Looking for a Hong Kong VPS with reliable direct routing and generous bandwidth? DMIT's n2 series delivers dual PCCW connectivity across all three major Chinese carriers, offering stable international access with IPv6 support. Whether you need streaming capabilities or consistent performance for your Asia-Pacific operations, these plans provide solid infrastructure without the premium CN2 GIA pricing.
DMIT is a US-based hosting provider that's been fine-tuning its Hong Kong infrastructure over recent months. The journey's been interesting—they started with HKBN routing, then temporarily switched China Telecom to CN2 and China Unicom to PCCW during some network turbulence. Now their n2 series has settled on something more straightforward: dual PCCW routing for all carriers.
The current setup prioritizes practical benefits—high bandwidth allocations, generous traffic allowances, and direct connections across the board. The company's roadmap hints at upcoming n3 plans focused on CN2 GIA with two distinct approaches: high-bandwidth-low-traffic and low-bandwidth-high-traffic configurations. They're clearly thinking about different use cases.
One thing worth noting: these servers use Hong Kong IPs that work with Netflix but not TVB. If your IP faces attacks, the system automatically enables ping blocking and may route through Japan or Singapore as a protective measure.
Test connectivity before committing:
Hong Kong PCCW/CN2 Test IP: 193.110.200.233
The network architecture provides direct routing for China Telecom, China Unicom, and China Mobile, avoiding the congestion you'd typically see with cheaper providers. IPv6 comes standard, which is increasingly relevant for modern applications.
Not all situations qualify for IP changes. Here's when you can request a new address:
TCP Blocking Scenarios
If your IP gets TCP-blocked by mainland China, you can swap it once every 35 days. Two conditions apply: you must be on a non-monthly plan, and your service needs more than 35 days remaining.
DDoS Situations
IPs that experience DDoS attacks can't be changed for three days afterward. If mainland China completely blocks your IP across all protocols, replacement isn't available—that's considered a terminal situation.
👉 Check current DMIT Hong Kong availability and real-time pricing here
Understanding these limitations upfront helps set realistic expectations. The policy exists because complete blocks often indicate behavior patterns that would just repeat with a fresh IP.
DMIT's refund policy is stricter than some competitors. Six specific situations void your refund eligibility:
Using over 10GB of traffic within three days of purchase eliminates refund options. DDoS attacks against your service also disqualify refunds—the reasoning being that attack mitigation consumes resources regardless of fault.
Network quality complaints don't qualify for refunds, which makes sense given the subjective nature of "quality." Voluntary service cancellation is permanent with no refunds or restoration. Speed limitations due to abuse violations also void refunds.
The one exception with timing flexibility: if your IP is unreachable in certain regions, submit a ticket within one business day of purchase. After that window closes, the refund option expires.
pvm.n2.mini – Entry Point
1GB RAM
Single CPU core
20GB SSD storage
1.2TB monthly traffic
100Mbps bandwidth
$14.9 monthly
pvm.n2.micro – Balanced Option
2GB RAM
Dual CPU cores
20GB SSD storage
2.5TB monthly traffic
150Mbps bandwidth
$29.9 monthly
pvm.n2.small – Performance Tier
4GB RAM
Quad CPU cores
40GB SSD storage
4TB monthly traffic
150Mbps bandwidth
$44.9 monthly
pvm.n2.medium – Maximum Configuration
4GB RAM
Quad CPU cores
60GB SSD storage
6TB monthly traffic
200Mbps bandwidth
$59.9 monthly
The pricing structure scales predictably with resources. Traffic allocations are notably generous compared to premium CN2 GIA alternatives, making these plans suitable for bandwidth-intensive applications that don't require absolute optimization for mainland China access.
Content delivery networks that serve Asia-Pacific audiences get solid value from the PCCW routing. The direct connections avoid common bottlenecks while the high traffic caps support distribution workloads.
Development teams testing applications for international markets appreciate the stable latency and IPv6 support. The Hong Kong location provides realistic conditions for serving both Asian and Western users.
Streaming applications work well given the Netflix compatibility and generous bandwidth. Just remember the TVB limitation if that's relevant to your use case.
The infrastructure handles moderate traffic spikes without throttling, assuming you stay within acceptable use boundaries. For mission-critical applications requiring guaranteed CN2 GIA routing, waiting for the upcoming n3 series might make more sense.
DMIT's Hong Kong n2 series fills a specific niche between budget providers and premium CN2 offerings. You get reliable PCCW routing, substantial traffic allowances, and predictable performance without paying for top-tier optimizations you might not need. The strict refund policy and IP replacement limitations require careful consideration, but for users with clear requirements, these plans deliver practical value at competitive monthly rates. Test the network thoroughly within your first day if regional accessibility matters to your use case.