
- Εγγύηση επιστροφής χρημάτων 30 ημερών
- 3 φορές ταχύτερα με SSD και caching, καθημερινά αντίγραφα ασφαλείας και εύκολη ανάκτηση
- Υποστήριξη διαθέσιμη 24/7/365 μέσω συνομιλίας, τηλεφώνου, email, εισιτηρίων

- Pay-as-you-go pricing with scalable resources
- Global data center network for flexible deployment
- Limited support for basic users; paid support plans can be expensive
IONOS vs AWS: Quick Summary
After testing both platforms, I found UltaHost to be the clear winner. It felt faster, gave me more storage right from the start, and offered plenty of free features like SSD storage, daily backups, SSL, and one-click WordPress. The pricing also felt much friendlier.
GoDaddy wasn’t bad. I liked the support and beginner-friendly dashboard, but compared to UltaHost, it just didn’t give me the same speed, flexibility, or value.
1. Prices and Plans Comparison
IONOS Offers Lower, Simpler Pricing Than AWS.
AWS pricing may be flexible, but it quickly gets overwhelming and expensive if you’re not careful. IONOS, on the other hand, keeps things simple and affordable.
When I tested both platforms, IONOS offered predictable monthly plans with generous resources, like unlimited websites, SSD storage, and even AI tools, for just $1 to $10/month, depending on your needs. AWS charges by the second for compute time, storage, data transfer, and more.
Sure, it’s powerful, but if you’re just looking to host a website or run a small project, IONOS clearly gives you more for less without needing a pricing calculator or a degree in cloud economics.
2. Customer Support Comparison: Who’s Got Your Back?
IONOS Offers Fast, Human Support Without Extra Fees.
When your website is down or your server throws an error in the middle of a client project, customer support becomes the single most important feature a host can offer.
You don’t want to be stuck reading documentation for hours—you want a real person, fast, who knows what they’re doing.
IONOS Customer Support
To see if IONOS support lived up to its promises, I started with phone support. I accessed it right from the dashboard. After clicking the help icon, I was shown my customer ID and a temporary phone PIN—this system made authentication super easy.

I called the number provided and asked:
“Does IONOS offer firewall management for VPS hosting, or do I have to configure iptables manually?”
The support agent picked up in under a minute. Not only did he know the answer, but he walked me through where to find the Cloud Panel’s built-in firewall settings. He also explained how users still need to configure internal firewall rules like iptables or UFW for full control.
The phone support is super responsive, clear, and helpful. No upsell. No confusing menu systems.
Then I tested live chat. From the help section, I clicked “Start a live chat” and got an automated assistant first. I asked the same firewall question. The bot couldn’t answer—but it connected me to a human agent within about a minute.
Once connected, the support rep explained the same thing as the phone agent and even provided a direct link to the firewall documentation. I appreciated that they didn’t just tell me what to do—they gave me the resources too.

Verdict on Live Chat: Slight delay, but once connected, the agent was clear and helpful. It’s a solid support option.
AWS Customer Support
Next, I turned to AWS. I already knew I was on their Basic Support Plan, which doesn’t include technical support—only billing and account-related questions. Still, I tested what I could.
I went to the AWS Support Center and chose Live Chat.

Within a minute, I was connected to a rep named Luis. I asked:
“If I purchase a Reserved Instance and later change the instance type, how does that affect billing?”
Luis gave a detailed answer. He explained that Standard Reserved Instances are partially flexible, and Convertible Reserved Instances offer more modification options. He also shared links to AWS docs with more info.
The chat was fast, friendly, and thorough.

But here’s the thing—that’s where Basic Support ends. If I had asked about setting up a server, debugging an issue, or configuring security, I’d be told to upgrade to the Developer plan (starts at $29/month) or Business support (which can cost hundreds).
So while AWS offers world-class infrastructure, true support is hidden behind a paywall.
3. Hosting Features Comparison
IONOS Offers More Built-In Features for Less Money.
IONOS Features
When I tested IONOS, I was surprised at how many features came bundled with even the lowest-tier plan. I started with their $1/month Plus plan, and it already included unlimited websites, unlimited storage, professional email, a free domain, Wildcard SSL, and daily backups.
Setting up WordPress took only a couple of clicks, and the AI website builder was genuinely useful—it helped me generate a working site layout with content suggestions in less than 10 minutes.

I also liked their performance scaling system. If your site starts to slow down because of traffic, you can upgrade CPU and RAM instantly for just a few dollars per level.
The interface felt intuitive, even for someone who isn’t a developer, and it made things like database creation, SSL management, and file access super simple.
AWS Features
AWS is a different beast altogether. It doesn’t offer a single “hosting plan”—you have to build your environment using services like EC2 for compute, S3 for storage, RDS for databases, and so on. I spun up a WordPress site on EC2, but it required manual setup, installing Apache, configuring DNS, and generating SSL certificates using Certbot.
If you want something easier, Lightsail is AWS’s attempt to simplify hosting. It comes with a bundled instance, SSD storage, and a fixed data transfer limit.
But even with Lightsail, I still had to configure my server and set up my domain, email, and backups manually. Also, features like email hosting or automated backups require using other paid AWS services like Amazon WorkMail or AWS Backup.

AWS gives you maximum flexibility, and that’s great if you’re building something complex or enterprise-level.
But for small businesses or personal websites, the setup is overkill and the costs add up fast if you’re not careful.
4. Website Performance Comparison
IONOS Loads Faster and Feels Smoother Overall.
When it comes to web hosting, speed is everything. A faster site directly impacts user experience, bounce rate, and even conversion rates.
So to see how each provider really performs under real-world conditions, I ran a GTmetrix test on sites hosted on IONOS and AWS.
IONOS Performance

IONOS held up well. The page loaded quickly and was fully interactive, just 2.1 seconds after the test started.
I was especially impressed with how smoothly it handled layout shifts and how low the blocking time was—only 198 milliseconds. This means the site didn’t hang or stutter while loading. LCP at 1.5s is solid for shared hosting. It felt snappy and ready almost immediately.
AWS Performance

Even though AWS had a faster LCP at 1.1s, it struggled in other areas. The Total Blocking Time was huge—2.5 seconds, meaning scripts and resources were getting in the way of smooth interactivity.
The page took 6 seconds to become fully interactive and 7.7 seconds to finish loading completely. For a modern website, that’s just too slow, especially on a platform as powerful as AWS.
IONOS clearly delivers a more optimized experience out of the box. It didn’t just load faster—it was smoother, more responsive, and had fewer layout or script delays. AWS, while technically capable of blazing speeds (as seen in the LCP), doesn’t give you those results automatically. You need to configure and optimize the stack heavily yourself. Otherwise, heavy scripts and poor resource handling can slow things down dramatically.
5. Ease of Use Comparison: Which Platform Is Easier to Use?
IONOS Is Easier to Use Thanks to Its Simpler Setup and More Intuitive Dashboard.
Before recommending any hosting platform, I wanted to experience how each one actually feels when you’re using it to build and manage a website. It’s one thing to list features, but it’s something else entirely to walk through them as a real user.
I walked through all of this myself, step by step. Here’s what I found.
Registration and Creating a New Account
I started with the most basic task: creating an account.
Signing up for IONOS was quick, clear, and guided. I went straight to their website, clicked Hosting, then chose VPS Hosting. I picked the VPS XXL plan to test performance, clicked Configure, and was presented with a few setup options:
- Choose Ubuntu 24.04 as my OS
- Selected the recommended US data center
- Skipped optional backup add-ons for now

The checkout flow was clean. I entered my billing details and selected PayPal (but IONOS also supports credit cards and digital wallets like Apple Pay and Google Pay). The transaction was processed instantly, and within seconds, I received a confirmation email with everything I needed to get started: my server IP, login credentials, and links to access the dashboard.

The whole experience was beginner-friendly. Every step was clear, there were no surprises, and I never had to guess what to do next.
AWS took longer and felt more like opening a business account than signing up for a website.

I had to:
- Fill in basic account info (email, password, account name)
- Provide full address and phone number
- Enter credit card details (required even for free tier)
- Go through phone verification
- Choose a support plan (I picked the free Basic plan)
After completing all the steps, AWS said my account would be ready soon. It was activated after a short wait, but overall, it felt more bureaucratic.
AWS didn’t feel hard, but it was definitely more involved. It’s designed for developers or businesses familiar with cloud platforms, not casual users.
Client Area and Dashboard
After signing up, the dashboard is where you’ll be spending most of your time. So I wanted to compare how each provider presents the key tools you need to manage your hosting.
When I logged into IONOS, I was welcomed by a clean, structured dashboard. The top-level categories made perfect sense:
- Websites & Stores
- Domains & SSL
- Servers & Cloud
- Email & Office

I clicked on Servers & Cloud, and everything I needed to manage my VPS was right there—no digging required. I could see:
- Server name, IP address, and status
- Operating system version
- Login credentials for SSH access
- Live resource stats: RAM, CPU, SSD usage
- Firewall settings and configuration options
The layout was modern and minimal. Nothing felt overwhelming. It was easy to find what I was looking for and even easier to make changes.
Whether you’re a beginner or experienced user, the IONOS dashboard is thoughtfully designed to help you get things done without friction.
AWS was a completely different experience. When I logged in, I was greeted by the AWS Management Console, a massive control panel packed with hundreds of services.

This dashboard isn’t built for just hosting websites. It’s a unified portal for developers, IT teams, and cloud engineers running everything from machine learning to global infrastructure.
To do anything, I had to search for the right service using the search bar:
- EC2 to manage servers
- S3 for storage
- Route 53 for DNS
- CloudWatch for monitoring
Every service has its own interface, and it’s easy to get lost. It’s powerful—but definitely not beginner-friendly.
AWS gives you full control, but you need to know what you’re doing. This dashboard is for developers, not casual users.
Hosting Setup: Creating a New WordPress Website
Since WordPress is the most popular CMS out there, I wanted to see how easy it is to get a site live on both platforms.
From the IONOS dashboard, I went to Websites & Stores and clicked Create New Website. I was given a few options:
- Start with a website builder
- Add an existing website
- Launch a WordPress project

I selected WordPress & More, entered a project name, picked my language, and clicked Start WordPress Installation.
It took about 30 seconds.
After that, I hit Launch WordPress, and it opened a guided setup wizard that helped me:
- Set my admin username and password
- Choose a theme
- Configure default plugins
Everything was automatic. I didn’t touch a single command line or config file.
This is one of the easiest WordPress setups I’ve seen. It’s perfect for anyone who just wants to get online and start customizing.
Setting Up WordPress on AWS (Using Lightsail).
To make the test fair, I avoided the more technical EC2 method and went with Amazon Lightsail, which is AWS’s simpler hosting service.
Here’s how I did it:
- Searched for Lightsail in the console
- Clicked Create Instance
- Choose Linux + WordPress as the blueprint
- Picked a region and plan
- Waited for the instance to start

Then I had to:
- Use the browser-based SSH terminal
- Run a command to get the WordPress admin password
- Copy the public IP to visit the site
- Log into WordPress using “user” and the password I retrieved
Lightsail is easier than EC2, but still much harder than IONOS. If you’re not comfortable using a terminal or managing infrastructure, it’s going to feel intimidating.
Server Management
Managing your server should be straightforward. Whether it’s rebooting, tracking usage, or editing firewall rules, these are things you’ll do regularly.
From the Servers & Cloud section, I clicked on my VPS. I was taken to a simple yet powerful panel with:
- Real-time resource usage (RAM, CPU, storage)
- SSH login credentials
- Firewall policy editor
- Server restart/reboot options
- OS reinstall or upgrade options

Every setting was accessible with a few clicks. I never had to leave the dashboard or reference documentation to figure something out.
IONOS provides all the essential tools in one place. It’s user-friendly without sacrificing control.
There is no single “Server Management Dashboard” in AWS that directly equates to something like cPanel or Plesk.
Managing a server in AWS means working across multiple services:
- EC2 console to reboot or stop/start instances
- IAM for key pair security
- EBS for storage volumes
- Security Groups for firewall settings
- CloudWatch for monitoring metrics

Each of these tools has its own section. There’s no unified panel for “your server.” Instead, you’re managing pieces of infrastructure spread across different dashboards.
AWS gives you deep control, but at the cost of simplicity. Managing one VPS in IONOS takes 1 panel. In AWS, it takes 4 or more.
6. Privacy and Security Comparison: Which Platform is More Secure?
Your Data Is Safer in the Hands of IONOS.
IONOS Privacy and Security
When I tested IONOS, one of the first things that stood out was how built-in and visible the security protections are, right from the dashboard. You don’t need to dig through documentation or configure things manually. It’s all there, working in the background to keep your site and data safe.
IONOS includes free SSL certificates on every plan, so you don’t have to manually generate or install anything. It also enables DDoS protection by default, using intelligent filtering to block bad traffic before it reaches your server.
For backups, IONOS takes automatic daily snapshots, which is incredibly helpful if you ever need to restore your site. There’s also malware scanning built into WordPress hosting and other CMS installs, so you’re protected from common threats without needing to install third-party tools.
On the privacy side, IONOS complies with GDPR regulations and uses AES-256 encryption for backups and internal data. You also get two-factor authentication, firewall policies, ModSecurity rules (WAF), and tools like MyDefender and SiteLock for advanced backup and site protection.
IONOS feels like a platform designed with security in mind. Everything from the infrastructure to the account level is protected, and you don’t have to be a tech expert to benefit from it.
AWS Privacy and Security
Next, I turned to AWS. It’s a different world here. AWS is incredibly secure—but only if you know how to configure it.
AWS operates under the Shared Responsibility Model, which means they secure the infrastructure, but you’re responsible for securing everything you build on top of it. That includes your EC2 server, S3 bucket permissions, and even basic things like backups and malware scans.
For SSL, AWS gives you free certificates via AWS Certificate Manager—but you can only use them with services like CloudFront or ELB. If you run a standalone EC2 instance, you’ll need to manually install a certificate (e.g., with Certbot).
DDoS protection comes from AWS Shield Standard, which is free and always on. You can also pay for Shield Advanced for more robust protection. AWS also offers a WAF (Web Application Firewall) you can configure with CloudFront or Load Balancers—but again, you need to set it up manually.
For backups, AWS gives you tools like EBS snapshots, AWS Backup, and RDS backups, but you have to configure schedules and retention policies yourself. There’s no built-in malware scanner—you’re expected to install and manage your own antivirus tools or build custom workflows to scan uploaded files.

AWS does provide a powerful access control system (IAM), with support for fine-grained permissions and multi-factor authentication. But IAM is a complex tool—there’s a learning curve, especially if you’ve never worked with JSON policy files before.
AWS gives you everything you need to build a secure environment, but you have to configure most of it manually. If you don’t know what you’re doing, it’s easy to miss something critical.
7. Server Locations Comparison
AWS Has More Global Coverage with 36 Regions and 114 Availability Zones Worldwide.
When you’re hosting a website or running a VPS, server location really matters—especially for performance, latency, and compliance.
IONOS Server Locations
IONOS offers a solid network of data centers focused in Europe and the United States. During my test, I was able to choose from the following locations:
- Germany (Frankfurt, Berlin)
- France (Paris)
- UK (London, Worcester)
- Spain (Logroño)
- United States (Las Vegas, Nevada; Newark, New Jersey; Lenexa, Kansas)
I chose Frankfurt for my initial VPS deployment and then tested server migration to their Las Vegas data center. The process was incredibly smooth. I simply created an image of my VPS using the IONOS Cloud Panel and redeployed it in the new location. It took just a few clicks and a few minutes.
Even though its locations are limited to Europe and North America, IONOS offers extremely reliable service. They use Equinix data centers, which are known for high physical security, redundant power, and ISO 27001 certification. Frankfurt’s facility, for example, has biometric access control, 8 diesel generators, and 24/7 on-site staff.
If your users are in the US or Europe, IONOS gives you everything you need—high-performance infrastructure and a clean way to migrate between regions. But if your audience is in Asia, Africa, or South America, you’ll hit a wall.
AWS Server Locations
Then I switched to AWS, and the difference in scale was immediately obvious.
AWS has 36 geographic regions, each with multiple Availability Zones. In total, that’s:
- 114 Availability Zones
- 700+ CloudFront Edge Locations
- 13 Regional Edge Caches
- 43 Local Zones
- 31 Wavelength Zones

What this means practically is: AWS can host your services in nearly every major region across the globe, including:
- North America
- South America (like São Paulo and upcoming Santiago)
- Europe (Frankfurt, Ireland, Stockholm, Milan, Paris)
- Middle East (Bahrain, UAE, upcoming Saudi Arabia)
- Africa (Cape Town)
- Asia-Pacific (Singapore, Sydney, Tokyo, Seoul, Mumbai, Jakarta, and more)
Even better, you can migrate your EC2 instance to another region if needed, but it’s a bit more technical than on IONOS. It involves creating an image of your instance (AMI), copying it to another region, and launching it there. It’s not a one-click experience, but it’s fully supported and well-documented.
AWS gives you the most comprehensive and flexible global infrastructure. If your business targets users across continents or requires compliance in specific countries, AWS wins hands down.
IONOS vs AWS: The Bottom Line
IONOS is the clear winner for anyone looking for simple, affordable, and secure hosting without the technical hassle. It’s beginner-friendly, fast, and comes with all the essential tools built in, while AWS, though powerful, is overkill for most small businesses and takes much longer to set up and manage.
| Category | Winner | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing and Plans | IONOS | Fixed monthly pricing with generous resources, starting at just $1/month |
| Support | IONOS | 24/7 phone and live chat support included at no extra cost |
| Hosting Features | IONOS | Everything you need—SSL, email, backups—comes built-in |
| Website Performance | IONOS | Faster overall load time and lower blocking time in GTmetrix tests |
| Ease of Use | IONOS | Clean dashboard and beginner-friendly setup process |
| Privacy and Security | IONOS | Pre-configured security features like SSL, backups, and malware scans |
| Server Locations | AWS | Global infrastructure with 36 regions and over 114 Availability Zones |


