• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Why is colo hosting more expensive than renting a dedicated server in the US?

I can't seem to find any reasonably priced colocation services in the US when compared to renting a dedicated server. Shouldn't colo services by their very nature be cheaper?

I'd like to build my own server to get the exact configuration i need and just pay for bandwidth but I simply can't find anything reasonable.

My requirements:
Gigabit connection
40TB of bandwidth monthly
2U space

Any ideas? google is doing me no good in this regard.
 
colocation gives you more control and the way that the colocation data centers are provisioned and billed they typically charge higher rates. However you typically get more B/W, as most of the customers that utilize this are small hosting companies that resell the servers.

Also what geographical region would you like to co-locate to? If you would please let us know we can further assist. thanks.
 
colocation gives you more control and the way that the colocation data centers are provisioned and billed they typically charge higher rates. However you typically get more B/W, as most of the customers that utilize this are small hosting companies that resell the servers.

Also what geographical region would you like to co-locate to? If you would please let us know we can further assist. thanks.

Anywhere in the midwest of the US.
 
I can't seem to find any reasonably priced colocation services in the US when compared to renting a dedicated server. Shouldn't colo services by their very nature be cheaper?

Different customer segments with different levels of expectation vs. price sensitivity. Dedicated servers are for folks who need "a server" - colocation are for folks who need "this exact server."
 
Back
Top