The Price of Free Hosting

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When you’re starting a new business, anything “free” that helps you along can sound like a really good idea. But when it comes to free web hosting, it might not be as great as it seems.

“Free” hosting can have strings attached. You may find yourself struggling to move your site data off of someone else’s computer, or find yourself on the hook for an enormous monthly fee. By the time your site is successful, you may find the price of “free” hosting to be much higher than you anticipated!

We’re going to take an objective look at exactly what free web hosting is . . . and why it may end up costing you in the end.

What is Free Web Hosting?

Web hosting can be thought of as your website’s home: it’s where all of the important files and data (everything that’s needed to keep your website running) lives. “Free” web hosting is, of course, when that space is made available to users without a cost.

How does it work? A service allots you space on a server that they own and operate. You are responsible for creating and maintaining your own website, but you don’t have to worry about anything to do with the actual server. Sometimes the host even provides extras, like free site builders or automated installation tools.

Why Would They Give Away Hosting?

It seems counterintuitive, right? Businesses are meant to make money, but how can they make money if they’re giving out their product for free? This seems especially true of web hosting, which requires an enormous amount of hardware, space to hold the physical machines, bandwidth, power, and people to provide maintenance. That’s a lot of overhead!

Here’s why they do it:

Upselling – Like many products or services today, some hosting providers offer a very basic product for free in the hopes that their clients will upgrade to a paid plan later. Paid plans, of course, typically come with more features and resources that can be quite enticing. For example, a free hosting plan might come with email support or chat boards, while the paid version might come with free 24-hour support from live customer service reps. Sometimes these paid plans are a good deal, but you can often get more features for less money over the long term by choosing an affordable, fully-featured hosting plan from the beginning.

Limited Resources – Some plans are “free” only as long as a site stays within some arbitrarily defined limitations. If your site exceeds a certain number of visitors, or you use up a limited amount of storage space, you can find your site completely offline — until you pay for more resources. While many hosting plans will have some limitations in place, these limitations should be clearly stated up-front so you can plan around them and upgrade if needed. You don’t want your site taken offline right as you begin to gain popularity!

Proprietary Ecosystem – If you’re new to site design, this is an aspect of free hosting that will take some explaining. The most popular ways to build websites involve using free and open-source tools that anyone can download, access, or work with at no charge. This includes everything from user-friendly Content Management Systems (CMSs) like WordPress to advanced app frameworks like Laravel.

Some companies choose to focus on proprietary platforms. Some of these platforms are even quite well made and easy to use. Here’s the problem — if you ever want a feature the platform designers did not plan for, you’re stuck! This would not be a problem with a more popular tool like WordPress. A WordPress designer could look for a plugin, or try to code a solution. WordPress is one of the world’s most popular platforms, so it’s quite likely a solution already exists.

Relying on a proprietary platform to run your business is an unnecessary risk. If you ever need something outside the scope of that platform, you have no choice but to hope your hosting company decides to change their software. No one outside of your hosting company can change or update the platform. Who knows if your hosting company will want to! Your situation may be too specialized to justify the cost of coding a custom site add-on.

That’s not even the worst thing about these proprietary platforms. If you one day decide to move your business elsewhere, you may find it impossible to do so. Many of these platforms have no easy way of exporting site data. Even if you could export your data, there will be nowhere else you can easily upload it. The exported data will be incompatible with other site frameworks. On the other hand, something like a WordPress site is very easy to move from one server to another.

Free, Nearly Free, and Affordable Alternatives

Despite the drawbacks, free web hosting is an ideal solution for certain situations. If you’re just learning to code, running a blog-only page, or you just want to show your boss that you can put words on a screen, then free hosting might be the perfect fit. Here are some forms of free and affordable hosting that are useful in specific situations.

Use a Blogging Service or Newsletter Platform

If you don’t actually need a website and just want to get words in front of your readers, consider a blogging service like Medium or a newsletter service like Substack. These services are free to post on, and some even have opportunities for you to make money off of your work.

GitHub Pages

If you just need to get a website online for testing purposes, classwork, or to make a pitch before building the real thing, consider using GitHub Pages. Once you learn how to use GitHub to manage your version control, it’s easy to extend this further and use GitHub to test out websites while you work on them. You can always upgrade to a real hosting plan after you’ve done all the work of designing and testing your site.

Nearly Free: Subdomains

Now, subdomains aren’t free. You need to already have a hosting plan up and running to add a subdomain. Here’s the thing: subdomains can have everything a full website has, and most hosting accounts allow you to create multiple subdomains for every “real” domain you have. They’re a great way to try out new frameworks or keep one-off projects in one, convenient place. Best of all, there’s no need to buy a new domain!

QuickStarter

QuickStarter isn’t free, but if you’ve never done any form of site design before and just want something online as soon as possible, it’s a great choice. Why would I mention a paid site-design service in a discussion regarding free hosting? One word: expandability. A QuickStarter site is a full and complete WordPress site. We’ll help you get online in a few days and then you’re free to change the design, layout, pages, are functionality using the world’s most popular CMS.

Launch your web presence quickly and easily with Shared Hosting. Our user-friendly hosting is perfect for everyone, providing the fastest shared hosting experience possible, all powered by cPanel.

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The Bottom Line

Sit down and make a list of your website’s requirements. Do you run an eCommerce store that requires a lot of bandwidth? A simple one-page website? Do you plan on uploading lots of photo albums to showcase your work?

Once you know exactly what type of resources your site will require, you can decide if free web hosting is for you.

High quality hosting is worth the cost for a vast majority of situations. If you want your website to last a long time and create a return on your investment, choose a hosting platform for the life of your business, not just the first few weeks. That way, your site can grow with your business!

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