An unmanaged dedicated server is exactly what it sounds like: the provider gives you a physical machine, network and remote access, and everything above the operating system is yours. No managed control panel, no provider-installed software stack, no support tickets for application problems — and, in exchange, a notably lower price than a managed server. For teams with the skills to run their own stack, it's the best value in hosting.
With an unmanaged dedicated server, the provider is responsible for the hardware, power, network and remote management access (IPMI/console). You're responsible for everything from the OS up: installation, patching, security hardening, the web server, databases, backups and monitoring. You get full root, and nothing is installed that you didn't put there.
If you'd struggle to secure and patch a Linux server yourself, a managed option is worth the premium. Our guide on managed vs unmanaged hosting covers where the line falls.
The honest checklist of your responsibilities:
None of this is hard for an experienced team, and full control means no surprises and no fighting a pre-installed panel.
You're not paying for a support team to manage software they didn't write for you, or for control-panel licensing. The provider's cost is the hardware and network, so an unmanaged dedicated server is typically the cheapest way to get an entire physical machine — often dramatically less than a managed equivalent with the same specs.
The provider's job on an unmanaged server is to do the physical part well: solid hardware, fast SSD/NVMe storage, generous unmetered bandwidth, reliable remote management, and quick provisioning. Internetport's dedicated servers offer exactly that — AMD EPYC and Dell PowerEdge hardware, SSD storage, unmetered 10 Gbps uplinks and full remote management, hosted in Europe, available unmanaged so you keep control and cost down. Deciding on hardware? See our dedicated server buying guide.