A hosting control panel is where you actually run your sites — creating domains, databases, email accounts and SSL certificates without touching the command line. Two popular options are CyberPanel and Plesk, and they suit noticeably different users. Here's an honest comparison to help you pick.

The quick summary

Feature and experience

Plesk is the more mature, all-rounder platform. It has a highly polished interface, runs on both Linux and Windows, supports a wide range of web servers, and has an extensive marketplace of extensions (security, backups, WordPress tooling, and more). If you manage many sites or want a deep, supported ecosystem, Plesk delivers.

CyberPanel is leaner and built for speed — it ships with OpenLiteSpeed (or the commercial LiteSpeed), which is fast for PHP and WordPress out of the box. The interface covers the essentials cleanly, and the price (free for the OpenLiteSpeed edition) is hard to beat. The trade-off is fewer advanced features and a smaller community.

Performance

CyberPanel's OpenLiteSpeed foundation gives it a genuine performance edge for PHP/WordPress workloads, especially with LiteSpeed Cache. Plesk performs well too and can run on high-performance stacks, but performance isn't its headline pitch — breadth and polish are.

Cost

For cost-sensitive projects, CyberPanel's free tier is compelling. For businesses that want a supported, feature-complete platform, Plesk's licence is usually money well spent.

Which should you choose?

Getting either, managed

The good news: you don't have to choose your control panel and your host separately. Internetport's managed web hosting offers both Plesk and CyberPanel on fast SSD infrastructure in Europe, so you can pick the panel that fits and let us handle the platform underneath. New to the topic? See how to choose web hosting.