Beginners Guide: Shared Hosting
Shared hosting is one of the most popular ways to get a website online, and it’s often the best value for beginners and small businesses. But not all shared hosting is created equal. At HostingRoo, our top-tier shared plans offer more CPU and RAM than some entry-level VPS packages, giving you serious performance without the complexity.
What Is Shared Hosting?
Shared hosting means your website shares a physical server with other websites. Each site gets its own slice of resources (like disk space, bandwidth, and memory), but all are hosted on the same machine. It’s like renting an apartment in a building — you have your own space, but you share the infrastructure.
How Shared Hosting Works
When you sign up for shared hosting:
Your website is stored on a server alongside others
The server is managed by your hosting provider (like HostingRoo)
You get access to a control panel (usually cPanel) to manage files, emails, domains, and more
Resources are allocated fairly, but performance depends on the quality of the hosting environment
Why HostingRoo Shared Hosting Is Different
Unlike many budget hosts, HostingRoo’s higher-tier shared plans include:
More CPU cores and RAM than some entry-level VPS plans
Faster performance for WordPress, WooCommerce, and other dynamic sites
Australian infrastructure for low-latency local access
Real human support from our Aussie team
Zero-downtime migrations if you’re switching from another host
This means you get VPS-like performance, without the VPS price or complexity.
Pros of Shared Hosting
Affordable: Lowest-cost hosting option
Beginner-friendly: No server management required
Easy setup: One-click installs for WordPress, email, and more
Managed environment: Security, updates, and performance handled by the host
Cons of Shared Hosting
Limited control: You can’t tweak server-level settings
Resource sharing: Lower-tier plans may be affected by noisy neighbours
Who Should Use Shared Hosting?
Shared hosting is ideal for:
Personal websites and blogs
Small business sites
Portfolio or brochure-style websites
Anyone starting out with web hosting
If your site grows or needs more power, you can upgrade to a higher shared plan or move to VPS later.
Shared Hosting vs Other Hosting Types
Hosting Type | Cost | Performance | Control | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Low | Moderate–High | Low | Beginners, general websites | |
VPS Hosting | Medium | High | Medium | Growing sites, developers |
High | Very High | High | Large sites, custom setups | |
Cloud Hosting | Flexible | Scalable | Medium | Apps, scalable businesses |
Final Thoughts
Shared hosting is the easiest way to get started online, and with HostingRoo’s higher-tier plans, you’re not just getting entry-level performance. You’re getting serious speed, reliability, and support, backed by Australian infrastructure and real humans who care.
Whether you’re launching a blog, business site, or portfolio, shared hosting gives you everything you need to get started, without the tech headaches.
