SOLUTIONS FOR ECOMMERCE

Hosting That Keeps Pace With a Growing Store

Growing stores outgrow the restrictions of shared hosting as catalogues, extensions, traffic and checkout activity increase. VPS-powered hosting gives platforms such as Magento and WooCommerce clearer resource allocation and room to grow.

A Slow Store Doesn't Feel Slow to You. It Feels Expensive.

Shared hosting is fine until the catalogue grows, the extensions pile up and the first big sale arrives. Then every shared-tenant slowdown lands directly on your checkout.

Storefront competing with other tenants for CPU
Dedicated VPS resources for your store alone
Sale-day traffic overwhelming a fixed shared plan
Size up ahead of seasonal demand, on your decision
Database and cache crammed into the same shared box
Store, database and caching services sized deliberately
Hosting far from the customers actually buying
Server locations in India, the USA and Europe

Built for Catalogues, Carts and Checkouts

Dedicated Resources for Your Store

Your storefront no longer competes with other tenants for CPU and memory. Resource-based VPS plans keep product pages and checkout responsive.

Magento, WooCommerce and More

Deploy Magento, WooCommerce, OpenCart or PrestaShop with your database and caching services on infrastructure sized for the workload.

Scale for Seasonal Demand

Move to a larger configuration ahead of sales events and high-traffic seasons, keeping resource decisions in your hands rather than a metered bill.

Database and Cache Alongside

Run MySQL and Redis next to your store on the same VPS when resources allow, or on separate servers as order volume grows.

Domains and HTTPS Handled

Point your domain and configure HTTPS through the platform for supported deployments — table stakes for any store, minus the manual certificate work.

Migration Before the Season

Moving an existing store? Request a migration review early — scope is confirmed before work begins, so the cutover lands well before your busy period.

Pick Your Platform

Frequently Asked Questions

Ecommerce FAQ

Common questions from store owners evaluating HiQloud.

It depends on catalogue size, extensions and traffic. A modest WooCommerce store runs comfortably on an entry VPS; a Magento store with a large catalogue typically needs more CPU and memory. Compare plans on the pricing page, or contact the team with your store details for guidance.

Review your resource usage in the platform ahead of the event, and move to a larger configuration if the store is already running warm. Because plans are resource-based, that decision is yours to make in advance — not a surprise bill afterward.

Migration assistance may be available after a review of your current hosting, store platform, database and access. The scope and timeline are confirmed before work begins. Plan migrations well before your busy season.

Yes. Smaller stores often run everything on one VPS; growing stores split MySQL or Redis onto their own servers for headroom. Both patterns are supported — it's a resource decision, not a platform limitation.

Give Your Store Infrastructure That Takes Sales Seriously

Dedicated resources for your storefront, database and caching layer. Size up before the season, not after the slowdown.

Developer Illustration | HiQloud