By The HostingDive Team | Last updated: March 2026 | 14 min read
Two of the most-recommended web hosts on the market. Similar intro prices. Very different hosting philosophies. If you’re weighing Hostinger against SiteGround, the decision comes down to one fundamental question: do you prioritize long-term cost and AI features, or premium support and managed WordPress quality?
We’ve dug through independent benchmark data, tested both platforms, and cross-referenced findings from a dozen third-party reviewers — including Gizmodo, Cybernews, 01net, and Website Planet — to give you a genuinely balanced comparison. This is not a “one-size-fits-all” answer, because the right pick genuinely depends on your use case.
If you want the short version: jump to the Quick Verdict. If you want to understand the full data, read on.
Quick Verdict
Hostinger wins on price, AI features, and storage; SiteGround wins on support, security, and managed WordPress quality. For most budget-conscious users, bloggers, and developers managing multiple sites, Hostinger delivers more value per dollar — especially at renewal, where its rates stay meaningfully lower than SiteGround’s. But if you run a small business where a hosting issue at 2 a.m. demands a phone call, or you need daily backups and staging on the cheapest plan, SiteGround is worth paying extra for. Choose Hostinger if you need to keep costs predictable long-term, host multiple sites, or want the best AI builder suite in shared hosting. Choose SiteGround if phone support is non-negotiable, you’re building a WordPress or WooCommerce store you can’t afford to have go down, or you want a genuinely managed experience with minimal hands-on server management.
Side-by-Side Snapshot
| Factor | Hostinger | SiteGround | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Entry intro price | $1.99/mo (48-mo term) | $2.99/mo (12-mo term) | Hostinger |
| Entry renewal price | $10.99/mo | $17.99/mo | Hostinger |
| Sites on entry plan | 100 | 1 | Hostinger |
| Storage (entry plan) | 100 GB SSD | 10 GB SSD | Hostinger |
| Storage type | NVMe (Business+) | SSD | Hostinger |
| Uptime (12-month avg) | 99.99% | 99.99% | Tie |
| TTFB (avg, North America) | 443 ms | 510 ms | Hostinger (slight edge) |
| Load test (1,000 users) | 47 ms avg | 143 ms avg | Hostinger |
| Server response time | 511 ms (Cybernews avg) | 217 ms (Cybernews avg) | SiteGround |
| Daily backups (entry plan) | No (weekly only) | Yes | SiteGround |
| CDN on entry plan | No (Business+ only) | Yes | SiteGround |
| Staging on entry plan | No (Business+ only) | No (GrowBig+ only) | Tie |
| US data centers | 1 (Arizona) | 4 (VA, IA, TX, CA) | SiteGround |
| Total data centers | 14 | 11 | Hostinger (overall global reach) |
| Phone support | No | Yes (24/7) | SiteGround |
| Live chat support | 24/7 | 24/7 | SiteGround (faster connection) |
| AI tools | Yes (Kodee, AI Builder, AI Writer) | Limited (Coderick AI, AI Studio) | Hostinger |
| WordPress.org recommended | Yes | Yes | Tie |
| VPS hosting | Yes (from $6.49/mo) | No | Hostinger |
| Money-back guarantee | 30 days | 30 days | Tie |
Sources: HostingStep WordPress Benchmarks, 01net Hostinger vs SiteGround, Cybernews comparison.
Pricing Comparison
Both hosts advertise attractive intro prices — but the real cost picture only becomes clear when you look at renewal rates and total spend over time. The gap is significant.
Hostinger Pricing (March 2026)
| Plan | Intro (48-mo term) | Renewal (48-mo) | Sites | Storage | Backups |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Premium | $1.99/mo | $10.99/mo | 100 | 100 GB SSD | Weekly |
| Business | $2.99/mo | $13.99/mo | 100 | 200 GB NVMe | Daily |
| Cloud Startup | $7.49/mo | ~$18+/mo | 100 | 200 GB NVMe | Daily |
Note: Introductory rates require a 48-month commitment, paid upfront. Prices exclude VAT. Source: Website Builder Expert — Hostinger Pricing 2026.
SiteGround Pricing (March 2026)
| Plan | Intro (12-mo term) | Renewal (12-mo) | Sites | Storage | Backups |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| StartUp | $2.99/mo | $17.99/mo | 1 | 10 GB SSD | Daily |
| GrowBig | $4.99/mo | $29.99/mo | Unlimited | 20 GB SSD | Daily |
| GoGeek | $7.99/mo | $44.99/mo | Unlimited | 40 GB SSD | Daily |
Introductory rates apply to the first 12-month term only. After that, full renewal prices apply. Source: SiteGround KB — Current Rates.
Total Cost Over Time: Entry Plans vs. Mid-Tier Plans
The tables above don’t show the full picture. Here’s what each host actually costs over 1, 2, and 4 years — including the renewal hit when the intro term ends.
Entry Plan (Hostinger Premium vs. SiteGround StartUp)
| Timeframe | Hostinger Premium | SiteGround StartUp | Savings with Hostinger |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 (intro) | $95.52 (48-mo plan paid upfront, prorated) | $35.88 ($2.99 × 12) | SiteGround cheaper Y1 |
| Year 2 (renewal kicks in for SG) | Covered by 48-mo term (~$23.88) | $215.88 ($17.99 × 12) | Hostinger saves ~$192 |
| 4-year total (Hostinger: 1 term; SiteGround: Y1 + 3yr renewal) | ~$95.52 for first 48 mo | ~$683.52 ($35.88 + $215.88×3) | Hostinger saves ~$588 |
| After 48 months (Hostinger renewal at $10.99/mo) | $527.52/4yr renewal term | $863.52/4yr (at $17.99/mo) | Hostinger saves ~$336 |
Key takeaway: SiteGround’s intro deal requires only a 12-month commitment (lower upfront risk), but year 2 onward costs 63% more than Hostinger’s renewal rates at the entry tier. Over four years, the cost difference on entry plans is substantial.
Mid-Tier Plan (Hostinger Business vs. SiteGround GrowBig)
| Timeframe | Hostinger Business | SiteGround GrowBig | Savings with Hostinger |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | ~$35.88 (prorated from 48-mo term) | $59.88 ($4.99 × 12) | Hostinger saves ~$24 |
| Year 2 (SiteGround at renewal) | ~$35.88 (still in 48-mo term) | $359.88 ($29.99 × 12) | Hostinger saves ~$324 |
| 4-year total | ~$143.52 (one 48-mo term) | ~$1,139.64 | Hostinger saves ~$996 |
All figures approximate. Hostinger 48-month pricing assumes the full term is paid upfront at $2.99/mo = $143.52. SiteGround Year 1 at intro price, Years 2–4 at standard renewal rate. Source: Website Planet — SiteGround Pricing, Website Builder Expert — Hostinger Pricing.
Important Caveats on Pricing
- Hostinger’s lowest intro rates require a 48-month commitment — that’s $95.52 paid today to lock in $1.99/mo. If you’re not ready to commit for four years, the effective monthly rate rises significantly.
- SiteGround’s intro deal only requires 12 months — lower upfront commitment, but you face the steep renewal price sooner.
- Both hosts’ prices vary by active promotions — verify current pricing directly on Hostinger and SiteGround before purchasing.
- Hostinger entry (Premium) plan only offers weekly backups — if you need daily backups, you must step up to Business ($2.99/mo intro).
Pricing verdict: Hostinger wins clearly — lower entry price, dramatically lower renewal rates, and significantly more included features per dollar. SiteGround is worth the premium only if its specific advantages (see below) matter to you.
Performance Comparison
Performance data in web hosting is notoriously inconsistent across testing methodologies. We’ve aggregated results from multiple independent sources to give a balanced picture.
Uptime
| Source / Period | Hostinger | SiteGround |
|---|---|---|
| HostingStep (12-month, 2024) | 99.99% (1h 15min downtime) | 99.99% (~52 min downtime) |
| TechRadar (10-week, 2026) | 99.96% | — |
| Cybernews (~2 months) | 100% | 100% |
| Gizmodo (3 months, 2026) | 100% | 99.95% |
| 01net long-term average | 99.96–99.98% | 99.98–99.997% |
Verdict: Tie. Both hosts are rock-solid on uptime, consistently hitting or exceeding 99.9% SLA guarantees across all independent monitoring sources. Neither gives you reason for concern here.
Speed and TTFB
| Metric | Hostinger | SiteGround | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| TTFB (12-month avg, North America) | 443 ms | 510 ms | HostingStep |
| TTFB (Global avg) | 503 ms | 886 ms | HostingStep |
| TTFB (Gizmodo head-to-head) | 291 ms | 40 ms | Gizmodo |
| Server response time (Cybernews avg) | 511 ms | 217 ms | Cybernews |
| TTFB (OnlineMediaMasters) | 513 ms | 1,164 ms | OMM |
| GTmetrix fully loaded (optimized Neve) | 769–773 ms | 683–731 ms | Gizmodo |
| Website Planet fully loaded | 0.8 s | 1.1 s | Website Planet |
| Cybernews fully loaded | 936 ms | 1.1 s | Cybernews |
The honest TTFB picture: TTFB results vary dramatically depending on the testing methodology and server proximity. Gizmodo’s direct head-to-head showed SiteGround’s TTFB at 40ms (exceptional) vs. Hostinger’s 291ms. But HostingStep’s 12-month average across 22 global locations favors Hostinger (443ms vs. 510ms). The takeaway is that both are competitive, and results depend heavily on where your visitors are located — which brings us to data center coverage.
Load Test: Traffic Spikes
| Test | Hostinger | SiteGround | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stress test (1,000 virtual users) | 47 ms avg | 143 ms avg | 01net |
| Load test (0–100 concurrent users) | — | 147 ms avg, 0% errors | HostingStep |
| WPBeginner stress (50 virtual users) | Stable, no degradation | — | WPBeginner |
| Avg response (100 virtual users, Gizmodo) | 592 ms | 339 ms | Gizmodo |
Load test verdict: Hostinger edges ahead for traffic spikes. The 01net stress test result — 47ms vs. 143ms under 1,000 concurrent virtual users — is the most dramatic data point in this comparison. Hostinger’s LiteSpeed server stack handles concurrent traffic surges significantly better than SiteGround’s shared infrastructure. If your site gets hit with viral traffic, Hostinger handles it more gracefully.
Server Technology
- Hostinger: LiteSpeed web servers + NVMe SSD (Business+), HTTP/3 and QUIC, LiteSpeed Cache plugin pre-installed for WordPress, up to 300 PHP workers on Business plan.
- SiteGround: Nginx with SuperCacher (NGINX Direct Delivery + Dynamic Caching + Memcached), Google Cloud Platform infrastructure, HTTP/3 support (added 2025), SG Optimizer plugin.
Overall performance verdict: Competitive tie with context-dependent winner. Hostinger is faster for page load times in most independent full-load tests and handles traffic spikes better. SiteGround delivers more consistent server response times and has stronger US-regional performance due to 4 US data centers vs. Hostinger’s 1. For an audience primarily in the US, SiteGround’s infrastructure advantage is real.
For a deeper dive on each host’s performance independently, see our Hostinger review and SiteGround review.
Features Comparison
| Feature | Hostinger | SiteGround | Edge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Data centers (total) | 14 locations, 4 continents | 11 locations, 4 continents | Hostinger (global reach) |
| US data centers | 1 (Phoenix, AZ) | 4 (VA, IA, TX, CA) | SiteGround |
| Infrastructure | Own data centers | Google Cloud Platform | SiteGround (enterprise-grade) |
| Web server | LiteSpeed | Nginx | Hostinger (performance under load) |
| Storage (entry plan) | 100 GB SSD | 10 GB SSD | Hostinger |
| Storage (mid-tier plan) | 200 GB NVMe | 20 GB SSD | Hostinger |
| CDN | Hostinger CDN, free on Business+ | In-house CDN, 170+ edge points, free on all plans | SiteGround (all plans + more edge points) |
| Staging environment | WordPress Business plan+ ($2.99/mo intro) | GrowBig+ ($4.99/mo intro) | Hostinger (cheaper plan tier) |
| Daily backups | Business plan+ only; Premium = weekly | All plans, free (30-day retention) | SiteGround |
| On-demand backups | Business plan+ | GrowBig+ only; add-on on StartUp | Tie (both require paid upgrade) |
| SSL certificates | Free, unlimited (Let’s Encrypt, all plans) | Free wildcard (Let’s Encrypt, all plans) | Tie |
| Security suite | WAF, malware scanner, DDoS protection, 2FA | AI anti-bot system, custom WAF, account isolation, real-time monitoring (every 0.5s), HackAlert, SiteGround Security plugin | SiteGround |
| Free domain privacy (WHOIS) | Yes (included, worth ~$9.99/yr) | No ($12–$24/year add-on) | Hostinger |
| Email hosting | Up to 100 accounts/site (1 GB each) | Unlimited accounts (10 GB each) | SiteGround (more storage per mailbox) |
| WordPress management | Auto-updates, WP-CLI, vulnerability scanner, staging (Business+) | Flexible auto-updates (per-plugin), SG Optimizer, staging (GrowBig+), WordPress.org recommended | SiteGround (more granular control) |
| AI tools | Kodee AI agent, AI Website Builder 2.0, AI Writer, AI Logo Generator, AI Heatmap, Horizons app builder | Coderick AI (coding), AI Studio (Feb 2026), Easy Website Builder with AI | Hostinger |
| Developer tools | SSH, Git, WP-CLI, PHP version control, Node.js, Docker (VPS), 240+ Docker templates | SSH, Git (GoGeek only), WP-CLI, PHP control, HTTP/3, Site Tools | Hostinger (Git on lower plans; Docker for VPS) |
| Control panel | hPanel (beginner-friendly, mobile-friendly) | Site Tools (modern, purpose-built for WordPress) | Tie (both are quality custom panels) |
| VPS hosting | Yes (KVM-based, from $6.49/mo) | No (cloud only, from $100/mo) | Hostinger |
| Reseller/white-label hosting | No | GoGeek plan ($7.99/mo intro) | SiteGround |
| Collaborator tools | Limited (multiple user access via hPanel) | Full collaborator system (per-site access with separate login) | SiteGround |
| Free migration | Free for all open-source CMS (WordPress, Joomla, etc.) | Free WordPress migration plugin; ~$30/site for manual non-WP migrations | Hostinger (free for more CMS types) |
Sources: Gizmodo — Hostinger vs SiteGround 2026, Website Planet, Cybernews, official product pages.
Customer Support Comparison
Support quality is where the gap between these two hosts is most clear-cut. SiteGround wins this category convincingly, and it matters for buyers who value fast, expert help during a hosting crisis.
Support Channels
| Channel | Hostinger | SiteGround |
|---|---|---|
| Live chat | 24/7 (AI bot → human, ~1–3 min) | 24/7 (bot → instant human, seconds) |
| Ticket / email | 24/7 | 24/7 |
| Phone support | ❌ Not available | ✅ 24/7 |
| AI chatbot | Kodee (handles 83% of interactions) | AI chatbot (routes to human) |
| Knowledge base | Extensive, video guides, 30+ DNS provider guides | Extensive, well-organized, illustrated |
Response Times
| Metric | Hostinger | SiteGround |
|---|---|---|
| Live chat (human connection) | ~1–3 minutes | Seconds (near-instant) |
| Email/ticket first response | 4–17 minutes (TechRadar testing) | ~15 minutes average (some under 5 min) |
| Phone support | Not available | Immediate (when queue not full) |
| First-contact resolution | Good for basic issues; inconsistent for complex | 90–98% (stated; independently corroborated) |
Support Quality: What the Data Shows
TechRadar’s dedicated support testing found Hostinger agents knowledgeable for common issues, with email replies arriving in 4–5 minutes — well above industry average. However, community feedback on Reddit consistently notes that complex technical issues are handled inconsistently, often escalated with little follow-up. Hostinger’s Kodee AI bot now handles 83% of interactions, which can frustrate users with non-standard problems.
SiteGround’s support has long been considered best-in-class among shared hosting providers. HostingStep reports a 90%+ first-contact resolution rate, and SiteGround’s own support page cites a 4.99/5 Trustpilot rating from 1,843+ reviews. The biggest differentiator is 24/7 phone support — SiteGround is one of the only major shared hosts still offering it. For small business owners who need to speak to someone when their site goes down on a Saturday morning, this is a genuine advantage.
Caveats: Some 2025 Reddit reports mention SiteGround gating certain advanced support requests behind a $65 “Expert Care Credit” fee. SiteGround states standard support remains free; this appears to affect premium/priority escalations only. Long-time users also note support quality has declined slightly from the “legendary” era of 2017–2020, though it still leads the budget hosting category by a wide margin.
Support verdict: SiteGround wins clearly. Faster human connection, phone support, higher resolution rates, and stronger overall reputation. Hostinger’s support is above-average for budget hosting but cannot match SiteGround’s consistency or phone channel.
Who Should Pick Hostinger
Try Hostinger if any of these match your situation:
- Budget is your primary constraint, especially long-term. Hostinger’s renewal rates ($10.99/mo for Premium, $13.99/mo for Business at 48-month renewal) are consistently $6–$16/mo lower than SiteGround’s equivalent tiers. Over four years, that’s hundreds to over $1,000 in savings depending on the plan tier. For solo bloggers, students, and bootstrapped businesses, this difference is material.
- You’re managing multiple websites. Hostinger’s entry Premium plan allows 100 websites. SiteGround’s equivalent StartUp plan allows 1. If you’re a freelancer, agency, or developer who builds client sites, Hostinger’s multi-site capacity at a low monthly rate is hard to beat without stepping up to SiteGround’s GrowBig ($29.99/mo renewal).
- Your site is likely to get traffic spikes. Hostinger’s LiteSpeed server stack handled 1,000 concurrent virtual users at 47ms average response in 01net’s stress test, compared to 143ms for SiteGround. If you run content that occasionally goes viral — a news site, a deal aggregator, a campaign page — Hostinger’s architecture absorbs spikes more gracefully.
- AI-powered website building is important to you. Hostinger’s AI ecosystem is the most comprehensive in the shared hosting market: Kodee AI agent, AI Website Builder 2.0, Horizons app builder (builds full apps from text prompts), AI Writer, AI Logo Generator, and AI Heatmap. SiteGround launched Coderick AI and AI Studio in February 2026, but Hostinger has a meaningful head start in production-ready AI tools integrated into the hosting workflow.
- You want to start with shared hosting and scale to VPS later. When you outgrow shared hosting, Hostinger has KVM VPS plans starting at $6.49/month. SiteGround’s “upgrade path” skips directly to cloud hosting at $100/month. If you want a budget-friendly VPS option from the same provider, Hostinger is the only viable choice between the two.
- Your audience is global (outside the US/Europe). Hostinger has 14 data centers across Asia (India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore), South America (Brazil), and Europe, plus one US location. If your users are primarily in Southeast Asia or South America, Hostinger’s regional server presence gives you better TTFB than SiteGround, which is strong in the US and Europe but weak in Asia (830ms TTFB) and Australia (910ms).
Also consider Hostinger if: you want support in multiple languages (Hostinger offers 12+ languages, SiteGround is primarily English), you prefer to pay with cryptocurrency, or you need free WHOIS domain privacy (included in Hostinger plans; an add-on costing $12–$24/year with SiteGround).
See our full guide to the best web hosting for small businesses to compare Hostinger and SiteGround against other top providers.
Who Should Pick SiteGround
Try SiteGround if any of these apply:
- Phone support is a requirement, not a nice-to-have. SiteGround is one of the last major shared hosting providers offering 24/7 phone support. For businesses that cannot afford downtime — e-commerce stores, service businesses with client-facing sites, anyone who needs to speak with a technical expert immediately — this channel is irreplaceable. Hostinger has no phone support at all, and this is its biggest weakness.
- You need daily backups from day one, on the cheapest plan. SiteGround includes automated daily backups with 30-day retention on every plan, including the entry-level StartUp ($2.99/mo intro). Hostinger only offers daily backups on its Business plan and above — the entry Premium plan has weekly backups only. For a small business or client site where data loss is not an option, SiteGround’s backup coverage is meaningfully better at the entry level.
- You’re building a WordPress or WooCommerce store and want a managed experience. SiteGround’s WordPress management is more mature and granular: per-plugin auto-update control, SuperCacher with SG Optimizer (multi-layer caching out of the box), one-click staging on GrowBig+, and a WooCommerce-specific environment pre-configured for checkout performance. SiteGround is also one of only three hosts officially recommended by WordPress.org. For WooCommerce stores where uptime and cart speed directly affect revenue, SiteGround’s managed stack provides more protection.
- Your visitors are primarily in the United States. SiteGround runs 4 US data centers on Google Cloud (Virginia, Iowa, Texas, California), giving US-based visitors shorter network distances. Hostinger has one US location in Arizona. If 80%+ of your traffic is from the continental US, SiteGround’s infrastructure density gives a measurable TTFB advantage for that audience.
- Security is a top priority. SiteGround’s security suite is more advanced than Hostinger’s at the shared hosting tier: a proprietary AI anti-bot system that blocks 500,000–2 million brute-force attempts per hour, a custom multi-layer WAF, account-level isolation (your site can’t be affected by compromised neighbors), real-time server monitoring every 0.5 seconds, and HackAlert continuous malware scanning. The SiteGround Security WordPress plugin manages all of this from the dashboard. If your site handles sensitive customer data or has been targeted by bots before, SiteGround’s security depth is worth the premium.
- You run an agency or reseller business. SiteGround’s GoGeek plan ($7.99/mo intro, $44.99/mo renewal) includes white-label hosting, making it the only option between these two for reselling hosting to clients under your own brand. The collaborator system — which lets you add team members or clients to individual sites with their own login and Site Tools access, without exposing your billing — is also more purpose-built for agency workflows than Hostinger’s equivalent.
Also consider SiteGround if: you prefer shorter contract commitments (SiteGround’s intro deal requires only 12 months vs. Hostinger’s 48-month requirement for best pricing), your project is growing toward the 100,000–400,000 monthly visits tier where SiteGround’s managed infrastructure proves itself, or you’ve had bad experiences with shared hosting security in the past.
The Bottom Line
After analyzing the data from over a dozen independent sources, here’s where we land:
Hostinger is the better choice for most users. Its renewal pricing is significantly lower than SiteGround’s, it supports more websites on entry plans, offers more storage at every tier, has the best AI toolkit in shared hosting, handles traffic spikes better, and provides a more affordable path to VPS when you need to scale. Five of the eight major review sources covering this matchup — including Gizmodo, Website Planet, and Cybernews — declare Hostinger the overall winner, primarily on value grounds.
SiteGround is the better choice for specific, important use cases: businesses that need phone support, users who want daily backups on the cheapest possible plan, agencies building WooCommerce stores, and US-focused sites where infrastructure density matters. CNET rates SiteGround the “best web host overall” with an 8.6/10, citing its tools and security. It’s a premium product priced accordingly.
The honest decision guide:
- New website, tight budget, multiple projects: Hostinger Business plan
- WordPress or WooCommerce store, US-focused, need phone support: SiteGround GrowBig
- Freelancer managing client sites: Hostinger Business (100 sites, low renewal)
- Agency with reseller needs: SiteGround GoGeek
- AI-first site builder: Hostinger (no contest on AI tooling)
- Business where downtime = lost revenue and you need a phone call: SiteGround
Both hosts offer 30-day money-back guarantees, so there’s no risk to trying either. If you’re still unsure after this comparison, read our detailed Hostinger review or SiteGround review for a deeper look at each host individually.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Hostinger better than SiteGround?
For most users — especially those on a budget, managing multiple sites, or wanting AI-powered tools — Hostinger offers better overall value. Its renewal prices are 40–60% lower than SiteGround’s equivalent plans, and it includes more storage and more sites on entry-level plans. SiteGround is better for users who prioritize support quality (including phone support), daily backups on every plan tier, and a more managed WordPress/WooCommerce experience. “Better” depends entirely on your needs.
Which is faster: Hostinger or SiteGround?
Both are competitive, and results vary by testing methodology. Hostinger generally delivers faster fully-loaded page times in head-to-head tests (0.8s vs. 1.1s in Website Planet’s test) and dramatically outperforms SiteGround under concurrent load (47ms vs. 143ms in 01net’s stress test). SiteGround delivers faster server response times in some individual tests and has a consistent advantage for US-based visitors due to its 4 US data centers. For global audiences, Hostinger’s 14-location network provides broader coverage.
Does SiteGround have phone support in 2026?
Yes. SiteGround is one of the few remaining major shared hosting providers offering 24/7 phone support for technical, billing, and sales issues. Hostinger does not offer phone support. If phone support is important to you, SiteGround is the clear choice between these two hosts.
What happens to pricing when my Hostinger or SiteGround plan renews?
Both hosts increase prices significantly at renewal. Hostinger’s entry Premium plan renews at $10.99/mo (from a $1.99/mo intro rate). SiteGround’s StartUp plan renews at $17.99/mo (from $2.99/mo intro). On a like-for-like basis, Hostinger’s renewal rates are consistently lower — this is one of its strongest long-term advantages. Always factor in renewal pricing, not just the headline intro rate, when comparing total cost of ownership.
Can I migrate my site from Hostinger to SiteGround (or vice versa)?
Yes. Both hosts support free WordPress migration. SiteGround provides a free WordPress Migrator plugin and migration tool. Hostinger offers free automated migration for WordPress and other open-source CMS platforms. Neither host creates vendor lock-in — both use standard hosting environments. DNS propagation after migration typically takes 24–48 hours. The recommended approach is to set up the site at the new host, test it in staging, then switch DNS when you’re confident it’s working.
Which host is better for WooCommerce in 2026?
SiteGround has the edge for WooCommerce. Its GrowBig plan ($4.99/mo intro, $29.99/mo renewal) includes pre-configured WooCommerce hosting with SuperCacher multi-layer caching optimized for dynamic e-commerce pages, daily backups, staging for safe plugin updates, and 24/7 phone support — all critical for a revenue-generating store. Hostinger is capable of running WooCommerce and is significantly cheaper, but its support limitations (no phone) and the lack of daily backups on the entry plan are meaningful gaps for e-commerce. For a store where uptime and security directly affect sales, SiteGround’s managed environment is the safer choice.