Key takeaways
- Reselling hosting is an affordable, potentially lucrative business to launch
- You need some technical knowledge to start the business
- Don’t offer the lowest prices – your customers will get what they paid for
Just under two-thirds (65.3%) of US small businesses are profitable in 2024. On average, a small business without any employees makes an annual revenue of $47,794. Web hosting is one potentially lucrative niche to consider, with the market projected to reach $216 billion by 2025. A hosting business can be feasible if the founder is able to adapt to changes and make smart investments in marketing and advertising.
Both individuals and companies can start a reseller hosting business. This type of business involves providing a service without actually owning or managing the server. In comparison, buying a server can set you back by as much as $1,000 a month. The startup investment is huge.
As a reseller, you sell hosting packages that you purchased from another company. You don’t need to purchase expensive infrastructure. Reselling hosting keeps the initial costs low while still making it possible to start a hosting business.
You can start with storage of 50GB SSD, which provides access to a 4-core CPU—more than sufficient for most small business websites.
Invest in a knowledge base
If you don’t know how to manage a server, including related incidents, and cannot personally operate as a system administrator, hosting will be a challenging niche to break into. Having at least a basic understanding of how hosting works is highly recommended. Keeping upfront costs low becomes difficult without this knowledge because you’ll need to hire professionals and pay competitive salaries. Services like VPS hosting require constant attention when setting up websites, domains, DNS, etc.
Your parent host also affects the degree of complexity of hosting. Unless you’re willing to pay for customer support staff, you’ll have to help your customers set up their websites, understand control panels, and troubleshoot any issues.
Don’t aim for the lowest price
You may have noticed hosting packages for as little as $2 a month and wondered how it’s possible to turn a profit on those. These prices mean that the provider is selling more than they can fit on a single server. Usually, this is at the user’s disadvantage. The quality of the service is low, with frequent downtime because limits have been exceeded. There are considerable security risks. According to a recent IBM report, a data breach costs $3.86 million on average.
The price works to the user’s detriment psychologically because they have been programmed that such cheap hosting is available and refuse to pay more for a quality package.
What’s more, many providers only sell at $2 for the first year. On renewal, the price jumps dramatically.
Providers that don’t wish to resell hosting can also keep upfront costs low. Start with a cloud or VPS service and upgrade to a dedicated one when capacity is full, or launch with a small dedicated server.
Profit margins to expect
Reseller profit margins go up to 60%, but the normal margin is 20-40%. If you want the maximum possible, you need to offer added-value services, like excetarget=”_blank”ptional support. Don’t expect to turn a profit in the first year or two unless you have fantastic marketing. You’ll find running and maintaining a hosting business is not expensive once you set it up.
FAQ
How do I start a hosting business?
- Research competitors
- Choose the right type of server and packages to sell
- Create a business plan and model
- Launch customer support
What should I look for in a parent host?
Scalability and intuitiveness are two of the most important elements to consider. If you choose reseller hosting as your niche, make sure your parent host offers scalable solutions that can adapt to your customers’ growing needs. This might mean more bandwidth, RAM, CPU, etc.
An intuitive control panel is essential for efficient service management. Look for providers that offer user-friendly control panels like cPanel or WHM. They make managing multiple hosting accounts simpler, and your customers will be grateful.