Cloudzy Vol. I

An essay · Vol. I · April 2026

On cloud infrastructure,
considered.

A hosting company that pays attention. AI-ready VPS, GPU servers, and dedicated bare metal — provisioned in sixty seconds across sixteen regions, billed by the hour, written about with the patience the subject deserves.

Fig. 1 — Cloudzy network, schematic

On reliability

Hosting is the part of the internet that most quietly fails.

When something on the web works, it's invisible. The page renders, the request completes, the bot trades, the model serves — and no one notices the racks in Utah, the fibre under the Atlantic, the carefully chosen schedulers. Hosting is infrastructure in the literal sense: the unseen below.

Cloudzy was started in 2008 with the position that this layer deserves more care than the industry tends to give it. Faster cores, real NVMe, honest pricing, hourly billing, no surprises. The kind of hosting you'd recommend to a friend deploying their first production app — and the kind a forex bot fleet can rely on at three in the morning.

What follows is, perhaps unfashionably, an essay about that work. The plans, the regions, the API, the people. Read what's relevant, skip the rest.

Three pillars

What Cloudzy is, said three ways.

01

Compute that earns its keep.

AMD EPYC cores at 4.2+ GHz, paired exclusively with NVMe storage and 40 Gbps uplinks. Single-thread leadership at every plan tier — measured, not claimed.

2,080
Geekbench 6, single-core
02

An API written by people who have used one.

REST and Terraform. Provision, snapshot, resize, and tear down from your pipeline. Sixty-second deploys. Hourly billing. The sort of API you forget you're using.

60s
from signup to first SSH
03

Sixteen regions, picked with intent.

Utah for the western U.S., Amsterdam for trans-Atlantic latency, Singapore for Southeast Asia. We add regions when the routing makes sense — not for the brochure.

<10 ms
P50 in-region latency

The rates

Plans, set as a table.
All four are good.

Hourly, monthly, or yearly. No egress fees, no surprise bills, no lock-in. The "Professional" tier is what most teams choose; it is in no way required.

Plan Memory CPU NVMe Transfer Per month
Starter 512 MB 1 vCPU 20 GB 1 TB $2.48 $4.95 Begin →
Basic 1 GB 1 vCPU 25 GB 1 TB $3.48 $6.95 Begin →
Advanced 2 GB 1 vCPU 60 GB 3 TB $7.48 $14.95 Begin →
Professional — Most chosen 4 GB 2 vCPU 120 GB 5 TB $14.48 $28.95 Begin →

¹ All plans include free IPv6, 40 Gbps uplinks, daily snapshots on Pro, and a 14-day money-back guarantee. For GPU, custom specs, or Windows licensing, write to sales.

The network

Sixteen regions,
read as a directory.

Each region is a private-peered POP with redundant uplinks. Move a workload between any two with a single API call.

North America 6 regions
  • Utah 40°45′ N us-utah-1
  • Dallas 32°47′ N us-dal-1
  • Los Angeles 34°03′ N us-lax-1
  • New York 40°43′ N us-nyc-1
  • Las Vegas 36°10′ N us-lvg-1
  • Miami 25°45′ N us-mia-1
Europe 4 regions
  • Amsterdam 52°22′ N eu-ams-1
  • London 51°31′ N eu-lon-1
  • Frankfurt 50°06′ N eu-fra-1
  • Zürich 47°23′ N eu-zrh-1
Asia & Middle East 3 regions
  • Dubai 25°12′ N me-dxb-1
  • Singapore 1°21′ N ap-sgp-1
  • Tokyo 35°41′ N ap-tyo-1

In our customers' words

“We moved our forex bot fleet to Cloudzy and cut latency to our broker by sixty percent. The London region paid for itself in the first week — and the support team replied in four minutes at three in the morning.”

Marko V.
Quant trader, independent

“The API is genuinely scriptable. Our Terraform pipeline provisions a staging fleet in ninety seconds.”
Daniel K.
Platform lead, SaaS
“Spinning up a GPU box for a one-off training job and tearing it down at the end of the day — billed in cents, not dollars.”
Aisha R.
ML engineer, fintech

333 verified reviews. Read the rest.

Endnote

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Free five-dollar credit on signup. No card hold. Cancel any time. The reading was, we hope, worth your while.

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