Virtual private server (VPS) hosting platforms provide rentable virtual machines (VMs) that function like independent servers within a partitioned physical server. These platforms use virtualization software to allocate a guaranteed share of resources (CPU, RAM, storage, bandwidth) to each VPS user, ensuring isolation and stable performance even though multiple virtual instances run on the same hardware.
 Customers manage their VPS environments through control panels, dashboards, or APIs, where they can configure operating systems, install applications, and manage databases or websites.
VPS hosting platforms are ideal for organizations that need more flexibility, control, and resources than shared hosting but do not need the full capacity or expense of a dedicated server. By combining resource guarantees with scalability options, VPS hosting platforms give users the benefits of a dedicated server–like control at a lower cost, while providers handle the physical server maintenance, networking, and infrastructure.
To qualify for inclusion in the Virtual Private Server (VPS) Hosting category, a product must:
 
Provide rentable virtual environments created through server virtualization on partitioned physical servers
Reserve dedicated portions of server resources (e.g., CPU, RAM, storage, bandwidth) for each VPS user to ensure performance isolation
Provide customers with management tools (e.g., control panels, dashboards, APIs, or direct root access) to configure operating systems, install applications, and manage hosted workloads
Support resource upgrades or scalability (e.g., increasing CPU, RAM, or storage) to accommodate growing workloads