There's a particular kind of frustration that every sysadmin or developer knows well — you're staring at a cloud bill that somehow grew 40% since last quarter, and you can't quite figure out why. You're paying for compute you barely use, bandwidth that costs a fortune at scale, and "managed" features you never asked for. At some point, the math stops making sense.
That's usually when people start looking at dedicated servers again.
SpinServers is one of those providers that quietly earns a reputation in the bare metal world. No splashy marketing, no celebrity endorsements — just a straightforward operation out of Dallas, Texas, offering enterprise-grade hardware at prices that make you double-check the decimal point.
Let me walk you through what they actually offer in 2026.
SpinServers (technically a DBA of Majestic Hosting Solutions LLC) is a US-based IaaS provider specializing in dedicated servers and private cloud. They're vertically integrated in an unusual way — they're also one of the largest traders of used enterprise server hardware globally, which is how they keep prices low while still running Dell, HP, Quanta, and Supermicro gear.
They own their own ASN (AS 396073), operate Tier III datacenters in Dallas, TX and San Jose, CA, and hold SOC2, HIPAA, and PCI compliance certifications. The 99.999% uptime commitment isn't just a marketing line — it's in their SLA.
The short version: they're not a reseller. They own the hardware, the network, and the buildings.
👉 Browse SpinServers' Current Inventory
A lot of dedicated server providers will put you on a 12-month contract before you've even figured out if the hardware suits your workload. SpinServers runs month-to-month with no setup fees. If you hate it after 30 days, you leave. If you love it, you stay. Simple.
The other thing that stands out is the network. Every dedicated server — even the entry-level ones — comes with dual 10Gbps ports as standard. That's not a premium add-on; it's the baseline. Most competitors charge significantly extra for that kind of pipe, if they offer it at all.
Then there's the Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) feature, which lets you create L2 private networks between your servers within their infrastructure. It's free, it's actually useful, and it turns a pile of standalone metal into something resembling a proper private cloud without the managed cloud price tag.
Here's what's currently listed for their Dallas location:
Entry Level
Intel Xeon E3-1280 v5 (4 cores / 8 threads @ 3.7GHz), 32GB RAM, 1TB NVMe SSD, 30TB bandwidth on dual 10Gbps — $79/month
Mid-Range
Intel Xeon Gold 6122 Customizable (20 cores / 40 threads @ 3.70GHz), 64GB RAM (default), 1TB SSD (default), 30TB bandwidth on dual 10Gbps — $99/month
High Memory
Dual Intel Xeon E5-2630L v3 (16 cores / 32 threads), 256GB RAM, 2x 1.6TB SSD in RAID-1, 30TB on dual 10Gbps — $149/month
That 256GB of RAM at $149/month is genuinely hard to find elsewhere. The kind of workloads that need that much memory — large databases, in-memory caching layers, ML inference — typically push you toward cloud instances that will charge you several hundred a month for similar specs.
Enterprise Tier
Dual Xeon Platinum 6162 (48 cores / 96 threads), 768GB RAM, customizable SSDs, 100TB on dual 10Gbps — $869/month
Dual Xeon Platinum 8173M (56 cores / 112 threads), 1.5TB RAM, 4x 7.68TB NVMe SSD, 100TB on dual 10Gbps — $1,299/month
Quad Xeon Platinum 8268 (96 cores / 192 threads), 1.5TB RAM, 4x 3.84TB SAS SSD, 100TB on dual 10Gbps — $1,699/month
These top-tier configurations are what you're looking at for serious HPC workloads, large rendering farms, or enterprise database clusters.
If your use case involves transferring a lot of data — video streaming, large file distribution, data replication across regions — SpinServers also offers unmetered 10Gbps configurations. "Unmetered" means you're not watching a bandwidth counter tick up; the port runs full tilt, all month.
Xeon Gold 6122 (20 cores), 32GB RAM, 1TB SSD, unmetered dual 10Gbps — $1,598/month
Dual E5-2630L v3 (16 cores), 256GB RAM, 2x 1.6TB SSD RAID-1, unmetered dual 10Gbps — $1,648/month
Dual Platinum 6162 (48 cores), 1TB RAM, customizable SSDs, unmetered dual 10Gbps — $2,398/month
For context: a comparable unmetered 10G port from a major carrier or a cloud provider can easily run $1,500-$2,000/month on bandwidth alone, before you even factor in compute costs.
👉 See Unmetered Server Options
For teams that don't need a full bare metal box, SpinServers also offers KVM virtual private servers. These run on the same enterprise hardware as their dedicated fleet — not commodity cloud infrastructure.
Simple tiers:
2 vCPU / 2GB RAM / 40GB SSD / 4TB bandwidth — $12/month
4 vCPU / 4GB RAM / 80GB SSD / 8TB bandwidth — $29/month
6 vCPU / 8GB RAM / 120GB SSD / 8TB bandwidth — $39/month
8 vCPU / 8GB RAM / 160GB SSD / 10TB bandwidth — $45/month
Advanced configurations scale up to 64 vCPUs, 64GB RAM, 600GB SSD for $99/month. These are unusually large VPS tiers — most providers cap out at 8 or 16 cores for a "large" VPS plan.
Deployment is automatic. SpinServers advertises 30-minute provisioning for their instant server inventory, and user reports consistently back that up. You order, pay, and within half an hour you have IPMI access and a freshly installed OS.
They auto-install Linux, Windows, ESXi, cPanel, and Plesk. You can swap operating systems later directly from the client portal — no ticket required, no waiting for a tech to be available.
IPMI/iKVM access is included, which means you can get console-level access to your server even if you completely hose the OS. That's the kind of thing that saves you at 2am.
Dallas, TX is the main location — a privately-owned Tier III datacenter with:
Redundant power from multiple diverse substations (2N configuration)
Multi-homed network connecting to Cogent, Hurricane Electric, Level 3, IX, and others
24x7x365 on-site technicians
DDoS protection at the network level via Palo Alto carrier-grade firewalls
San Jose, CA is their Silicon Valley location, positioned specifically for Asia-optimized routing. If your users or services are in Asia-Pacific, the latency profile from San Jose is meaningfully better than Dallas.
The forum feedback on SpinServers is fairly consistent. On WebHostingTalk, one long-time dedicated server customer wrote that after renting quite a few servers over the years from various providers, SpinServers stood out as "some of the best" — with both servers auto-provisioned within 30 minutes as advertised, and support tickets handled promptly and professionally. The VPC feature in particular gets called out repeatedly as something genuinely useful rather than a marketing checkbox.
On Trustpilot, one customer described their experience in colocation as initially nerve-wracking but said the team quickly made them feel welcomed, with support they'd call the best in their 10+ years of using IaaS and colocation services.
There are some notes in reviews about server stock availability fluctuating (some configurations sell out), and at least one user flagged that IPv6 support is limited — worth checking if that's a hard requirement for your setup.
SpinServers makes the most sense if you're:
Running workloads that outgrow VPS — Once you're paying $200-400/month for a cloud VPS and still hitting limits, a dedicated server at $99-149/month with 10x the RAM and full-disk NVMe starts looking like an obvious trade.
Running bandwidth-heavy applications — Video platforms, game servers, CDN origins, torrent indexers, backup nodes. The 30TB included at 10Gbps is substantially more than most providers offer at this price point.
Building a private cloud — The free VPC feature and the ability to stack multiple servers into a private L2 network makes SpinServers viable for teams building their own Kubernetes clusters, private hypervisor setups, or multi-node databases without spending cloud money.
Doing CPU or GPU rendering — LinkedIn lists CPU rendering and GPU rendering as explicit use cases. The high-core-count configs at mid-range prices make sense for render farms.
Wanting predictability — No usage-based billing, no surprise charges at month end. You pay a flat monthly rate, and the server is yours.
Stock availability can vary — some configurations listed on the site show "Sold Out" at any given time. If you have a specific memory or storage requirement, it's worth contacting them directly about availability or customization options.
IPv6 support has been flagged as limited in community reviews. If your infrastructure requires robust IPv6, verify current status with their support team before committing.
Customer reviews, while positive overall, are relatively sparse compared to larger providers — SpinServers is a smaller operation, which cuts both ways. You get more personalized support, but less crowd-sourced troubleshooting data.
SpinServers is the kind of provider you find after you've overpaid for cloud compute long enough to do the math properly. Their entry-level dedicated servers start genuinely low, the hardware is enterprise-grade, the 10Gbps ports are standard rather than an upsell, and the month-to-month terms mean you're not locked into anything until you've had time to verify it works for your use case.
If you're scaling a workload that's outgrowing shared or cloud VPS, or you just want bare metal you can actually trust at a price that doesn't make your finance team wince, SpinServers is worth a serious look.
👉 View All SpinServers Plans and Current Pricing