Looking for serious VPS performance without the enterprise price tag? HostCram LLC is running their Black Friday and Cyber Monday special with some genuinely impressive specs—we're talking Intel i9-11900K processors, Samsung NVMe 4.0 storage, and pricing that starts at just $18 annually.
This isn't your typical budget VPS provider throwing together recycled hardware and hoping for the best. HostCram operates as a Wyoming-registered US company with their own ASN (AS39618) and fully owned IP ranges. That means they're controlling their network infrastructure directly, not just reselling someone else's capacity.
The hardware lineup is where things get interesting. Every server runs on new Dell-branded equipment, which might sound like marketing fluff until you look at the actual components:
The core specs across all plans:
Intel Core i9-11900K processors (yes, the desktop gaming chip)
Samsung 4.0 NVMe SSD storage for actual fast disk I/O
SK Hynix 3200 MHz DDR4 RAM
1 Gbps Internap (INAP) bandwidth connections
Full root access with Proxmox VE control panel
The i9-11900K is an 8-core, 16-thread processor with a base clock of 3.5 GHz and boost speeds up to 5.3 GHz. For VPS workloads that need single-thread performance—think databases, Node.js applications, or compilation tasks—this chip delivers performance that typically costs significantly more on standard VPS offerings.
👉 Check out HostCram's latest VPS configurations with enterprise-grade hardware
HostCram is offering several tiers during this sale, each targeting different use cases:
LXC-1G Special (Limited Support) - The entry point at $18/year
1 vCPU core running on i9-11900K
1 GB DDR4 RAM at 3200 MHz
10 GB NVMe storage
1 TB monthly bandwidth at 1 Gbps
1 dedicated IPv4 address
This is marketed as "limited support," meaning it's designed for users who know their way around Linux and don't need hand-holding. Perfect for testing environments, small personal projects, or as a dedicated bot host.
Killer Core: KVM-3C - The Windows-compatible option
3 vCPU cores
3 GB dedicated DDR4 RAM
70 GB NVMe storage
3 TB monthly bandwidth
Supports both Linux and Windows OS
The KVM architecture here is crucial if you need Windows Server or want full virtualization rather than containerization. The dedicated RAM allocation means your performance won't fluctuate based on neighbor activity.
LXC-1.5G, LXC-3G, and LXC-6G Promos - The scaling options
These plans follow a logical progression: double the RAM, you get roughly double the storage and bandwidth. The LXC-6G tops out with 3 vCPU cores, 6 GB RAM, 90 GB storage, and 6 TB monthly bandwidth—enough headroom for most small to medium web applications.
HostCram isn't just plugging servers into someone else's datacenter and calling it a day. They operate their own ASN (AS39618) with fully owned IP ranges, routed through Juniper hardware. The physical location is Carrier-1 Data Centers in Dallas, Texas.
The Internap (INAP) bandwidth is particularly noteworthy. INAP's network is designed for performance routing—automatically selecting the best path for traffic based on real-time performance metrics. For applications where latency matters, this makes a measurable difference compared to standard transit connections.
Free weekly offsite backups are included across all plans, and you can request a /48 IPv6 prefix at no extra charge. If you're running services that need IPv6 support (and you probably should be), that's 280 trillion addresses to work with.
👉 Explore HostCram's network capabilities and datacenter specifications
While the VPS deals are the headline act, HostCram runs a broader infrastructure business. They offer private proxy services, email server hosting, and IP rental with ASN options. The fact that they're operating across multiple ISP and hosting networks with BGP sessions available suggests they're set up for more complex networking requirements.
If you're building something that needs specific IP geolocation, or you need to announce your own IP space, these aren't services you'll find at your typical budget VPS provider. It's infrastructure-level capability packaged for smaller customers.
HostCram accepts the standard payment methods: debit and credit cards, PayPal, Payoneer, and bank transfers. They mention being open to other payment options if you ask, which is useful for international customers dealing with payment processor limitations.
For testing before you commit, you can request a test IP through their live chat. It's worth actually doing this—run some ping tests, check latency from your location, see how the network performs during peak hours.
The $18/year entry point is competitive for what you're getting—i9-11900K CPU access, NVMe storage, and solid bandwidth from a provider running their own network infrastructure. The "limited support" designation on that plan is honest marketing; if you need tutorials and frequent assistance, you might want to start with one of the higher-tier plans.
For developers, small businesses, or anyone running services that need reliable performance without renting an entire dedicated server, these specs deliver considerably more power than typical budget VPS offerings. The i9-11900K's single-thread performance is legitimately several times faster than the Xeon processors you'll find in most shared VPS environments.
The inclusion of Windows support on the KVM plans opens up use cases that pure Linux providers can't serve. Running a Windows-specific application or development environment usually means paying significantly more—having it available at these prices is genuinely useful.
HostCram's Black Friday offer isn't flashy marketing over recycled hardware. You're getting current-generation i9 processors, Samsung's latest NVMe storage, and access to infrastructure that suggests they're serious about network performance. The pricing is aggressive enough to be interesting, but not so cheap that you're wondering what corners got cut.
If you need VPS resources for development work, hosting projects, or running services that benefit from strong single-thread CPU performance, this is worth investigating before the sale ends. Just make sure to test their network from your location first—performance varies based on geography, and no amount of good hardware fixes a bad network path.