You're probably tired of overpriced VPS plans that promise the world but deliver sluggish performance. Here's something different: RackNerd just restocked their Los Angeles DC03 datacenter, and they're practically giving away native IPv6 support while doubling your traffic allowance. Whether you need a test server in California or a production setup in Europe, their 8-location network might finally solve your "where should I host this" headache.
RackNerd restocked their Los Angeles DC03 facility, and the entry point is still $10.28 per year. That's not a typo—less than a dollar monthly gets you into one of their west coast datacenters.
The bigger news? They've rolled out native IPv6 across LA DC-02, LA DC-03, Utah, and Strasbourg, France. If you need IPv6 (and honestly, who doesn't at this point), you just open a ticket and they hand you a /64 block. No extra charge, no verification dance, just free IPv6.
And then there's the traffic doubling. RackNerd is giving double bandwidth to any plan that hasn't been doubled before. Old customers, new customers—doesn't matter. If your traffic quota is still at its original amount, you can claim the upgrade.
Beyond LA, you've got options in San Jose, Dallas, Chicago, New York, and Ashburn. They also restocked their AMD Ryzen 7950X VPS lineup for those who actually need CPU horsepower instead of just spinning up another WordPress install.
RackNerd runs datacenters across the US—San Jose, Los Angeles, Dallas, Chicago, Atlanta, New Jersey—plus they've expanded into Utah for storage-heavy workloads. Everything runs on KVM virtualization, which means you're getting actual dedicated resources instead of containerized scraps.
They use SolusVM for management. It's not fancy, but it works. You can reboot servers, reinstall operating systems, and check bandwidth graphs without filing support tickets.
Payment-wise, they take Alipay and PayPal. If you're outside the US and don't want to deal with credit card authorization holds, that's useful.
Their server types include standard VPS plans, hybrid dedicated servers (VDS), bare metal boxes, and SEO hosting setups for anyone running multiple sites. The Utah datacenter specializes in high-capacity storage servers if you're archiving data or running backups.
All their KVM servers come with 1Gbps ports, one IPv4 address, and SolusVM access. No promo codes needed—the pricing is already discounted.
For location selection, you'll see Los Angeles DC-03, San Jose, Seattle, Dallas, Chicago, New York, Ireland, and Toronto. If a datacenter isn't showing up in the dropdown, it's sold out.
The Ryzen 7950X plans are available in San Jose, Dallas, Chicago, New York, and Ashburn. Same 1Gbps bandwidth, same single IPv4 setup.
About that traffic doubling: the bandwidth numbers you see are already doubled. After you purchase, you can claim the upgrade by posting your order number on their LowEndTalk thread or leaving it in a comment somewhere visible. If you don't have a LET account, others in the community will relay the request. As long as your plan hasn't been doubled before, you're eligible.
Before committing money, you should probably test their network. Looking glass servers exist for a reason.
Los Angeles DC-02: http://lg-lax02.racknerd.com
Los Angeles DC-03: https://lg-lax03.racknerd.com
Run some ping tests, check latency from your location, download the test files they provide. If the numbers look acceptable for your use case, then consider purchasing. If the latency is terrible or packet loss shows up, you've saved yourself a headache.
Their other datacenters have similar testing endpoints, though they're not all listed here. If you need to verify a specific location like Dallas or Chicago, open a pre-sales ticket and ask for the looking glass URL.
Budget VPS hosting used to mean accepting terrible performance or limited locations. RackNerd's pricing makes it possible to spin up multiple servers across different regions without spending like you're running a startup.
The native IPv6 support matters more than people realize. As IPv4 exhaustion continues, having v6 ready means one less migration headache down the road. The free /64 allocation gives you enough addresses for pretty much any containerized setup or multi-service deployment.
The traffic doubling is straightforward value. Most providers would either raise prices or add complicated tier systems. RackNerd just doubled everyone's bandwidth and moved on.
For anyone testing distributed systems, running region-specific services, or just wanting backup servers in multiple locations, the 8-datacenter spread provides actual geographic diversity. West coast, central US, east coast, plus international options in Europe and Canada.
RackNerd's LA DC03 restock brings back their lowest-priced annual plan at $10.28, now with free native IPv6 and doubled traffic allowances across their network. Eight datacenter locations give you enough geographic options to actually test latency differences or serve users in specific regions. The Ryzen 7950X lineup provides an upgrade path when you need more than basic compute resources.
If you've been putting off spinning up that side project because hosting costs seemed unreasonable, this pricing structure removes that excuse. 👉 RackNerd's multi-location network and budget-friendly plans make it worth checking their current availability before the popular datacenters sell out again.