Alternatives to Kinsta logo

Alternatives to Kinsta

Pantheon, WP Engine, SiteGround, GoDaddy, and DigitalOcean are the most popular alternatives and competitors to Kinsta.
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What is Kinsta and what are its top alternatives?

They provide high performance hosting on Google Apps servers, which means your site runs on the same infrastructure as Google
Kinsta is a tool in the Hosted Blogging Platforms category of a tech stack.
Kinsta is an open source tool with GitHub stars and GitHub forks. Here’s a link to Kinsta's open source repository on GitHub

Top Alternatives to Kinsta

  • Pantheon
    Pantheon

    Stop struggling with version control, staging environments, backups, and workflow. Pantheon makes best practices easy. It’s 100% free for developers. ...

  • WP Engine
    WP Engine

    WP Engine provides best-in-class customer service on top of innovation-driven technology. This is why over 30,000 customers in 120 countries have chosen us for their mission critical WordPress hosting needs. ...

  • SiteGround
    SiteGround

    It is a web hosting company and reports servicing more than 1,800,000 domains worldwide. It provides shared hosting, cloud hosting and dedicated servers as well as email hosting and domain registration ...

  • GoDaddy
    GoDaddy

    Go Daddy makes registering Domain Names fast, simple, and affordable. It is a trusted domain registrar that empowers people with creative ideas to succeed online. ...

  • DigitalOcean
    DigitalOcean

    We take the complexities out of cloud hosting by offering blazing fast, on-demand SSD cloud servers, straightforward pricing, a simple API, and an easy-to-use control panel. ...

  • DreamHost
    DreamHost

    It is the leader in shared web hosting, vps hosting, dedicated hosting, WordPress hosting, cloud storage and cloud computing. ...

  • HostGator
    HostGator

    HostGator is a Houston-based provider of shared, reseller, virtual private server, and dedicated web hosting with an additional presence ...

  • WordPress
    WordPress

    The core software is built by hundreds of community volunteers, and when you’re ready for more there are thousands of plugins and themes available to transform your site into almost anything you can imagine. Over 60 million people have chosen WordPress to power the place on the web they call “home” — we’d love you to join the family. ...

Kinsta alternatives & related posts

Pantheon logo

Pantheon

56
3
The professional website platform for Drupal & WordPress sites.
56
3
PROS OF PANTHEON
  • 1
    Quality customer service
  • 1
    One of the most fast hosting platforms out there
  • 1
    Wonderful platform, people fast and secure this can be
CONS OF PANTHEON
    Be the first to leave a con

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    WP Engine logo

    WP Engine

    73
    1
    Hassle-Free WordPress Hosting
    73
    1
    PROS OF WP ENGINE
    • 1
      Best customer support of any business, all time
    • 0
      <a href="https://hostandprotect.com/">best hosting</a>
    CONS OF WP ENGINE
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      SiteGround logo

      SiteGround

      31
      2
      A shared hosting provider that offers its users multiple different hosting options
      31
      2
      PROS OF SITEGROUND
      • 1
        Simple to get started
      • 1
        Cheap
      CONS OF SITEGROUND
        Be the first to leave a con

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        GoDaddy logo

        GoDaddy

        557
        11
        Your all in one solution to grow online
        557
        11
        PROS OF GODADDY
        • 8
          Flexible payment methods for domains
        • 3
          .io support
        CONS OF GODADDY
        • 2
          Constantly trying to upsell you
        • 1
          Not a great UI

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        Deep Shah
        Software Engineer at Amazon · | 6 upvotes · 974.7K views

        I only know Java and so thinking of building a web application in the following order. I need some help on what alternatives I can choose. Open to replace components, services, or infrastructure.

        • Frontend: AngularJS, Bootstrap
        • Web Framework: Spring Boot
        • Database: Amazon DynamoDB
        • Authentication: Auth0
        • Deployment: Amazon EC2 Container Service
        • Local Testing: Docker
        • Marketing: Mailchimp (Separately Export from Auth0)
        • Website Domain: GoDaddy
        • Routing: Amazon Route 53

        PS: Open to exploring options of going completely native ( AWS Lambda, AWS Security but have to learn all)

        See more
        DigitalOcean logo

        DigitalOcean

        18.2K
        2.6K
        Deploy an SSD cloud server in less than 55 seconds with a dedicated IP and root access.
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        PROS OF DIGITALOCEAN
        • 560
          Great value for money
        • 364
          Simple dashboard
        • 362
          Good pricing
        • 300
          Ssds
        • 250
          Nice ui
        • 191
          Easy configuration
        • 156
          Great documentation
        • 138
          Ssh access
        • 135
          Great community
        • 24
          Ubuntu
        • 13
          Docker
        • 12
          IPv6 support
        • 10
          Private networking
        • 8
          99.99% uptime SLA
        • 7
          Simple API
        • 7
          Great tutorials
        • 6
          55 Second Provisioning
        • 5
          One Click Applications
        • 4
          Dokku
        • 4
          LAMP
        • 4
          Debian
        • 4
          CoreOS
        • 4
          Node.js
        • 3
          1Gb/sec Servers
        • 3
          Word Press
        • 3
          Mean
        • 3
          LEMP
        • 3
          Simple Control Panel
        • 3
          Ghost
        • 2
          Runs CoreOS
        • 2
          Quick and no nonsense service
        • 2
          Django
        • 2
          Good Tutorials
        • 2
          Speed
        • 2
          Ruby on Rails
        • 2
          GitLab
        • 2
          Hex Core machines with dedicated ECC Ram and RAID SSD s
        • 1
          CentOS
        • 1
          Spaces
        • 1
          KVM Virtualization
        • 1
          Amazing Hardware
        • 1
          Transfer Globally
        • 1
          Fedora
        • 1
          FreeBSD
        • 1
          Drupal
        • 1
          FreeBSD Amp
        • 1
          Magento
        • 1
          ownCloud
        • 1
          RedMine
        • 1
          My go to server provider
        • 1
          Ease and simplicity
        • 1
          Nice
        • 1
          Find it superfitting with my requirements (SSD, ssh.
        • 1
          Easy Setup
        • 1
          Cheap
        • 1
          Static IP
        • 1
          It's the easiest to get started for small projects
        • 1
          Automatic Backup
        • 1
          Great support
        • 1
          Quick and easy to set up
        • 1
          Servers on demand - literally
        • 1
          Reliability
        • 0
          Variety of services
        • 0
          Managed Kubernetes
        CONS OF DIGITALOCEAN
        • 3
          No live support chat
        • 3
          Pricing

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        Christopher Wray
        Web Developer at Soltech LLC · | 15 upvotes · 189.8K views

        This week, we finally released NurseryPeople.com. In the end, I chose to provision our server on DigitalOcean. So far, I am SO happy with that decision. Although setting everything up was a challenge, and I learned a lot, DigitalOceans blogs helped in so many ways. I was able to set up nginx and the Laravel web app pretty smoothly. I am also using Buddy for deploying changes made in git, which is super awesome. All I have to do in order to deploy is push my code to my private repo, and buddy transfers everything over to DigitalOcean. So far, we haven't had any downtime and DigitalOceans prices are quite fair for the power under the hood.

        See more

        Hello, I'm currently writing an e-commerce website with Laravel and Laravel Nova (as an admin panel). I want to start deploying the app and created a DigitalOcean account. After some searches about the deployment process, I saw that the setup via DigitalOcean (using Droplets) isn't very easy for beginners. Now I'm not sure how to deploy my app. I am in between Laravel Forge and DigitalOcean (?Apps Platform or Droplets?). I've read that Heroku and Laravel Vapor are a bit expensive. That's why I didn't consider them yet. I'd be happy to read your opinions on that topic!

        See more
        DreamHost logo

        DreamHost

        29
        0
        The best open source cloud hosting platform for individuals, small businesses, and developers
        29
        0
        PROS OF DREAMHOST
          Be the first to leave a pro
          CONS OF DREAMHOST
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            HostGator logo

            HostGator

            19
            0
            A leading provider of web hosting
            19
            0
            PROS OF HOSTGATOR
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              CONS OF HOSTGATOR
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                Shared insights
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                WebflowWebflowHostGatorHostGator

                I am very new to web services so please bear with me.

                I am currently subscribed to HostGator's hatchling/hosting plan, as well as Webflow's monthly plan. I wonder if I need the shared hatchling plan from HostGator at all to run my website. I have a small low-maintenance website, which is mainly for personal portfolios. So no web purchases or much interaction is needed at all.

                I know the essentials are my domain renewals, and webflow subscription (since I design and update through their platform). So I wonder if I really need the hatchling plan.

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                WordPress logo

                WordPress

                98.8K
                2.1K
                A semantic personal publishing platform with a focus on aesthetics, web standards, and usability.
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                PROS OF WORDPRESS
                • 417
                  Customizable
                • 368
                  Easy to manage
                • 356
                  Plugins & themes
                • 259
                  Non-tech colleagues can update website content
                • 248
                  Really powerful
                • 145
                  Rapid website development
                • 78
                  Best documentation
                • 51
                  Codex
                • 44
                  Product feature set
                • 35
                  Custom/internal social network
                • 18
                  Open source
                • 8
                  Great for all types of websites
                • 7
                  Huge install and user base
                • 5
                  Perfect example of user collaboration
                • 5
                  Most websites make use of it
                • 5
                  Best
                • 5
                  It's simple and easy to use by any novice
                • 5
                  I like it like I like a kick in the groin
                • 5
                  Open Source Community
                • 4
                  Community
                • 4
                  API-based CMS
                • 3
                  Easy To use
                • 2
                  <a href="https://secure.wphackedhel">Easy Beginner</a>
                • 1
                  Flexibility
                CONS OF WORDPRESS
                • 13
                  Hard to keep up-to-date if you customize things
                • 13
                  Plugins are of mixed quality
                • 10
                  Not best backend UI
                • 2
                  Complex Organization
                • 1
                  Forced to use LAMP stack
                • 1
                  Great Security
                • 1
                  Do not cover all the basics in the core

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                hello guys, I need your help. I created a website, I've been using Elementor forever, but yesterday I bought a template after I made the purchase I knew I made a mistake, cause the template was in HTML, can anyone please show me how to put this HTML template in my WordPress so it will be the face of my website, thank you in advance.

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                Dale Ross
                Independent Contractor at Self Employed · | 22 upvotes · 1.7M views

                I've heard that I have the ability to write well, at times. When it flows, it flows. I decided to start blogging in 2013 on Blogger. I started a company and joined BizPark with the Microsoft Azure allotment. I created a WordPress blog and did a migration at some point. A lot happened in the time after that migration but I stopped coding and changed cities during tumultuous times that taught me many lessons concerning mental health and productivity. I eventually graduated from BizSpark and outgrew the credit allotment. That killed the WordPress blog.

                I blogged about writing again on the existing Blogger blog but it didn't feel right. I looked at a few options where I wouldn't have to worry about hosting cost indefinitely and Jekyll stood out with GitHub Pages. The Importer was fairly straightforward for the existing blog posts.

                Todo * Set up redirects for all posts on blogger. The URI format is different so a complete redirect wouldn't work. Although, there may be something in Jekyll that could manage the redirects. I did notice the old URLs were stored in the front matter. I'm working on a command-line Ruby gem for the current plan. * I did find some of the lost WordPress posts on archive.org that I downloaded with the waybackmachinedownloader. I think I might write an importer for that. * I still have a few Disqus comment threads to map

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