The price you see on Hostinger's is the price you pay for one term and never again. That is not a scandal, it is how almost every budget host works. The problem is people budget around the intro rate and get a shock at renewal.
Here are the real 2026 numbers, the renewal jumps, and the buying strategy that costs you the least.
Quick verdict • Shared intro from $1.99 to $2.99/month on a 48-month term, depending on the promo running. • Premium renews near $10.99/mo, Business near $16.99/mo, Cloud Startup near $25.99/mo. • VPS renews far more gently, roughly double the intro rate instead of triple or quadruple. • Best move: buy the longest term so your first renewal is four years out. • Budget for a domain after year one and decline the pre-checked add-ons at checkout. |
Hostinger prices everything on term length. The longer you commit, the lower the monthly rate, and the longest term (usually 48 months) carries the headline price. Pay monthly and you pay the most, often with a setup fee on top.
Plan | Intro (48-mo term) | Renewal | Best for |
Premium shared | $1.99 to $2.99/mo | about $10.99/mo | Blogs, portfolios, small sites |
Business shared | $2.99 to $3.99/mo | about $16.99/mo | Small stores, daily backups |
Cloud Startup | $7.19 to $9.99/mo | about $25.99/mo | Growing sites, dedicated resources |
KVM 2 VPS | $5.84 to $6.49/mo | about $11.99/mo | Developers, control |
These figures track multiple 2026 pricing trackers. One guide updated in 2026 notes that promotional rates shift week to week, so treat the intro numbers as a band rather than a fixed figure and confirm at checkout.
Shared hosting carries the steepest renewal increase. The percentage looks alarming because the intro price is so low, but the dollar figure still matters.
• Premium: about $2.99 to $10.99/month, roughly a 3.7x jump.
• Business: about $3.99 to $16.99/month, roughly a 4.3x jump.
• Cloud Startup: about $7.99 to $25.99/month, roughly a 3.3x jump.
• VPS plans: closer to a 2x jump, which makes them more predictable long term.
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Nobody migrates hosts every year, so the honest figure is the multi-year total. Over six years Hostinger Premium runs around $359, including one renewal cycle, which still undercuts most competitors. I compare that figure head-to-head in the Hostinger vs Bluehost guide.
The buying rule that follows: pick the longest term you can commit to. A 48-month purchase locks the intro rate for four years and pushes your first renewal as far out as possible. That single choice saves more than any coupon.
• Domain renewal: the free domain covers year one only. Budget roughly $10 to $15 a year after that.
• Pre-checked add-ons: Hostinger sometimes pre-selects extras. Uncheck anything you did not come for.
• Monthly billing fees: short-term contracts can carry a setup fee. Long-term avoid it.
• VAT or local tax: added at checkout in some regions, so the displayed price is pre-tax.
1. Buy the 48-month term to lock in the lowest monthly rate and delay renewal.
2. Stack a valid Hostinger promo code at checkout for an extra discount on the first term.
3. Decline add-ons you do not need, then add them later only if required.
4. Set a calendar reminder 60 days before renewal to decide whether to downgrade, renew, or move.
For the codes that actually work and how Hostinger structures its discounts, see the Hostinger coupon and deals guide, which is updated as promotions change.
For the intro term, easily. The hardware and uptime are strong for the money. At renewal, it is still competitive, just not the cheapest thing on the market. The value holds if you buy a long-term plan and plan for the renewal instead of being surprised by it.
Check out the Best Hostinger deal here
A renewal that goes from $2.99 to $10.99 is often described as a 270% increase, which sounds alarming. The percentage is large because the starting number is tiny. In absolute terms, you are moving from about $36 a year to about $132 a year on Premium. A 2026 pricing breakdown confirms the dollar figure stays low against competitors even after the jump, which is the number worth judging.
The term you choose changes the price more than any coupon. A one-month plan sits near full rate and can carry a setup fee, while the 48-month term carries the lowest monthly figure and locks it for four years. Detailed plan analysis puts the 48-month Premium total at about $95 across the whole term, which works out cheaper per month than any shorter option.
The one reason to choose a shorter term is uncertainty. If you are not sure the project will last, a twelve-month term limits your commitment. Just know you are trading a higher monthly rate and an earlier renewal for that flexibility.
When the renewal date approaches, you have more options than paying the standard rate. You can downgrade to a cheaper plan if you over-bought. You can sometimes catch a current promotion as an existing customer. You can move to a different host if the value no longer fits. The mistake is doing nothing and letting the full renewal hit on autopay. Set a reminder 60 days out and make an active choice.
The monthly rate is not the whole bill. Your true first-year cost includes the plan, any add-ons you keep, and the domain after year one. A clean Premium purchase with no extras is cheap. The same purchase with paid email, paid migration, and a couple of pre-checked extras can quietly double. Build your real budget from the plan, plus only the services you will actually use.
Shared plans start between $1.99 and $2.99 per month on a 48-month term, depending on the promotion running, with a free domain for the first year. Renewal rates are higher: Premium near $10.99, Business near $16.99, and Cloud Startup near $25.99 per month.
The advertised price is a first-term introductory rate. Once your initial term ends, the account renews at the standard rate, which is roughly three to four times the intro price on shared plans. The service does not change, only the price.
Buy the longest available term, usually 48 months, to get the lowest monthly rate and to push your first renewal four years out. Add a valid promo code at checkout and decline any pre-checked add-ons you do not need.
Yes. The free domain covers the first year only. After that, you renew the domain at the standard rate, typically around $10 to $15 a year, depending on the extension.
Proportionally, yes. VPS renewal increases are closer to double the intro price, while shared hosting can triple or quadruple. For users who need the resources, VPS is more predictable over the long run.
Read more: Is Hostinger Good for Beginners in 2026?