Traditional shared hosting works for small static sites, but as soon as your website starts to grow, the limits become obvious — slow load times, downtime under traffic spikes, and limited control.
Cloud hosting solves these issues by spreading your site across a network of servers. If one node fails, another takes over instantly. If traffic spikes, the platform scales automatically.
The benefits add up quickly: faster page loads, better SEO due to improved Core Web Vitals, stronger security with isolated environments, and pay-as-you-go pricing that matches actual usage.
For business websites, e-commerce stores, and SaaS apps, cloud hosting is the modern default. Providers like AWS, Google Cloud, DigitalOcean, and managed platforms like Vercel and Netlify make it easier than ever to get started.