New on LowEndTalk? Please Register and read our Community Rules.
All new Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, so a short delay after registration may occur before your account becomes active.
All new Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, so a short delay after registration may occur before your account becomes active.

Comments
oracle free arm.
@gigahost & @OVHcloud
Currently using 1 vps from @rsk and 2 vps from @onidel, both of them has no downtime issue.
1 other from hostdzire (with high cpu steal issue) and 1 other from deluxehost (the vps still offline since boot / grub issue after run dnf-update 2 month ago)
vultr for me
Greencloud
SolidVPS
Racknerd
AlphaVPS
@SiliCloud
Honestly, I think all the big names are good. I've never experienced any serious downtime with OVH or Hetzner which are where the bulk of my primary services are located (and so I would actually notice if they went down).
OVH for me is the standout, as I had one machine for 9.5 years with no downtime at all. The uptime on it reached well over 1000 days, after I forgot to upgrade it for so long. It was just when I did an
apt-get installone time and discovered the debian repo no longer even existed that I got round to upgrading it!Here's to many more years with 0 downtime!
nexusbytes as confirmed by status page
liteserver
@BinaryLane is very good, I don't recall ever having a downtime in several years. IIRC they display the ID/hostname of the server your VM is deployed to and I've seen mine change multiple times over the years with no perceptible interruption to my server running a VPN. Presumably, if they detect a hardware issue e.g. a failing disk, they live-migrate all the VMs off the machine to take it offline without interrupting anybodys workload.
Bigger hosts or ones with better hardware+software stack for HA are more likely to do this.
I use @rarecloud & @servers_guru for VPN. These two are over 99% up time.
Racknerd
Please define "uptime". Is it the VPS uptime, network or both? And when network is involved, how is it measured.
Reason I'm dropping this is because it makes all the difference. I have VPSes that have a system uptime of 300+ days without issue, but network connection drops a few times a day and that makes them quite unusuable for some purposes. Also I hear people say that they have 100% network uptime while they only check every 5 or 10 minutes - you cannot make a real statement about network uptime that way.
Also the specific location with a provider can make all the difference.
@serverpoint has excellent uptime
@AvenaCloud has been very good
https://metrics.torproject.org/rs.html#details/D91074DFA38C1A2402DBCE45EE3FB1B21EAEFE19
Hetzner
Layer.ae
Greencloud
Some I can say without having checked my monitoring: netcup, oracle cloud, @berohost
Prem. 👌👍 Jokes apart they were a solid provider in their Prime. I wonder what happened ?
Advin Servers
I own many servers from different hosting companies.
Even within the same provider, some machines are extremely stable while others experience occasional downtime.
companies I’ve used with zero issues are:
vps:
Hetzner
cloudways
Netcup
PH24
racknerd
dedicated servers
oneprovider (3yrs)
Good companies, but they faced some disruptions.
2 days ago Tampa went offline, nod London is going crazy for over 12 hours.... what's exactly you mean when u say they are stable ?
GCP, AWS, Azure and (surprisingly) RackNerd.
In all fairness, long box uptime may not be a good thing, if they are not on HA infrastructure, they probably have insecure host nodes if they have been up for so long.
OVH
hetzner, colocrossing, gigahost. all flawless uptime although gigahost does have a lot of network issues as of recently. it's just weird routing though, haven't seen any total cutouts.
Advinserver's Miami EPYC 9654 Premium node, has been 100% uptime since I bought it
https://status.advinservers.com/report/uptime/f072b2c03a239bbdaf0c26ef95ad9802/
RackNerd, two consecutive years (different nodes), 100% uptime
Most of them are fine except the really shit ones. If you have to worry about the extra 9's, you need more than one provider anyway.