner's auction undercuts Contabo by roughly 3x, and the June price hike left it untouched. If bare metal is the goal, weigh both against the wider dedicated server field antes de comprar.
atuação, Rede, and Global Reach
Specs win the spreadsheet; behavior wins production. Contabo's shared cores can hit 20-40% CPU steal at peak, and reviewers note time-to-first-byte (quão rápido o servidor começa a responder) swinging through the day on loaded machines. Hetzner's shared cores wobble less, and its dedicated-vCPU line, pricey as it now is, removes the noisy-neighbor problem outright. Network favors Hetzner too: Contabo caps the entry port at 200 Mbit / s, while Hetzner runs a faster, more even backbone. If your bottleneck is bandwidth or steady response time, that difference is the product.
Reach flips the other way. Contabo se espalha por 9 regiões e 11 data centers: a European hub in Germany plus the UK (Portsmouth), três regiões dos EUA (Nova york, Seattle, St. Louis), Cingapura, Tóquio, Sydney, e Mumbai. Hetzner runs six locations across four countries: Falkenstein e Nuremberg na Alemanha, Helsinque na Finlândia, Ashburn and Hillsboro in the US, e Singapura. For an audience in Japan, Austrália, ou Índia, Contabo puts a box near them; Hetzner can't. Both are German companies, so for EU data-residency under GDPR either one keeps data on the continent. That's worth weighing alongside the broader German hosting market if your users sit in Central Europe.
How to Choose Between Contabo and Hetzner
Don't default to the cheaper sticker. Match the box to the job.
Carga de trabalho: memory-hungry app, orçamento inferior a 15 euros/mês, latency not critical → Contabo Cloud VPS 30 (EUR 14, 24 GB de RAM). Self-hosted analytics, um servidor de jogo, a big database cache, or a staging fleet all want RAM more than steady microsecond timing. Hetzner can't touch 24 GB at that price without jumping to an EUR 85.99 dedicated plan. Skip Contabo only if the app can't tolerate occasional CPU steal.
Carga de trabalho: production API or checkout flow, Público da UE, needs consistent cores → Hetzner. Buy the CAX11 (EUR 5.99 BRAÇO) if your stack is ARM-ready, or step to a dedicated CCX plan if it isn't and the budget allows. The point here is predictable response time, and Contabo's shared-core variance works against you. Pair it with a managed load balancer as you scale.
Público: primarily Japan, Austrália, or India → Contabo, on distance alone. A Tokyo or Sydney box shaves latency that no amount of Hetzner tuning recovers from Falkenstein. Hetzner's only Asia-Pacific site is Singapore, e os seus 0.5 TB traffic cap there makes a busy site expensive fast.
Despesas: you want dedicated cores as cheap as possible → Contabo VDS S (EUR 34.40, 3 núcleos, 24 GB). Post-June, this undercuts Hetzner's CCX13 (EUR 42.99, 2 núcleos, 8 GB) on both price and resources. A year ago the smart pick was Hetzner; the June hike reversed it. Uma advertência: if the workload can run on ARM, Hetzner's CAX11 is the exception that still beats Contabo on efficiency per euro.
perguntas frequentes
Is Hetzner still cheaper than Contabo after the 2026 aumento de preço?
Not on resources. Na entrada, both sit near EUR 5.50, but Contabo gives 8 GB of RAM to Hetzner's 4 GB. For dedicated cores the gap widened after June 15: Contabo's VDS S (EUR 34.40, 24 GB) now undercuts Hetzner's CCX13 (EUR 42.99, 8 GB). Hetzner is only "mais barato" if you count ARM value or the stability you get per euro, not the gigabytes.
Does Contabo or Hetzner have less CPU steal?
Hetzner, claramente. Contabo runs shared cores, and users report steal climbing to 20-40% during busy hours, which shows up as uneven response times. Hetzner's shared cores are steadier, and its dedicated-vCPU CCX plans remove steal entirely. If your app is latency-sensitive, that consistency is the main reason to pay Hetzner's higher 2026 preços.
Which is better for hosting in Asia or Australia, Contabo ou Hetzner?
Contabo, by reach. It runs data centers in Tokyo, Sydney, Mumbai, e Singapura, so you can place a server near the audience. Hetzner's only Asia-Pacific location is Singapore, and that region includes just 0.5 TB of traffic with EUR 7.40/TB overage, which punishes busy sites. For Japanese, australiano, or Indian users, Contabo is the practical pick.
Can I run Docker and Kubernetes on both Contabo and Hetzner?
Yes on both, since each gives full root on an unmanaged server. The difference is tooling. Hetzner offers an API, a Terraform provider, balanceadores de carga, and private networks that make a self-run Kubernetes cluster far less painful. On Contabo you wire all of that yourself. For hands-off container orchestration, Hetzner's cloud-native pieces save real hours.
Do Contabo and Hetzner offer refunds?
Contabo offers a 14-day money-back guarantee on new orders, though conditions apply (the auto-renewal grace period doesn't cover German customers). Hetzner offers none. It bills by the hour instead, so cancelling a server stops the meter right away. Want a trial window to bail out? Contabo's refund is the safer route. Happy to pay only for the hours you actually run? Hetzner's model fits better.
Veredicto Final
Não há um único vencedor, and anyone who names one hasn't read the June price list. Contabo takes raw value: double the RAM at entry, cheaper dedicated cores after Hetzner's hike, tráfego ilimitado, and data centers across Asia and Australia. Buy it when raw capacity is the point and you can live with shared-core variance. Hetzner takes consistency and tooling: steadier cores, a genuine cloud API, ARM servers, e 20 TB of EU traffic. Buy it for EU-region production apps where predictable performance beats headline gigabytes, and lean on the CAX11 ARM plan to sidestep the dedicated-line price shock.
Weighing other budget hosts against these two? Nosso Contabo vs Linode comparison pits Contabo's cheap RAM against Akamai's network, e Kamatera x Hetzner covers hourly-billed cloud against Hetzner's fixed plans.
