PrivilegeServer is built for teams that want the power of Amazon Web Services without the complexity of the AWS Console. Whether you need shared hosting for a small site, a VPS for a custom app, or a dedicated server for enterprise workloads, you can go from sign-up to a live server in under five minutes. Our unified dashboard walks you through plan selection, payment, and provisioning—no AWS certifications required.
When you choose a plan, our system automatically provisions the right AWS resources behind the scenes. For shared hosting, we use Lightsail instances with a custom control panel. For VPS, we spin up EC2 instances with your chosen operating system and attach an Elastic IP. For dedicated servers, we allocate EC2 Dedicated Instances or physical hardware in our Dallas data center. Every step is logged and visible in your dashboard, so you always know the status of your deployment.
After provisioning, you receive an email with access details: control panel URL, SSH credentials if applicable, and links to documentation. Our 24/7 support team can help with migrations, DNS configuration, and best practices. Many customers run WordPress, Laravel, or Node.js applications without ever touching the AWS Console—PrivilegeServer handles the infrastructure so you can focus on your product.
We recommend starting with a Shared or VPS plan to familiarize yourself with the dashboard and support workflow. Once you are comfortable, you can scale up to Reseller or Dedicated tiers. All plans include daily backups to S3, 99.9% uptime SLA, and the option to add domains and SSL certificates from the same interface. Getting started is free of long-term contracts; you can cancel or change plans as your needs evolve.
If you run into any issues during setup, our knowledge base and video tutorials cover common tasks like adding domains, installing SSL, and configuring email. You can also open a ticket or use live chat—our team typically responds within a few hours. We are committed to making your first deployment smooth so you can focus on building, not on infrastructure.