Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!


Shells Virtual Desktop
BMail.ag - Secure Email Service
Server.net
CPLicense.net
VPS Server
Buy VPN
Vultr
VMs for AI
HostDare
ReliableSite White-Label Dedicated Hosting for Resellers
InterServer VPS
BMail.ag - Secure Email Service
Best VPN
High-Performance Bare Metal Server Solutions
Karvl.com
Server Mania Cloud Hosting
DataWagon Hosting
AlphaVPS Hosting
Evoxt.com
Clouvider
VPS Hosting with NVMe
Residential IPs in the US & 4G Mobile Proxies in EU & US with Unlimited Bandwidth
ReliableSite White-Label Dedicated Hosting for Resellers
Rabisu - Hosting Solutions
Shells Virtual Desktop
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.

BuyVM.net: Price Adjustments

245

Comments

  • barbarosbarbaros Member

    @allthemtings said:

    @angstrom said:

    @allthemtings said:

    Back when prices were sane and everything felt simpler, I had this little VPS that somehow did it all. It wasn’t powerful by today’s standards—just a few cores, barely any RAM—but it was reliable in a way that felt almost personal. I knew every process running on it, every config tweak, every late-night restart after pushing something risky. It hosted projects that mattered, experiments that failed, and ideas that actually worked. Now, with prices climbing and everything feeling more disposable, I catch myself missing that box—not for what it could do, but for what it represented: control, freedom, and a time when building things online felt a bit more within reach.

    Its been a blast BuyVM, this is where we go our separate ways

    Please don't post AI-generated comments

    But AI generated provider advertising posts is fine

    Got it!

    You can say you are not native English and just used AI to fix grammar issues in your message

  • allthemtingsallthemtings Member, Megathread Squad

    @barbaros said:

    @allthemtings said:

    @angstrom said:

    @allthemtings said:

    Back when prices were sane and everything felt simpler, I had this little VPS that somehow did it all. It wasn’t powerful by today’s standards—just a few cores, barely any RAM—but it was reliable in a way that felt almost personal. I knew every process running on it, every config tweak, every late-night restart after pushing something risky. It hosted projects that mattered, experiments that failed, and ideas that actually worked. Now, with prices climbing and everything feeling more disposable, I catch myself missing that box—not for what it could do, but for what it represented: control, freedom, and a time when building things online felt a bit more within reach.

    Its been a blast BuyVM, this is where we go our separate ways

    Please don't post AI-generated comments

    But AI generated provider advertising posts is fine

    Got it!

    You can say you are not native English and just used AI to fix grammar issues in your message

    it s posibel

  • coffincoffin Member
    edited May 6

    @Fubukibox said:

    @LEBUserJoe said:
    Can someone explain this mass price increase?

    I get it lot of things have higher operating costs, but existing services? existing hardware that’s already paid? assuming the 15% increase is mainly discussing the increased hardware costs? it’s not been made clear what makes up this 15%

    Why punish your existing customer base?

    New users get new prices while existing ones keep the same prices locked i think

    No, email clearly says "... we'll be adjusting your plans during the next renewal ..." and there is a separate renewal price column for existing services.

  • angstromangstrom Moderator

    @allthemtings said:

    @angstrom said:

    @allthemtings said:

    Back when prices were sane and everything felt simpler, I had this little VPS that somehow did it all. It wasn’t powerful by today’s standards—just a few cores, barely any RAM—but it was reliable in a way that felt almost personal. I knew every process running on it, every config tweak, every late-night restart after pushing something risky. It hosted projects that mattered, experiments that failed, and ideas that actually worked. Now, with prices climbing and everything feeling more disposable, I catch myself missing that box—not for what it could do, but for what it represented: control, freedom, and a time when building things online felt a bit more within reach.

    Its been a blast BuyVM, this is where we go our separate ways

    Please don't post AI-generated comments

    But AI generated provider advertising posts is fine

    Got it!

    No, not really fine, so if you see such cases, feel free to report them!

    At the same time, most offer posts tend to be based on a recurring template, so they're not terribly original in style to begin with

    Thanked by 3Murv oloke DejavuMoe
  • FubukiboxFubukibox Member

    @coffin said:

    @Fubukibox said:

    @LEBUserJoe said:
    Can someone explain this mass price increase?

    I get it lot of things have higher operating costs, but existing services? existing hardware that’s already paid? assuming the 15% increase is mainly discussing the increased hardware costs? it’s not been made clear what makes up this 15%

    Why punish your existing customer base?

    New users get new prices while existing ones keep the same prices locked i think

    No, email clearly says "... we'll be adjusting your plans during the next renewal ..." and there is a separate renewal price column for existing services.

    WHAT? so my existing vps are fine?

  • coffincoffin Member
    edited May 6

    @Fubukibox said:

    @coffin said:

    @Fubukibox said:

    @LEBUserJoe said:
    Can someone explain this mass price increase?

    I get it lot of things have higher operating costs, but existing services? existing hardware that’s already paid? assuming the 15% increase is mainly discussing the increased hardware costs? it’s not been made clear what makes up this 15%

    Why punish your existing customer base?

    New users get new prices while existing ones keep the same prices locked i think

    No, email clearly says "... we'll be adjusting your plans during the next renewal ..." and there is a separate renewal price column for existing services.

    WHAT? so my existing vps are fine?

    No. If you are paying $3.50/mo right now for KVM Slice 1024, next month you will pay $4.50/mo.

    If you buy a whole new KVM Slice 1024 VPS, you will pay $5.00/mo.

    Edit for extra clarity: New price increase will show next invoice.

  • NeoonNeoon Community Contributor, Veteran

    $145 for a 32gig KVM, big uf.

  • FubukiboxFubukibox Member

    @coffin said:

    @Fubukibox said:

    @coffin said:

    @Fubukibox said:

    @LEBUserJoe said:
    Can someone explain this mass price increase?

    I get it lot of things have higher operating costs, but existing services? existing hardware that’s already paid? assuming the 15% increase is mainly discussing the increased hardware costs? it’s not been made clear what makes up this 15%

    Why punish your existing customer base?

    New users get new prices while existing ones keep the same prices locked i think

    No, email clearly says "... we'll be adjusting your plans during the next renewal ..." and there is a separate renewal price column for existing services.

    WHAT? so my existing vps are fine?

    No. If you are paying $3.50/mo right now for KVM Slice 1024, next month you will pay $4.50/mo.

    If you buy a whole new KVM Slice 1024 VPS, you will pay $5.00/mo.

    i see, so it's just $1 increase, last time i paid was $21/6mo so i guess ill be paying $27/6mo

  • dbadudedbadude Member

    chicken is getting expensive, they want us to eat big tec insect burgers

  • behukbehuk Member

    @Neoon said: $145 for a 32gig KVM, big uf.

    True, but it comes with dedicated vCPUs so...

  • lets see which provider follow

  • NeoonNeoon Community Contributor, Veteran

    @behuk said:

    @Neoon said: $145 for a 32gig KVM, big uf.

    True, but it comes with dedicated vCPUs so...

    Brother, you can get a fat dedi for that money.
    Fuck vCPUs

  • FubukiboxFubukibox Member

    @behuk said:

    @Neoon said: $145 for a 32gig KVM, big uf.

    True, but it comes with dedicated vCPUs so...

    can get a better dedi with that price

  • OhJohnOhJohn Member
    edited May 6

    The problem really is elsewhere: what do you get for the money?

    I'm using those because of anycast, which is a unique selling point in vps world.

    But: with the upstream provider used for that anycast going downhill since years and e.g. a vm in new york can only be reached via chicago from new york (40ms latency instead of 4) etc. pp., the price-value composition is is getting more problematic every months.

    Which is really sad in light of how BuyVM started as a innovative provider (but that innovation drive is probably already all gone with the sale of BuyVM one or two years ago).

    Thanked by 1Protocol903
  • NeoonNeoon Community Contributor, Veteran

    @Fubukibox said:

    @behuk said:

    @Neoon said: $145 for a 32gig KVM, big uf.

    True, but it comes with dedicated vCPUs so...

    can get a better dedi with that price

    A fat one, @allthemtings could get 2x KS Xeona G, he would be moist.

    Thanked by 1allthemtings
  • @Fubukibox said:

    @coffin said:

    @Fubukibox said:

    @coffin said:

    @Fubukibox said:

    @LEBUserJoe said:
    Can someone explain this mass price increase?

    I get it lot of things have higher operating costs, but existing services? existing hardware that’s already paid? assuming the 15% increase is mainly discussing the increased hardware costs? it’s not been made clear what makes up this 15%

    Why punish your existing customer base?

    New users get new prices while existing ones keep the same prices locked i think

    No, email clearly says "... we'll be adjusting your plans during the next renewal ..." and there is a separate renewal price column for existing services.

    WHAT? so my existing vps are fine?

    No. If you are paying $3.50/mo right now for KVM Slice 1024, next month you will pay $4.50/mo.

    If you buy a whole new KVM Slice 1024 VPS, you will pay $5.00/mo.

    i see, so it's just $1 increase, last time i paid was $21/6mo so i guess ill be paying $27/6mo

    Well, if >28% increase is just or even is probably somewhat subjective.

  • TimboJonesTimboJones Member

    @LEBUserJoe said:
    Can someone explain this mass price increase?

    I get it lot of things have higher operating costs, but existing services? existing hardware that’s already paid? assuming the 15% increase is mainly discussing the increased hardware costs? it’s not been made clear what makes up this 15%

    Why punish your existing customer base?

    What part isn't clear? They pay a datacenter to house their equipment and provide power and they pay another provider for bandwidth (and just a simplification of their expenses not including things like salary and increased hardware costs). Both of those are ongoing and increasing in cost.

    Are people only now hearing about the global datacenter and hardware shortage from the AI boom? How the fuck are people surprised by price increases?

    We've never raised prices in all the years we've operated, and have eaten every data-center & bandwidth provider increase. Most of these have been fairly small, usually pinned to inflation, but over the past 6 months we've been hit with >15% hikes from most of our facilities.

  • FranciscoFrancisco Top Host, Host Rep, Veteran

    @OhJohn said:
    The problem really is elsewhere: what do you get for the money?

    I'm using those because of anycast, which is a unique selling point in vps world.

    But: with the upstream provider used for that anycast going downhill since years and e.g. a vm in new york can only be reached via chicago from new york (40ms latency instead of 4) etc. pp., the price-value composition is is getting more problematic every months.

    Which is really sad in light of how BuyVM started as a innovative provider (but that innovation drive is probably already all gone with the sale of BuyVM one or two years ago).

    I’ve been working on a fix for the anycast stuff, I’m hoping to have some good news soon :) proposal was sent to the boss a few days ago.

    Francisco

    Thanked by 1OhJohn
  • @Francisco can you tell us how much more revenue BuyVM will get from this increase supposing all of your customers stay.

    I had once done a calculation about it when Netcup hiked their prices (In front of their CEO) and I had gotten a number close to 8 millions dollars. (https://lowendtalk.com/post/quote/215401/Comment_4751570) [PS: its a long comment]

    My understanding was that Netcup had increased its price hike in my honest opinion, somewhat exactly in such a way that they were able to continue having the same growth that they had, during covid (which was around somewhat 20% YoY iirc)

    So TLDR, they had done a price hike exactly in a way to try to have growth in such a way that they had during the best times of hosting and they raised prices for the average consumer who was using them over the board to achieve that.

    Now I was only able to achieve this TLDR because props to netcup it had a lot of information available about how many users use it, the average ticket size for a user which was the reason I was able to do this calculation so in some sense yeah props to their transparency.

    I would love to do a calculation about buyvm if possible and am just interested because Ram prices have indeed gone down from the peak which was during the Netcup crisis.

  • @whynotlearn said:
    @Francisco can you tell us how much more revenue BuyVM will get from this increase supposing all of your customers stay.

    Thanked by 2Francisco tux
  • FranciscoFrancisco Top Host, Host Rep, Veteran

    @whynotlearn said: I would love to do a calculation about buyvm if possible and am just interested because Ram prices have indeed gone down from the peak which was during the Netcup crisis.

    I can't get into those numbers, that's not for me to discuss.

    Thankfully BuyVM did its LUX migration last year without getting bit by the hardware price hikes, but it still cost hundreds of thousands to build, test, ship, setup the new hardware & location. All requiring a bunch of either remote hands, or flying guys out to do work.

    I know Hannan is wanting to do some hardware revisions (newer ryzens for other locations? maybe some epyc stuff), but hardware is as nuts as it is.

    That said, it was a bit of everything. Some datacenters weren't in contract when the sale happened last year, which meant Hannan had to negotiate new rates, and they got in a good hike on him then, i think around 20% on one place alone. Telehouse just did a mass hike on power this year (15%+). Miami went through an absolute shitshow because it changed hands 3 times in just a few months, with DR now doing a sizable bump too. CH costs more than LUX, as well as transport costs to get HE into the DC. The EU power stuff dug into it too, but not quite as bad.

    One of our vendors tried to 3x our bill last year on false pretenses. My clapping back at them ended up in court documents.

    It sucks, but Hannan/Cloudzy ate those costs for all of last year , and all of this year too. That's not counting all the years that I ate hikes from every DC and vendor we have. The slice pricing that currently exists has been in place since... 2015~2016? Maybe Hannan could've done some smaller yearly hikes (4% one year, 5% another, you get the idea), but I think its better to just hit a fair one off and call it done. I don't want things to turn out like cPanel where you're waiting for your yearly colonoscapy.

    Francisco

  • To me, @francisco, although I am more of a buyer rather than a business, but price-hikes have almost always never seen worth it to me even thinking as a business because well nobody likes to pay more and we don't know how many people might drop out paying entirely (Within the form on this page, it says that 66% people are thinking to cancel)

    Especially on existing users as I think its really unsure how they might react but it puts a wrench on an otherwise stable/predictable cashflow but I do understand some aspects of the decision though. It's not a completely negative decision and maybe I might do the same if I was in the same shoes of cloudzy.

    @Francisco said: I can't get into those numbers, that's not for me to discuss.

    That's alright mate, I hope that the person who is able to discuss shows up on the thread as I would really love to get some numbers/transparency!

    @Francisco said: That said, it was a bit of everything. Some datacenters weren't in contract when the sale happened last year, which meant Hannan had to negotiate new rates, and they got in a good hike on him then, i think around 20% on one place alone. Telehouse just did a mass hike on power this year (15%+). Miami went through an absolute shitshow because it changed hands 3 times in just a few months, with DR now doing a sizable bump too. CH costs more than LUX, as well as transport costs to get HE into the DC. The EU power stuff dug into it too, but not quite as bad.

    I find it interesting that the Datacenters are raising the average residential person's prices yet they are also raising the price on the cloud/vps providers who are using the datacenter themselves, and yet these datacenter making companies don't seem to be doing too much profit of themselves too. Where is all the money going into then, fire pits?

    Is it that for these datacenters, AI/GPU chips cause a lot more power consumption across the board and it has just increased the power prices of things as the demand has increased, period? I would love to hear your opinion.

    Once again though, although I know that you can't provide me the exact numbers but 20% increase in a DC rent/power hike doesn't correspond to an equal amount within the VPS itself as VPS has more things involved but it certainly impacts negatively but I am unsure to say how much to if the price hike would seem reasonable to the end user, but either way I can't say how the reaction of the end user would be until more people comment and thanks for your response your detailed response @Francisco and I hope that BuyVM sorts these things out with their customers. Nobody wishes to be in a situation where they have to price hike things hopefully so I hope things sort themselves out.

  • lowendpaullowendpaul Member

    This is good news, because squatters can free up some inventory I need.

    Thanked by 2MannDude Hannan
  • apollo15apollo15 Member

    considering this is first price hike they did, it is not bad at all.

    kuddos to them for taking the hit that long

    I use them for some stuff and it is decent

    Thanked by 2MannDude Hannan
  • lowendpaullowendpaul Member

    @LEBUserJoe said:
    Can someone explain this mass price increase?

    I get it lot of things have higher operating costs, but existing services? existing hardware that’s already paid? assuming the 15% increase is mainly discussing the increased hardware costs? it’s not been made clear what makes up this 15%

    Why punish your existing customer base?

    They need enough revenue to expand inventory, otherwise they may be struggling to buy 1 new rack when they need 10, or whatever it works out to. I'm seeing SSD prices 5x and HDD prices 150% in less than 6 months.

    Also, as others mention, running costs are higher, especially electricity, not to mention stuff breaks and eventually they run out of spares.

    The real test in integrity in pricing is whether they lower prices when the markets fall.

  • apollo15apollo15 Member
    edited May 6

    @lowendpaul said: They need enough revenue to expand inventory, otherwise they may be struggling to buy 1 new rack when they need 10, or whatever it works out to. I'm seeing SSD prices 5x and HDD prices 150% in less than 6 months.

    >

    salaries also go up

    people work for money

  • wholecakewholecake Member

    money is good, greed is bad.

  • emghemgh Member, Megathread Squad

    @allthemtings said:

    24 > 36$ for 1 Core 512MB @emgh @beanman109

    Back when prices were sane and everything felt simpler, I had this little VPS that somehow did it all. It wasn’t powerful by today’s standards—just a few cores, barely any RAM—but it was reliable in a way that felt almost personal. I knew every process running on it, every config tweak, every late-night restart after pushing something risky. It hosted projects that mattered, experiments that failed, and ideas that actually worked. Now, with prices climbing and everything feeling more disposable, I catch myself missing that box—not for what it could do, but for what it represented: control, freedom, and a time when building things online felt a bit more within reach.

    Its been a blast BuyVM, this is where we go our separate ways

    Ffs

    Thanked by 1allthemtings
  • emghemgh Member, Megathread Squad
    edited May 6

    Honestly with current BuyVM pricing you might as well just go with AWS for $2 (20%) more for a 2GB

    Thanked by 2Peppery9 corbpie
  • SparkedPaulSparkedPaul Member, Patron Provider

    Seems valid, all I see is people saying BuyVM is greedy in this thread, but datacenter costs have gotten insane, bandwidth has gone up, RAM prices have gone up. Most companies have eaten these costs as much as they can but eventually something has to given.

Sign In or Register to comment.