Iraqi small & medium businesses
Web hosting, e-commerce, ERP backends, internal tools. The common thread: your users are inside Iraq, so the server should be too.
VPS Iraq runs production-grade KVM virtual servers from datacenters in Erbil and Germany. One control panel, full root access, transparent USD pricing.
VPS Iraq is focused on one product line: KVM virtual servers, sold by the month, billed in USD. No shared hosting, no domain reselling, no upsells you will never use — just clean, performant virtual servers in two locations.
We serve teams that need reliable compute close to their users: Iraqi businesses hosting customer-facing services in Erbil, and operators wanting European reach from Germany. Every plan ships with dedicated vCPU, SSD storage, full root access, and a control panel that does what you would expect.
Our virtualization stack is Proxmox VE on enterprise hardware. KVM gives you a true virtual machine — full kernel control, custom OS images, no noisy-neighbor surprises. Storage is SSD across the fleet. Networking is provisioned with redundant uplinks and edge-level DDoS mitigation.
Low-latency hosting inside Iraq, ideal for local audiences and services.
European datacenter on our own hardware, for global reach and performance.
We sell one product (KVM VPS) to a few distinct audiences. Knowing which one you are helps us help you faster.
Web hosting, e-commerce, ERP backends, internal tools. The common thread: your users are inside Iraq, so the server should be too.
Production deploys, staging environments, CI runners, side projects. You want root, predictable cost, and someone to call when the network has a bad day.
Tick rate and ping matter more than anything. Erbil for Iraqi audiences; Germany (soon) for European players. KVM keeps the latency honest.
In-country compute for managed infrastructure, white-label hosting, or pieces of larger architectures. We will work on volume terms — open a ticket.
Most cloud traffic from Iraq still routes through Frankfurt or Istanbul before reaching its destination. That 60–80 ms round-trip is the latency penalty every Iraqi internet user pays today — every page load, every API call, every game packet.
Hosting inside Erbil eliminates that penalty for traffic that originates and terminates inside the country. For a customer in Baghdad calling your API, the difference is a snappy product and a sluggish one. For a game server, it is the difference between competitive and laggy.
Erbil is also where the Iraqi tech ecosystem actually lives — software companies, regional ISP peering, hardware partners. Being here means we are next to the people we need to work with, and next to the people who need us.