UK shared hosting
Managed shared accounts on hardware in the United Kingdom. cPanel gives you email, files, databases, and SSL in one place - ideal for CMS sites, shops, and agencies who want familiar tooling without running a server.
Prices include VAT at the UK rate unless we state otherwise.
In plain English
Shared hosting means many customers' websites live on the same physical server, each in their own isolated account. You do not get the whole machine - you get a slice of CPU, memory, and disk that is right-sized for typical brochure sites, blogs, and small shops.
We manage the server operating system and install cPanel so you can handle domains, email, databases, and files through a browser. You cannot change the kernel or reboot the host, but you also do not pay for - or maintain - bare metal yourself.
Need root access or custom kernels? Step up to UK VPS or dedicated servers.
Shared hosting shines when your stack is PHP + MySQL, you want one-click style workflows inside cPanel, and traffic fits well within fair-use CPU limits. Below are typical fits - each pairs naturally with cPanel tooling and UK peering for domestic visitors.
Blogs, marketing sites, and lightweight Woo shops. Cron, updates, and backups through cPanel + plugins.
Small and mid catalogues; pair with caching and CDN when you outgrow shared - we will size VPS or dedicated honestly.
Membership and content sites that expect a classic LAMP admin experience.
Editorial and institutional builds where PHP 8.x and MariaDB under cPanel are enough.
Why cPanel
Industry-standard control layer used by millions of sites - documented, scriptable, supportable.
Mailboxes, autoresponders, and webmail without running your own MTA.
File Manager plus SFTP accounts for deploy keys and CI uploads.
Databases and users with phpMyAdmin-style access for CMS data.
Addon domains, aliases, redirects, and zone editing in plain English.
Issue and renew certificates; force HTTPS on new builds in minutes.
Enough telemetry to spot traffic spikes before the invoice surprises you.
Where next?