“Cheap KVM VPS” covers everything from a rock-solid €3/month server to an oversold box that grinds to a halt every evening. The virtualization type (KVM) is a good sign, but price alone tells you almost nothing. Here’s what you’re actually paying for, and how to tell real value from a trap.
Why KVM matters at any price
KVM is full hardware virtualization: your VPS gets its own kernel, so you can run any operating system, load custom kernel modules, and use your allocated RAM as truly yours rather than shared. That’s a real advantage over older container-style virtualization (like OpenVZ), where resources are shared more loosely and “your” RAM can be borrowed by neighbours. So “KVM” on a cheap VPS is a genuinely positive signal — it’s the baseline you want.
What a cheap KVM VPS should still include
Even at the low end, a good-value KVM VPS gives you:
- Full root access and a choice of OS (Debian, Ubuntu, AlmaLinux, Rocky, Windows).
- SSD or NVMe storage — spinning disks at this point are a red flag.
- Dedicated RAM you don’t have to fight for.
- A usable amount of bandwidth without punitive overage fees.
- Fast provisioning — minutes, not days.
Where cheap VPS providers cut corners
The savings on a suspiciously cheap VPS usually come from one of these:
- Oversubscription. Packing far more VPSs onto a host than the CPU can serve. It benchmarks fine when you test it and crawls at peak. Look for providers who state their approach to CPU allocation.
- Slow or shared storage. IOPS matter as much as capacity for databases and busy apps.
- Thin network capacity. A cheap price with a saturated uplink means slow transfers when it counts.
- No support. Fine until something breaks and there’s no one to ask.
How to test value before you commit
Because KVM VPSs are cheap and quick to spin up, test rather than guess: run a disk benchmark, check CPU steal time under load, and transfer a large file to gauge real network throughput. A genuinely good-value VPS holds up; an oversold one shows its cracks immediately.
Getting cheap without the compromise
The sweet spot is a provider who keeps prices low without the oversubscription tricks — dedicated RAM, SSD/NVMe storage, honest CPU allocation, and real support. Internetport’s KVM VPS hosting is built that way: full root access, SSD storage, dual-node replication, Windows or Linux, provisioned in about 60 seconds, and hosted in Europe. New to VPS? See what a KVM VPS is and when you need one, or weigh it against a dedicated box in our VPS vs dedicated server guide.