Shared hosting platforms host multiple websites on a single physical server, with each website allocated a portion of the server’s resources. This model is cost-effective because infrastructure costs are distributed across many users, making it an ideal solution for individuals and small to medium-sized businesses with low to moderate traffic needs.
Customers manage their hosting environments through control panels or dashboards, where they can configure websites, domains, email accounts, databases, and security settings. While shared hosting platforms support resource scaling within defined limits, performance is inherently constrained by the shared nature of server resources. Shared hosting platforms typically support resource scaling within defined limits, ensuring affordability while maintaining reliable performance for smaller workloads.
By pooling resources across multiple customers, shared hosting platforms reduce costs but also share CPU, memory, and bandwidth capacity across hosted sites. Compared to dedicated hosting, this approach offers lower cost and ease of use, but with fewer guarantees around performance under heavy load.
To qualify for inclusion in the Shared Hosting category, a product must:
 
Host multiple websites on a single physical server by allocating resources across different customers
Provide customers with a control panel or dashboard to manage websites, domains, email accounts, databases, and security settings
Support common relational databases, such as MySQL or PostgreSQL
Offer resource allocation and upgrade options that allow users to increase storage, bandwidth, or compute within shared hosting limits
Provide reliability measures, including basic redundancy and uptime guarantees, to minimize downtime and latency