I've created websites the hard way and the easy way for many years. Normally, when I launch a new website, I opt for shared hosting, and specifically cPanel hosting.
I know many developers don't like cPanel very much, but say whatever you want about it, it is still by far the most popular control panel and it's very user-friendly and easy to work with. It's my favorite control panel.
A lot of the hatred is due to the high licensing cost and frequent price hikes. Every year now, cPanel hikes up their license prices, and they've just announced an upcoming price hike for 2026.
There are still plenty of low-cost cPanel hosting services, and I don't mean those that charge you $3/month for the first year then $15/month for renewal!
These are some providers I've personally used and would recommend:
This low-profile web host is one of the hidden gems I stumbled upon a while ago. They offer cheap cPanel hosting from $3/month and renews for the same price. No upselling or gimmicks.
Their plans have all of the features I usually look for and they also give you a dedicated IP address for free. Support is responsive and more helpful than most of the big companies that outsource their support (many switched to AI assistants now).
They have some affordable VPS plans if you need that, but it's completely self-managed.
2. NameCheap
I've been using NameCheap as my domain registrar and web host for more than 10 years, and it's still relevant in 2025. They did increase prices, but it's still one of the most affordable options among popular providers.
One thing I don't like about NameCheap's cPanel hosting is that they don't offer free Let's Encrypt SSL certificates. They give you a PositiveSSL certificate for free for the first year, then it renews for $13/year. This can be a deal breaker if you are going to host multiple websites.
3. Spaceship
Spaceship is owned by NameCheap but it's a more modern platform and has lower prices for domains, web hosting, and email.
If you need a domain + cPanel hosting for a new website, Spaceship is the cheapest provider that comes to mind. Just don't use it for high-traffic or resource-intensive websites because none of these cheap services are meant for that.
Top comments (0)