Looking to deploy multiple dedicated servers across global locations without the usual headaches? This review explores GTHost's practical advantages—from simultaneous multi-server installations to their comprehensive control panel—showing you exactly what works when you need reliable infrastructure fast.
We purchased our second test server at $124—just under the $125 dedicated server threshold that matters to budget-conscious deployers. The base configuration came with solid specs, and we added two extra IP addresses at $2 per month each.
The server appeared in the GTHost Control Panel immediately after installation, ready to configure. No waiting around, no support tickets needed.
Hardware specs:
E5-2650 v2 processor
64 GB DDR3 RAM
1 x 800 GB SSD
300 Mbit/sec unmetered bandwidth
Dallas location
$84/month
Here's where GTHost actually saves you time. You can purchase and install multiple servers at once—even with different operating systems running on each. We tested this with two servers: one running Rocky Linux, the other on Debian.
Test setup:
Server 1: Rocky Linux 8.6 in Dallas (14-minute install)
Server 2: Debian 11.4 in Paris (12-minute install)
Both servers installed simultaneously. No babysitting required.
The process is straightforward: select your hardware, pick your OS, add to cart, continue shopping for the next server, then complete the purchase. The control panel handles the rest.
If you're managing infrastructure across multiple regions or testing different configurations, 👉 GTHost's multi-deployment capability cuts your setup time in half compared to sequential installations.
GTHost's control panel gives you everything upfront—hardware specs, network speeds, pricing, and availability across 17 locations spanning the United States, Europe, and Great Britain. No hunting through documentation or opening tickets to find basic information.
The panel stays current. Rocky Linux and Ubuntu Jammy were both available during our testing, which tells you they're maintaining their OS library instead of letting it stagnate.
Key advantages we observed:
Complete hardware and network information before purchase
Current OS versions available
Fast deployment across multiple locations
Transparent pricing with no hidden fees
For teams running distributed infrastructure or developers needing specific geographic presence, the location variety matters. You can spin up servers where your users actually are.
Need extra IPs? GTHost charges $2 per month per additional IP address. We added two to our test server without complications. The IPs were configured and ready immediately after server deployment.
Both test servers came online within 15 minutes of purchase. Network performance matched the advertised speeds. The unmetered bandwidth on both configurations meant we could run tests without watching transfer counters.
The Dallas server on 300 Mbit/sec handled everything we threw at it. The Paris server on 500 Mbit/sec gave us room for heavier workloads.
GTHost makes sense if you need:
Multiple servers deployed quickly across different regions
Transparent pricing without surprise fees
A control panel that doesn't require a manual to navigate
Budget-friendly dedicated hardware with decent specs
The simultaneous deployment feature alone saves hours when you're setting up distributed infrastructure or testing configurations across locations.
GTHost maintains a promotions page with rotating deals. Our first test server configuration came from there. If you're planning a deployment, 👉 check their current offers before committing to standard pricing—you might find exactly what you need at a better rate.
GTHost delivers on the basics that matter: fast deployment, multiple locations, and a control panel that actually helps instead of getting in your way. The ability to deploy multiple servers simultaneously sets them apart when you're building distributed infrastructure or need to test across regions. Combined with straightforward pricing and current OS options, GTHost provides a solid foundation for projects that need reliable dedicated hardware without enterprise-level complexity or costs.