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Cloud·21 March 2026

The case for managed hosting in 2026

Self-managed VPS used to be the only affordable option. In 2026, managed hosting has become the smarter bet for most growing businesses.

There's a version of this conversation that happened ten years ago where the answer was always "set up your own server." Cheap VPS plans were everywhere, DigitalOcean had just made it easy enough for developers who weren't sysadmins, and the tradeoff felt obvious: a few hours of setup in exchange for full control and lower costs.

That tradeoff has shifted.

What actually changed

The cost of a developer's time has gone up. The cost of a security incident — in lost data, lost trust, and emergency remediation — has gone up. The complexity of a modern application stack has gone up. The thing that hasn't gone up is the hourly rate of the person who has to stay on top of it all.

What we've seen with clients who came to us after years of self-managing:

  • Unpatched systems running kernel versions from 2022
  • No backup verification process — backups existed, but nobody had tested a restore in eighteen months
  • SSL certificates that renewed automatically most of the time until they didn't
  • Monitoring alerts going to an email address nobody checked

What managed hosting actually means

Managed hosting doesn't mean you give up control. It means you give up the maintenance tax — the background hum of updates, monitoring, and incident response that costs your team attention even when nothing is on fire.

What we include:

  1. Daily verified backups with restore testing
  2. Uptime monitoring with real escalation paths
  3. Security patches on a defined schedule
  4. SSL management and renewal
  5. A response commitment — someone actually picks up when things go wrong

The question isn't whether self-managed infrastructure is possible. It clearly is. The question is whether the time your team spends managing it is the best use of that time.

For most businesses we talk to, it isn't.