Best Web Hosting in Thailand (2026): Top 12 Providers Compared 🇹🇭
Hostinger fired up its 13th data center in Kuala Lumpur in August 2025. From Bangkok, that facility now beats Singapore on the round-trip path by roughly 5-10 milliseconds, which most Thailand hosting guides written before late-2025 still get wrong. We re-verified all 12 providers below in May 2026 with one filter at the front: how close their nearest server actually sits to Thai users. Renewal prices and refund windows came next, because the gap between a USD 1.79 promo and a USD 8.95 renewal is the kind of detail that decides whether a recommendation holds up after year one.
Quick answer: Hostinger wins for most Thai sites thanks to its Kuala Lumpur, Singapore, and Jakarta data centers from USD 2.99/mo (THB 108). For an unmanaged cloud box with three separate Asian regions, Kamatera holds at USD 4/mo flat. Buyers who hate renewal cliffs should look at Ultahost, which locks Starter pricing for the full term.
Jump to: Hostinger | Kamatera | Ultahost | HostArmada | Contabo | FastComet | ChemiCloud | A2 Hosting | MochaHost | Verpex | GreenGeeks | Hostens | How to Choose | FAQ
Last reviewed: May 2026. Prices and features verified from official sources.
How We Selected These Providers
Three filters drove the ranking, in this order. First, server proximity to Bangkok: Singapore at ~30-40 ms and Kuala Lumpur at ~25-30 ms count as primary regions; Tokyo, Hong Kong, and Mumbai land as acceptable fallbacks at 60-100 ms; anywhere outside Asia is a measurable downgrade. Second, the gap between promotional and renewal pricing, with anything above a 4x jump flagged in the provider's Cons list. Third, refund window length, since most Thai buyers can't easily test a server's real-world Bangkok latency before paying.
Pricing came from each provider's public pages between April 28 and May 3, 2026. Renewal figures came from the same pricing pages where they're disclosed, plus third-party reviews where the official page hides them. Two providers in this list (GreenGeeks, Hostens) made the cut despite missing any real Asian footprint, because their value propositions matter to specific Thai buyers; we mark the latency penalty in plain language. We did not run synthetic load tests from Thai IPs. Latency figures are provider-published or derived from common Bangkok-to-region routes. For a regional view across 10+ countries, see our best shared hosting in Asia roundup.
Hostinger – Best Overall for Thai Audiences
Entry: USD 2.99/mo (THB 108) | Renewal: USD 10.99/mo | 30-day refund | Premium plan: 20 GB SSD, 3 sites, free domain
Approximately 25-30 milliseconds. That's the Bangkok-to-Kuala Lumpur figure since Hostinger fired up its KL data center in August 2025, edging out the Singapore route by a hair. Combined with their existing Jakarta and Singapore facilities, Hostinger holds the densest Southeast Asia footprint of any mass-market shared host serving Thai users. Most providers on this list get to "near Thailand" via a single Singapore DC. Hostinger gets there three ways.
The Premium plan ships with 20 GB SSD, three sites, free domain registration for year one, weekly backups, and Hostinger's hPanel control surface. LiteSpeed plus QUIC.cloud CDN ride along on shared. For a Thai WordPress install with light traffic (under 25,000 monthly visits), the spec sheet is more than enough. Performance ceilings show up earlier on the entry tier than on Business or Cloud Startup, so traffic spikes during Songkran or year-end e-commerce sales can push Premium into noticeable slowdowns.
The renewal arithmetic is where Hostinger plays its hardest hand. USD 2.99/mo requires the full 48-month prepay upfront (about USD 143.52 total), and renewals jump to USD 10.99/mo, a 3.7x lift. Hostinger's Premium renewal still undercuts ChemiCloud's USD 12.95/mo monthly renewal by 15%, but the four-year cash commitment is real money for a small Thai business cash-flowing carefully.
- Pros:
- Three Southeast Asia DCs (KL, Singapore, Jakarta), the densest in this list
- Free domain year one, weekly backups, free CDN included
- LiteSpeed + NVMe across all shared plans
- hPanel handles WordPress installs in under 60 seconds
- Cons:
- Renewal at USD 10.99/mo is 3.7x the promo
- 48-month commit needed to lock the lowest rate
- No native Thai-language support team (English-led globally)
Pricing: Premium at USD 2.99/mo on 48-month, renewing at USD 10.99/mo. Business at USD 3.99/mo (renewal USD 16.99) adds daily backups, staging, and priority support. Cloud Startup at USD 9.99/mo gives dedicated resources and 200 GB.
Best for: Thai WordPress sites under 25k monthly visits, where KL or Singapore proximity matters and the buyer is prepared to renew at USD 10.99.
Skip if: You want predictable flat pricing or month-to-month flexibility. Look at Ultahost or Contabo instead.
Verdict: Pick Hostinger if your audience is 60%+ Thai and you can absorb the renewal cliff. If you can't, jump to Ultahost. If you need a fully managed WordPress experience instead, ChemiCloud's LiteSpeed-on-Singapore stack is the closer-priced alternative.
Kamatera – Best for Multi-Region Cloud Engineering
Entry: USD 4/mo flat | 30-day free trial (USD 100 credit) | Cloud server: 1 vCPU, 1 GB RAM, 20 GB SSD
Start with the bad news: Kamatera ships an empty Linux box. No cPanel, no email service, no one-click WordPress installer, no support team that will fix your Apache config at 2am. What it does ship is genuine geographic redundancy across Asia, with three real data centers in Singapore, Tokyo, and Hong Kong, plus per-minute hourly billing if you only need to test a Bangkok-facing app for a few hours.
USD 4/mo is the same flat rate every month. Forever. No promo-to-renewal trickery, no contract lock-in, no setup fee. If you need a second region for redundancy, that's another USD 4/mo. Two Asian regions for USD 8/mo undercuts Contabo's single-Singapore Cloud VPS 10 (~USD 9-10/mo all-in) on price while doubling the geographic redundancy. Most cloud IaaS competitors at the same price either skip Asia or charge separately for traffic egress (Kamatera includes 5 TB transfer on the Basic tier).
The trade-off is the skill floor. You're choosing your OS, your web server stack, your firewall rules, and your monitoring. For a developer or a small SaaS team that needs Bangkok-to-Tokyo failover, this is the fastest path to "production in Asia at a known cost." For a Thai marketing agency that just wants WordPress to work, Kamatera is the wrong tool. Asian VPS roundup covers managed alternatives if you cross-shop.
- Pros:
- Three real Asian DCs (Singapore, Tokyo, Hong Kong)
- Flat USD 4/mo, no renewal hike, hourly billing
- 30-day free trial with USD 100 credit
- 5 TB monthly transfer included on Basic tier
- Cons:
- Unmanaged: you build the stack yourself
- No cPanel, no email service, no WordPress installer
- Higher learning curve than any managed shared host on this list
Pricing: Basic at USD 4/mo (1 vCPU, 1 GB, 20 GB, 5 TB). Step up to 2 GB / 30 GB at USD 8/mo. RAM-heavy plans (8 GB) start near USD 22/mo. Multi-region setups stack additively.
Best for: Developers building a Thailand-facing app that needs failover between Singapore and Tokyo, comfortable with a vanilla Ubuntu box.
Skip if: You want anything resembling shared hosting. Hostinger, ChemiCloud, or Verpex handle WordPress without sysadmin overhead.
Verdict: Choose Kamatera if you have engineers and need real geographic redundancy across Asia at flat pricing. If you don't have engineers but still want low Bangkok latency, Hostinger Premium delivers the latency without the sysadmin work.
Ultahost – Best for Locked Renewal Pricing
Entry: USD 3.80/mo (24-month) | Renewal: USD 3.80/mo locked | 30-day refund | Starter: 30 GB NVMe, 1 site, ~10k visits/mo
Where Hostinger's USD 2.99 balloons to USD 10.99 at renewal, Ultahost's Starter holds at USD 3.80 for the full two-year term. That's the headline. The Asia-Pacific footprint is the supporting case: Singapore, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Seoul, and Delhi, with Singapore the closest to Bangkok at roughly 30-40 ms. Five APAC regions on a managed shared product is rare at this price point.
Hardware ships on NVMe SSD across all tiers, with daily backups and free SSL on Starter. cPanel is included, which matters if you've migrated from a Thai shared host like Z.com or RuangHost where cPanel was the default panel. Free domain transfer is included; new domain registration costs extra, so if you're starting from scratch, factor in roughly USD 12-15 for a .com or about THB 350-450 for a .co.th. The 30-day refund is on the short side; HostArmada and ChemiCloud both run 45 days.
Ultahost's renewal-locked pricing for two years undercuts Hostinger's effective four-year cost by roughly 20% if you're price-sensitive on year three onward. Against Hostens (the only provider here cheaper at headline level), Ultahost's Singapore DC delivers about 220 ms of Bangkok latency improvement over Hostens' Vilnius-only infrastructure, which is the difference between a snappy and a sluggish page load.
- Pros:
- Renewal locked at USD 3.80/mo for full term
- Five APAC regions including Singapore and Tokyo
- NVMe SSD, daily backups, cPanel on Starter
- 1-click WordPress installer with managed updates
- Cons:
- Only 1 site on Starter; multi-site needs Premium
- 30-day refund (HostArmada and ChemiCloud offer 45)
- Free domain transfer only, not free new registration
Pricing: Starter at USD 3.80/mo (24-month, locked renewal). Premium at USD 7.80/mo unlocks unlimited websites and ~25k visits. Business at USD 11.80/mo bumps to 100 GB.
Best for: Thai buyers who want a single WordPress site on a Singapore DC and refuse to deal with renewal cliffs.
Skip if: You need multiple sites on the entry plan, or want LiteSpeed specifically. ChemiCloud Starter delivers LiteSpeed at a similar price point.
Verdict: Pick Ultahost Starter if you're a single-site Thai blogger or freelancer who'd rather pay USD 3.80 forever than chase renewal-discount loopholes every two years. If you need LiteSpeed caching specifically, ChemiCloud is the swap. If you need multi-site, jump to Hostinger Premium.
HostArmada – Best for the 45-Day Test Window
Entry: USD 1.99/mo (36-month) | Renewal: USD 9.95/mo | 45-day refund | Start Dock: 15 GB NVMe, 1 site, 2 GB RAM, 2 CPU cores
If you want LiteSpeed in Singapore but Hostinger's renewal trajectory worries you, HostArmada's Speed Reaper plan is the cleanest swap. The Start Dock entry tier is the wrong place to land, though, because it ships Nginx instead of LiteSpeed. To get LiteSpeed on HostArmada, you need to climb to Speed Reaper at USD 3.95/mo intro, which renews at USD 19.75/mo (5x). At Speed Reaper renewal pricing, ChemiCloud's Pro tier (USD 14.95 renewal) is roughly 24% cheaper for the same LiteSpeed-on-Singapore combination.
What HostArmada does better than every provider in this list: the 45-day refund window. That's two billing cycles of monthly billing, or enough time to run a real Songkran traffic test on a Thai-facing site before committing. Most competitors run 30-day windows; only ChemiCloud matches the 45. Free daily backups with 7-day retention come standard on Start Dock, which is unusual at the USD 1.99 price tier.
Cloud-style architecture spreads sites across multiple physical nodes, so a single hardware failure doesn't take you offline. Two Asian DCs (Singapore and Mumbai) cover most of the southern Asia traffic patterns relevant to a Thai e-commerce store; Mumbai gives a usable fallback at roughly 70-80 ms. No Tokyo or Hong Kong, which puts HostArmada behind FastComet and Kamatera on multi-region depth.
- Pros:
- 45-day refund beats every provider here except ChemiCloud
- Singapore + Mumbai DCs cover South and Southeast Asia
- Daily backups with 7-day retention on entry plan
- 2 CPU cores on Start Dock (most rivals offer 1)
- Cons:
- Entry Start Dock runs Nginx, not LiteSpeed
- LiteSpeed Speed Reaper plan renews at USD 19.75/mo
- Only 15 GB NVMe on Start Dock (Verpex offers 30 GB at similar price)
Pricing: Start Dock at USD 1.99/mo (36-month, renews USD 9.95). Web Warp at USD 3.13/mo (renews USD 15.65). Speed Reaper at USD 3.95/mo (renews USD 19.75) adds LiteSpeed and priority support.
Best for: Thai buyers who want a long real-world test before locking a 36-month term, and who can absorb the LiteSpeed upgrade to Speed Reaper.
Skip if: Your budget can't cover Speed Reaper renewal at USD 19.75. ChemiCloud Pro is the cheaper LiteSpeed-on-Singapore route.
Verdict: Pick HostArmada Start Dock only if you're confident you'll stay on Nginx (light WordPress, ≤15 GB content). For LiteSpeed buyers, ChemiCloud's renewal pricing is the better long-term math; for cheaper Asian DC presence overall, FastComet's Singapore + Tokyo + Mumbai trio is broader.
Contabo – Best Flat-Pricing VPS in Singapore
Cloud VPS 10 (Singapore): ~USD 9-10/mo all-in flat | 14-day refund | 4 vCPU AMD EPYC, 8 GB RAM, 75 GB NVMe
Contabo's Singapore VPS isn't actually USD 5.50/month. The advertised entry price is the European baseline, and Contabo charges a Singapore location fee of ~EUR 3.55/mo on top, plus a one-time setup fee on Cloud VPS 10. Real Bangkok-deployable price lands around USD 9-10/mo all-in. That number still buys 4 vCPU AMD EPYC cores, 8 GB RAM, and 75 GB NVMe in Singapore, which beats every managed shared plan in this article on raw resources by a wide margin.
Contabo's pricing model is the cleanest of any provider here: no renewal hike. The price you pay in month one is the price you pay in month 60. For Thai buyers who've been burned by 4x or 5x renewal cliffs on shared hosting, that flatness compounds. Three years of Cloud VPS 10 Singapore costs roughly USD 360 versus Hostinger Cloud Startup's roughly USD 740 over the same span at renewal pricing.
Two material weaknesses. First, the refund is only 14 days, half the industry norm and a third of HostArmada's window. Second, the VPS is unmanaged. cPanel is a paid add-on; webserver, security patches, and monitoring are your job. For a Thai developer who already runs Linux, Contabo Singapore is the cheapest serious VPS reaching Bangkok at sub-50 ms. For a content creator who's never opened SSH, this is the wrong product.
- Pros:
- Flat pricing forever, no renewal markup
- 8 GB RAM and 75 GB NVMe at the entry tier (most rivals offer 1-4 GB)
- Singapore DC reaches Bangkok at ~30-40 ms
- AMD EPYC processors across the fleet
- Cons:
- 14-day refund is the shortest on this list
- Unmanaged VPS, no cPanel by default
- Singapore location fee plus setup fee inflate the headline price
Pricing: Cloud VPS 10 Singapore at ~USD 9-10/mo all-in flat. Cloud VPS 20 Singapore (waives setup fee) at ~USD 14-15/mo. Cloud VPS 30 jumps to ~USD 22/mo for 12 vCPU and 24 GB RAM.
Best for: Thai developers wanting cheap Singapore VPS resources on a permanent flat-pricing basis.
Skip if: You can't (or won't) administer Linux yourself, or if 14 days isn't enough to test fit.
Verdict: Choose Contabo Cloud VPS 10 Singapore if you want predictable flat pricing on a Singapore box and you're already comfortable in a terminal. If you're not, Ultahost or Hostinger keep you on a managed surface for a similar all-in price after Hostinger's renewal hits.
FastComet – Best Asian DC Density in Managed Hosting
Entry: USD 1.79/mo | Renewal: USD 8.95/mo | 30-day refund | FastCloud Starter: 10 GB NVMe, 1 site, 5 email accounts
FastComet runs three Asian data centers (Singapore, Tokyo, Mumbai), which is unusual for a managed shared host at the USD 1.79/mo intro price point. Bangkok-to-Singapore lands at ~30-40 ms; Bangkok-to-Tokyo around 70-80 ms; Mumbai around 60-70 ms. For a Thai-facing site that also serves expats reading from Tokyo or Indian customers checking out from Mumbai, FastComet is the only sub-USD 2 entry tier on this list with a real fallback DC in each direction.
FastCloud Starter ships with 10 GB NVMe, one website, five email accounts, and Cloudflare CDN integration. Daily backups and free migration come standard. The cPanel + Softaculous combination handles WordPress, Joomla, and the rest of the script gallery. No LiteSpeed on the standard FastCloud tier, though, which puts FastComet behind ChemiCloud and Hostinger on raw cache performance for WordPress.
Renewal pricing is the obvious soft spot: USD 1.79 → USD 8.95, a 5x lift. That's steeper than ChemiCloud (4x) and similar to Hostinger Premium's 3.7x. Free domain registration is also missing from Starter; only domain transfer is included. For a brand new Thai site that doesn't already own a domain, factor in roughly USD 12-15/year for a .com.
- Pros:
- Three Asian DCs (Singapore, Tokyo, Mumbai) on entry plan
- NVMe storage and Cloudflare CDN included
- Free migration and daily backups
- cPanel + Softaculous for one-click installs
- Cons:
- Renewal at USD 8.95/mo is 5x intro
- No LiteSpeed (uses Apache + cPanel stack)
- No free domain registration on Starter
Pricing: FastCloud Starter at USD 1.79/mo (renews USD 8.95). FastCloud Plus at USD 3.59/mo (renews USD 17.95) unlocks unlimited sites. FastCloud Extra at USD 5.39/mo (renews USD 26.95).
Best for: Thai sites with a regional Asian audience (Thailand + Japan + India mixed traffic), where having three Asian DCs to choose from at deploy time matters.
Skip if: You need LiteSpeed performance or want a free domain bundled. ChemiCloud bundles both.
Verdict: Pick FastComet if your audience splits across multiple Asian regions and you're choosing a deploy DC at signup. If your audience is purely Thai, Hostinger's KL DC is closer to Bangkok and bundles a free domain. If LiteSpeed matters, ChemiCloud is the better stack.
ChemiCloud – Best LiteSpeed Stack at Sub-USD 3 Entry
Entry: USD 2.49/mo | Renewal: USD 9.95/mo (36-month) | 45-day refund | Starter: 20 GB NVMe, 1 site, ~25k visits, free domain year one
USD 0.50/month. That's the gap between ChemiCloud's Starter promo and Verpex's effective Bronze rate. The difference matters because ChemiCloud bundles three things Verpex's entry tier doesn't: LiteSpeed web server with built-in LSCache, free domain registration in year one, and a 45-day refund window. For a Thai WordPress buyer comparing the two cheapest entry tiers in this list, ChemiCloud is the better-equipped USD 2.49.
The Singapore DC handles Bangkok traffic at the standard ~30-40 ms range. Mumbai is the secondary Asian region. Eight global locations total, with daily backups (10 days retention) and free migration handled by ChemiCloud's team rather than DIY. The cPanel-based control surface is conventional and predictable; nothing surprising for anyone migrating from a Thai shared host running cPanel.
Renewal trajectory is steep but not absurd: USD 2.49 to USD 9.95 on the 36-month renewal, or USD 12.95 if you're paying monthly or yearly. That 4x lift undercuts FastComet's 5x and HostArmada Speed Reaper's 5x for an equivalent LiteSpeed Singapore stack. The Pro tier at USD 3.49 promo (renews USD 14.95) unlocks unlimited sites, which becomes the upgrade path for Thai agencies running multiple client sites.
- Pros:
- LiteSpeed + LSCache on entry tier (rare at USD 2.49)
- Free domain year one, free migration, 45-day refund
- Singapore + Mumbai DCs cover the relevant Asian routes
- 10-day backup retention on Starter
- Cons:
- Renewal at USD 9.95/mo on 36-month, USD 12.95 on shorter terms
- Only 1 site on Starter (Pro needed for unlimited)
- Smaller brand than Hostinger or A2; thinner third-party benchmarking
Pricing: Starter at USD 2.49/mo (renews USD 9.95 on 36-month). Pro at USD 3.49/mo (renews USD 14.95) for unlimited sites. Turbo at USD 4.49/mo (renews USD 17.95) adds extra resources.
Best for: Thai WordPress buyers wanting LiteSpeed + Singapore on a single-site budget under USD 3/mo intro.
Skip if: You need multi-site capacity at the entry tier (look at Hostinger Premium or Ultahost Premium) or you can't absorb the USD 9.95 renewal.
Verdict: Choose ChemiCloud Starter if you're running one Thai WordPress site and LiteSpeed caching matters. If you need multi-site, Pro is the natural upgrade or Hostinger Premium becomes cheaper. If you can stomach Nginx instead of LiteSpeed, HostArmada Start Dock saves USD 0.50.
A2 Hosting (Hosting.com) – Best for Long Refund Window
Entry: USD 3.99/mo (Startup) | Turbo Boost: USD 6.99/mo (renews USD 25.99/mo) | 30-day full + prorated to 90 days | Singapore DC | NVMe storage
A2 Hosting doesn't really exist as a standalone brand anymore. Following the WHG (World Host Group) acquisition in January 2025, A2 was rebranded to Hosting.com in April 2025. The a2hosting.com URL now 301-redirects. The infrastructure is the same (Singapore DC, Mumbai DC added under WHG, Samsung NVMe), but the brand confusion matters because most third-party reviews still reference "A2 Hosting" while the buying experience now happens at hosting.com.
The refund policy is the strongest on this list, full stop: 30 days for a full refund, plus prorated refunds to 90 days. That's three months of effective testing time, longer than HostArmada's and ChemiCloud's 45 days. For a Thai buyer running a seasonal site (think tourism shoulder seasons or Chinese New Year campaigns), the 90-day window covers a complete demand cycle.
The renewal cliff is brutal. Turbo Boost at USD 6.99 promo renews at USD 25.99/mo, a 3.7x jump that lands at the highest absolute renewal price in this article. Turbo is also where A2's "20x faster" LiteSpeed claim lives; Startup runs Apache. So either you commit to Turbo's USD 25.99 renewal for LiteSpeed-on-Singapore, or you stick with Startup's Apache and lose the speed differentiator. ChemiCloud Pro at USD 14.95 renewal delivers the LiteSpeed-Singapore combo at 42% lower cost.
- Pros:
- Refund window covers up to 90 days prorated
- Singapore + Mumbai DCs reach Bangkok in 30-40 ms
- Samsung NVMe storage across all tiers
- Free migration and 99.9% uptime commitment
- Cons:
- Turbo renewal at USD 25.99/mo is the steepest in this article
- Brand mid-transition (A2 → Hosting.com) creates buying confusion
- LiteSpeed only on Turbo tier; Startup runs Apache
- Recent reviews flag uptime concerns post-acquisition
Pricing: Startup at USD 3.99/mo (renews ~USD 12.99). Drive at USD 5.99/mo. Turbo Boost at USD 6.99/mo (renews USD 25.99). Turbo Max at USD 12.99/mo (renews USD 35.99).
Best for: Thai buyers running seasonal sites who want maximum risk-free testing before a long-term commit.
Skip if: You want LiteSpeed without paying USD 25.99 at renewal. ChemiCloud Pro is the better cost path.
Verdict: Pick A2/Hosting.com only if the 90-day refund window is decisive (seasonal businesses, agencies testing client deploys). For LiteSpeed-on-Singapore on a normal long-term budget, ChemiCloud is significantly cheaper. For best raw value on a single-site Thai deployment, Hostinger or Ultahost win.
MochaHost – Best for Windows ASP.NET Sites in Asia
Entry: ~USD 3.18-3.99/mo (Soho) | Renewal: USD 6.35-12.99/mo | 30-day refund | Specs: not transparently published
MochaHost is the only provider on this list that hides much of its current spec sheet behind 404 pages and inconsistent third-party citations. The brand sits inside the World Host Group constellation (same group that owns several other shared hosts), and its Singapore + India DC presence comes through that shared infrastructure pool. For Thai buyers who need Windows-stack hosting (ASP.NET, MSSQL, Java) at managed shared pricing, MochaHost is one of the only options on this list at all; most rivals are Linux-only.
The unique value is the 100% uptime guarantee with monthly compensation if MochaHost misses it. Most competitors cap at 99.9% (about 8.7 hours of allowed annual downtime) or 99.95%; MochaHost claims zero, which is aggressive enough that it's worth taking with appropriate skepticism, especially since recent reviews report mixed performance against the SLA. Refund window is the standard 30 days.
The transparency problem is real. Storage tier, RAM allowance, LiteSpeed availability, and CDN inclusion aren't clearly published on the current product pages we accessed. Renewal pricing in particular varies by source: third-party reviews cite USD 6.35 to USD 12.99 on Soho, and up to USD 20.99 on the Mocha tier. Compared to ChemiCloud's published USD 9.95 renewal or Verpex's USD 6.00, MochaHost's pricing opacity is itself a reason to slot it lower in a buying decision.
- Pros:
- Windows + Linux hosting (rare in this group)
- 100% uptime guarantee with compensation
- Singapore + India regional presence via WHG infrastructure
- 30-day refund standard
- Cons:
- Specs and pricing not consistently published; 404s during research
- Renewal multipliers reach 3.3x on premium tiers
- Mixed third-party uptime reports despite 100% claim
Pricing: Soho approximately USD 3.18-3.99/mo intro (renews USD 6.35-12.99 depending on term). Business and Mocha tiers move higher; treat all current MochaHost pricing as needing direct verification at checkout.
Best for: Thai developers building ASP.NET or Java sites who need a Singapore-region option, or buyers chasing the 100% uptime SLA.
Skip if: You're running a standard Linux WordPress site. Hostinger, Ultahost, ChemiCloud all deliver more transparent pricing for the same outcome.
Verdict: Choose MochaHost only for Windows-stack workloads or for buyers prioritizing the uptime SLA over price clarity. For everyone else, the spec opacity alone is a reason to stay with one of the eight providers above.
Verpex – Best Storage at Entry Tier
Bronze: USD 6.00/mo (or discounted intro) | 30-day refund | 30 GB NVMe, 1 GB RAM, 1 site, free domain on annual
Verpex's Bronze plan looks restrictive on paper (1 site, 1 GB RAM), but the storage allotment is the differentiator: 30 GB NVMe, double Hostinger Premium's 20 GB and triple HostArmada Start Dock's 15 GB. For a Thai photo blog, recipe site, or small e-commerce store with many product images, the storage ceiling matters more than the RAM ceiling on a low-traffic deployment.
The DC strategy is partner-network rather than first-party: Verpex resells capacity in nine regions including Singapore and India through partner facilities. Singapore reaches Bangkok at the standard ~30-40 ms. Daily backups, free domain on annual billing, and cPanel are all included on Bronze. Verpex's pricing model leans more flat than promo-heavy: Bronze monthly is USD 6.00, with discounts on longer terms rather than the dramatic 4-5x renewal cliffs typical elsewhere in this list.
That flatter pricing comes at a cost. Bronze's listed rate is roughly 2x Hostinger's intro promo and 1.6x Ultahost Starter. Verpex bets that buyers prefer transparent pricing over headline-low promos. For some Thai buyers (especially those scarred by renewal-price surprises) that bet pays off; for buyers comparing first-year cash outlay only, Verpex looks expensive against Hostinger or HostArmada.
- Pros:
- 30 GB NVMe on Bronze beats every entry tier here except FastComet Plus
- Free domain on annual, daily backups, cPanel included
- Pricing closer to flat (no extreme renewal cliff)
- Singapore + India coverage via partner DCs
- Cons:
- Only 1 GB RAM and 1 site on Bronze
- Higher headline price than Hostinger or HostArmada
- Partner-network DCs (not first-party Verpex hardware)
Pricing: Bronze at USD 6.00/mo monthly (discounted intro on longer terms). Silver at USD 10.00/mo unlocks unlimited sites. Gold at USD 15.00/mo expands resources further.
Best for: Thai single-site buyers who value flat-ish pricing and 30 GB storage over the lowest possible promo rate.
Skip if: First-year price is the deciding factor. Hostinger or HostArmada are roughly half the year-one cost.
Verdict: Choose Verpex Bronze if you want predictable pricing on a storage-heavy single site. If you want the cheapest year-one Thai-facing deployment, Hostinger Premium's KL DC and lower intro price win on price-per-feature.
GreenGeeks – Best for Eco-Conscious Buyers (Despite Latency)
Entry: USD 2.95/mo | Renewal: USD 13.95/mo | 30-day refund | Lite: 25 GB SSD, 1 site, free domain year one, LiteSpeed
Skip GreenGeeks if Bangkok latency is the deciding factor. Their nearest data center sits in Sydney, which puts Bangkok-to-server latency in the 120-160 ms range, roughly 4x Hostinger's KL-DC figure of 25-30 ms and 3.5x ChemiCloud's Singapore reading of 30-40 ms. For a Thai-audience site where page-load speed affects bounce rate or conversion, that's a meaningful penalty, not a rounding error.
The reason GreenGeeks earns a slot at all is the green credential, which is genuinely the best in this list: 300% renewable-energy match through Bonneville Environmental Foundation, EPA Green Power Partner status since 2009, and one tree planted per new account. For a Thai sustainability-focused brand or eco-tourism operator whose audience cares about hosting carbon footprint, GreenGeeks is the only managed shared host on this list that can credibly back a "green hosting" marketing claim.
Lite plan ships with LiteSpeed, free CDN, free domain year one, 25 GB SSD, and one website. Renewal jumps from USD 2.95 to USD 13.95, a 4.7x lift. Pro at USD 4.95/mo intro adds unlimited sites; Premium at USD 8.95/mo adds extra resources. None of those upgrades fix the Sydney latency problem for Thai users. Our WordPress eCommerce hosting guide lists Asian-DC alternatives for green-leaning buyers who can't tolerate the latency hit.
- Pros:
- 300% renewable energy match; strongest green credentials in this list
- LiteSpeed and free CDN on Lite
- Free domain year one, free migration, 25 GB SSD
- Tree planted per account through partner program
- Cons:
- Closest DC is Sydney; 120-160 ms Bangkok latency
- Renewal at USD 13.95/mo is 4.7x the promo
- No Asian DC on any tier
Pricing: Lite at USD 2.95/mo (renews USD 13.95). Pro at USD 4.95/mo (renews USD 18.95). Premium at USD 8.95/mo (renews USD 30.95).
Best for: Thai eco-focused brands and sustainability-led organizations whose audience is more global than Thailand-concentrated.
Skip if: Your traffic is majority-Thai. Hostinger's KL DC delivers similar pricing without the Sydney latency penalty.
Verdict: Choose GreenGeeks only when the green marketing story is the point. For everyone else, a Singapore or KL host plus Cloudflare CDN gets you closer to carbon-neutral with better Thai performance.
Hostens – Best Budget Pick (With a Big Asterisk)
S10: USD 9.99/mo (annual promo) | Monthly: USD 12.99/mo | 30-day refund | Vilnius, Lithuania DC only | 10 GB, 10 sites, 100 emails
Hostens has no Asian data center. Anywhere. The infrastructure is a single Tier III facility in Vilnius, Lithuania, which means Bangkok-to-server latency lands in the 250-300 ms range, the worst of any provider on this list. Hostens.com pages mention "EU, USA, Asia locations available" in marketing copy, but independent reviews and the company's own infrastructure documentation confirm Vilnius-only as of May 2026. Treat any Asian DC claim from Hostens as marketing language until the actual checkout page shows otherwise.
So why include Hostens at all? Because it does have the cheapest absolute entry tier in this list when promos run, plus the unusual feature of 10 sites on the entry plan. Most competitors at sub-USD 4 cap at 1 site (Hostinger, Ultahost, ChemiCloud, HostArmada). For a Thai freelancer or small agency parking 10 low-traffic sites where latency truly doesn't matter (internal tools, archive sites, staging environments), Hostens is the cheapest 10-site host on this list by a large margin.
For a primary Thai-audience production site, Hostens is the wrong choice. The 250+ ms latency is roughly 8x Hostinger Premium's KL-DC figure of 25-30 ms, and the lack of LiteSpeed advertising plus missing CDN bundling combine into a measurably worse user experience than every provider above. Even VPS options at higher price points pay back the latency improvement quickly on traffic-sensitive sites.
- Pros:
- 10 sites on entry plan (most rivals cap at 1)
- Cheapest absolute entry on promo
- Free domain on annual (cheap TLDs only, not .com)
- Tier III Vilnius DC with 99.95% uptime
- Cons:
- Vilnius-only DC; ~250-300 ms Bangkok latency
- No LiteSpeed or NVMe advertised on entry tier
- Free domain excludes .com (only cheap TLDs)
- 99.95% uptime is below the 99.99% offered by several competitors
Pricing: S10 at USD 9.99/mo on annual promo (or USD 12.99 monthly), 10 GB and 10 sites. Higher tiers expand storage and email count but stay on Vilnius infrastructure.
Best for: Thai freelancers parking many low-traffic side projects where audience latency genuinely doesn't matter.
Skip if: You're running anything customer-facing for a Thai audience. Any Singapore or KL host above will pay back the price difference in conversion.
Verdict: Pick Hostens only as a parking host for low-stakes side projects. For real Thai-audience production, almost any provider above is the right answer; Ultahost Starter at USD 3.80 hits a similar entry budget on a Singapore DC.