Uptime Kuma Hosting
Uptime Kuma is an elegant self-hosted monitoring tool. Monitor websites, APIs, DNS, Docker containers and more with beautiful status pages and versatile notification channels.
What is Uptime Kuma?
Uptime Kuma is an elegant self-hosted monitoring tool. Monitor websites, APIs, DNS, Docker containers and more with beautiful status pages and versatile notification channels.
Features & Benefits
HTTP, TCP, DNS, Docker Checks
Uptime Kuma on your own vServer gives you full control and flexibility.
Elegant Status Pages
Uptime Kuma on your own vServer gives you full control and flexibility.
90+ Notification Channels
Uptime Kuma on your own vServer gives you full control and flexibility.
Multi-Language Support
Uptime Kuma on your own vServer gives you full control and flexibility.
Proxy Support
Uptime Kuma on your own vServer gives you full control and flexibility.
Maintenance Windows
Uptime Kuma on your own vServer gives you full control and flexibility.
3 Steps to Uptime Kuma
From ordering to running installation in just minutes
Order vServer
Choose a suitable vServer plan. For Uptime Kuma we recommend at least the XS (2 vCores, 2GB RAM). Your server is ready in 60 seconds.
Install Uptime Kuma with 1-Click
In the customer center, simply select Uptime Kuma as a template. The installation runs fully automatically.
Configure & Get Started
After installation, access Uptime Kuma directly through your browser. Set everything up to your liking.
Recommended vServer for Uptime Kuma
All plans with 1-click Uptime Kuma installation, root access and unlimited traffic
Virtual NVMe XS
Recommended
- vCores: 2
- ECC RAM: 2 GB
- NVMe SSD: 75 GB
- Traffic: Flatrate
- DDoS Protection
- 1-Click Uptime Kuma
Virtual NVMe XB
Standard
- vCores: 4
- ECC RAM: 8 GB
- NVMe SSD: 150 GB
- Traffic: Flatrate
- DDoS Protection
- 1-Click Uptime Kuma
Virtual NVMe XP
Power User
- vCores: 4
- ECC RAM: 16 GB
- NVMe SSD: 256 GB
- Traffic: Flatrate
- DDoS Protection
- 1-Click Uptime Kuma
Virtual NVMe XE
Team & Enterprise
- vCores: 6
- ECC RAM: 32 GB
- NVMe SSD: 512 GB
- Traffic: Flatrate
- DDoS Protection
- 1-Click Uptime Kuma
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about Uptime Kuma hosting
Uptime Kuma is an elegant self-hosted monitoring tool. Monitor websites, APIs, DNS, Docker containers and more with beautiful status pages and versatile notification channels.
For Uptime Kuma we recommend at least the XS (2 vCores, 2GB RAM). This plan provides enough resources for smooth operation. For higher usage or more users, we recommend upgrading to a larger plan.
With our 1-click installation, Uptime Kuma is automatically set up on your vServer. After ordering, simply select Uptime Kuma as a template in the customer center. All dependencies are automatically installed and configured.
Yes, Uptime Kuma is open source and licensed under the MIT license. The software itself is completely free. You only pay for the vServer running Uptime Kuma – starting from just €2.95/month.
Yes! Uptime Kuma runs exclusively on your own vServer in our datacenter in Stuttgart. Your data never leaves Germany and is stored fully GDPR compliant. We operate our own infrastructure – no third-party providers, no external hardware.
Yes, upgrading to a larger vServer is possible at any time. Simply contact our support and we'll take care of it – without data loss and without interruption.
Discover more 1-click apps
Uptime Kuma is just one of many apps you can install with 1-click on your vServer.
View all apps →Our Promise
What sets us apart from other providers
Own Datacenter
We operate our entire infrastructure ourselves in Stuttgart – no resellers, no external hardware.
Cancel Monthly
No long contract terms. Cancel monthly – fair and flexible.
30-Day Money Back
Not satisfied? Get your money back within 30 days – no questions asked.
100% Germany
Your data never leaves Germany. GDPR compliant and under German law.
Green IT –
Hosting with Responsibility
Climate protection and our environment matter to us. That's why we operate our entire infrastructure exclusively with electricity from renewable energy sources. We even generate part of it ourselves with our own solar power plant directly at the datacenter.
