
Cloudzy is a VPS hosting provider that covers both Linux and Windows environments, organized into Supersonic for standard workloads and Hypersonic for resource-intensive ones. What I found was a VPS platform that provisions cleanly, performs impressively under load, and is backed by a support team that gives direct, accurate answers.
There are a few gaps worth knowing about before you commit, but for the price, Cloudzy punches well above its weight. Here is the full picture, section by section.

Ready to get started? Head to Cloudzy and spin up your first server and get a 14-day refund window backing your first order.
To evaluate Cloudzy, I applied our hosting review methodology, a structured framework used consistently across all reviews to keep scores grounded in real testing rather than marketing claims.
Here’s how Cloudzy VPS performed:
| Parameter | Score | Why This Score |
|---|---|---|
| Prices | 9.2/10 | Competitive entry-level pricing with annual discounts up to 50%, multiple billing cycles, and crypto support make Cloudzy genuinely accessible across different user types. |
| Features | 9.0/10 | Solid lineup covering NVMe storage, snapshot backups, rescue mode, and broad OS support. Loses points for the absence of live migration and limited managed hosting options. |
| Ease of Use | 9.2/10 | The ordering flow is clean and the dashboard is logically structured. First-time VPS users may need a short adjustment period before server management feels intuitive. |
| Performance | 9.5/10 | Memory throughput exceeding 19 GB/s, fast NVMe read and write speeds, and 1,863 CPU events per second place this server firmly at the top of what I expect at this price tier. |
| Support | 8.5/10 | Ticket support delivered a first response in 39 minutes with an accurate, specific answer. The absence of live chat is the main gap holding this score back. |
| Overall | 9.1/10 | Cloudzy delivers strong performance, honest pricing, and a functional support system. A compelling VPS option for developers and growing businesses comfortable managing their own infrastructure. |

Cloudzy’s VPS lineup is split into two clear tiers: Supersonic for standard and moderate workloads, and Hypersonic for resource-intensive applications that need more headroom.
The Supersonic tier runs four plans. The entry-level Starter gives you a single vCPU, 1 GB DDR5 memory, and 25 GB NVMe storage, making it a practical starting point for lightweight applications or personal projects.
The Hypersonic tier is where Cloudzy caters to more demanding deployments. The Enterprise plan opens at 16 GB memory and 8 vCPUs, suited for production databases and high-traffic applications.
Windows VPS plans mirror this same structure across both tiers, with the same memory and storage allocations. All plans run on AMD EPYC hardware with up to 40 Gbps network connectivity and are billed on the same flexible cycle options.
There is no free trial, and your first VPS order is covered by a 14-day refund window. Here is how that policy works in practice:
Cloudzy also operates a downtime compensation policy worth knowing about. If your VPS experiences downtime caused by an issue on their end, they credit your account with twice the amount deducted during the affected period. That credit has no expiry.
For billing, you can choose from hourly, monthly, quarterly, semi-annual, or annual cycles. Annual plans carry the steepest discount, currently up to 50%. Payment options include Bitcoin, LTC, DOGE, USDT and other crypto, PayPal, credit and debit cards, and Alipay.
Check the pricing widget below for current rates across all VPS plans and billing cycles.
| Plan Name | Space | CPU | RAM | OS | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starter Linux | 25 GB | 1 x 4.2GHz | 1 GB | MYR 16.66 | Details | |
| Basic Linux | 60 GB | 1 x 4.2GHz | 2 GB | MYR 35.84 | Details | |
| Basic Win | 60 GB | 1 x 4.2GHz | 2 GB | MYR 35.84 | Details | |
| Advanced Linux | 120 GB | 2 x 4.2GHz | 4 GB | MYR 69.39 | Details | |
| Advanced Win | 120 GB | 2 x 4.2GHz | 4 GB | MYR 69.39 | Details | |
| Professional Linux | 240 GB | 8 x 4.2GHz | 8 GB | MYR 126.92 | Details | |
| Professional Win | 240 GB | 4 x 4.2GHz | 8 GB | MYR 126.92 | Details | |
| Enterprise | 350 GB | 16 x 4.2GHz | 16 GB | MYR 239.59 | Details | |
| GPU RTX 4090 Basic | 1.5 TB | 48 x 4.2GHz | 256 GB | MYR 3,112.18 | Details | |
| GPU RTX 5090 Basic | 1000 GB | 1 x 4.2GHz | 144 GB | MYR 3,991.10 | Details | |
| GPU A100 Basic | 500 GB | 12 cores | 48 GB | MYR 4,390.61 | Details | |
| GPU RTX 6000 PRO | 1.27 TB | 24 x 4.2GHz | 200 GB | MYR 5,193.63 | Details | |
| GPU RTX 4090 Standard | 2.93 TB | 48 x 4.2GHz | 512 GB | MYR 6,228.36 | Details | |
| GPU RTX 5090 Standard | 1.95 TB | 2 x 4.2GHz | 192 GB | MYR 7,986.20 | Details | |
| GPU A100 Standard | 1000 GB | 24 cores | 96 GB | MYR 8,785.22 | Details | |
| GPU RTX 4090 Advanced | 5.86 TB | 64 x 4.2GHz | 768 GB | MYR 12,460.71 | Details | |
| GPU A100 Advanced | 1.95 TB | 48 cores | 192 GB | MYR 17,574.44 | Details |

With the onboarding experience behind me and a live server in hand, the next thing I wanted to know was whether the infrastructure actually performs the way Cloudzy claims.
To find out, I ran a full sysbench benchmark suite directly on my provisioned server. Here is what I was working with before the numbers:
I tested three areas: CPU performance, memory speed, and disk I/O.
I ran the sysbench CPU benchmark with a prime number ceiling of 20,000 across all available threads. This test forces all cores into sustained mathematical work rather than idle tasks, making it a reliable measure of raw computational throughput and threading consistency.
The results:

These are strong numbers for a mid-range VPS. What I pay attention to is not just the raw events-per-second figure but the tightness of the latency spread.
A maximum of 0.78ms against an average of 0.54ms tells me the CPU resources are being allocated consistently across cores with no single thread being starved. For compute-heavy workloads like analytics, parallel processing, or API-heavy applications, that consistency matters more than peak throughput.
For the memory test, I used a 1M block size writing a total of 10 GB. Memory speed is particularly relevant for database-heavy workloads, caching layers, and applications that keep large datasets in RAM.
The results:

Over 19 GB/s of memory throughput is a standout result for a VPS at this price tier. Applications running Redis, Memcached, or any in-memory processing stack will feel the benefit directly.
The 0.05ms average latency is extremely low, pointing to well-provisioned memory with no noticeable contention under load.
This is where I paid closest attention, given Cloudzy’s emphasis on NVMe storage throughout their marketing. I ran both a sequential read/write test during file preparation and a random read/write workload.
Sequential read/write performance:
Random read/write test:

The random I/O results are the more meaningful figures for real-world workloads. An average latency of 0.02ms across mixed read and write operations is well within what you would expect from properly provisioned NVMe storage, and the throughput holds up strongly under realistic conditions.
Databases, logging-heavy applications, and file transfer workloads will all benefit from this level of disk responsiveness.
Cloudzy’s server delivered strong results across every benchmark I ran. The CPU consistency is solid, the NVMe storage performs as advertised, and the memory throughput of over 19 GB/s is the standout figure of the entire test suite.
For web applications, APIs, databases, and development environments, the performance here comfortably exceeds what I would expect at this price point. Where Cloudzy is less suitable is for users who need managed infrastructure or advanced networking capabilities beyond what a standard VPS panel provides.

A strong feature list means little if the platform is frustrating to actually use.
To get a genuine feel for Cloudzy’s day-to-day experience, I went through the entire onboarding process as a first-time customer would: selecting a plan, configuring a server, creating an account, completing payment, and then exploring the dashboard and management panel once the VPS was live.
I opened the Cloudzy homepage and clicked the Products menu at the top navigation bar. A clean dropdown appeared immediately, organized into four labeled columns: Compute, Operating Systems, RDP Servers, and Dev Tools.
I clicked Linux VPS from the Operating Systems column, which took me to the dedicated Linux VPS landing page.

From there, I clicked through to the plan selection page, which organizes Linux VPS options into two tiers: Supersonic for standard workloads and Hypersonic for more resource-intensive needs.
Billing cycle toggles sit at the top, letting me switch between yearly, monthly, and hourly views with the associated discount percentage displayed clearly next to each option. The yearly toggle showed 50% off, the monthly toggle showed 40%, and the hourly option 35%.

I selected the Professional plan from the Supersonic tier, which is highlighted as the most popular option. After reviewing the full range, I agreed with that framing: the resource balance hits a practical middle ground for most real workloads.
Clicking Deploy Now opened the Configure your Cloud VPS page. A four-step progress bar across the top of the screen tracked exactly where I was in the process: Complete Order, Sign Up, Payment, Deploy VPS.
Everything I needed to configure sat on a single page:


The real-time order summary on the right made the pricing fully transparent at every stage. There were no hidden totals waiting at the final step.
After confirming my configuration and clicking Deploy Now, I was taken to the account sign-up step.
Cloudzy provides four fast single-click options: Continue with Google, Continue with GitHub, Continue with Discord, and Continue with GitLab. A standard email and password form sits below for users who prefer it.

I created a new account using email, and a verification screen appeared immediately after, prompting me to enter a six-digit code sent to my inbox.
A countdown timer was visible on the screen, and a Skip for now link was available for users who want to continue without verifying immediately. Cloudzy does note on this screen that verification is required before virtual machines can be created.
The whole step was quick and clearly laid out.
After account creation, the payment screen appeared inside the dashboard itself. My order summary was displayed on the right: region, OS image, CPU count, memory, storage, and IPv4 details, all visible before I committed to anything.

Five payment methods were available on this screen: Bitcoin, LTC and DOGE, USDT and Crypto, PayPal, Credit/Debit Cards, and Alipay.
I selected Credit/Debit Card, completed the transaction, and received a confirmation email immediately. My server appeared in the Services List tab right away, with no wait between payment and provisioning.
One detail I appreciated: the entire checkout experience happens within the dashboard itself rather than routing through a separate payment portal. That continuity keeps the experience clean and friction-free.
After the payment cleared, I landed on the main dashboard. The layout is purposeful and uncluttered, designed specifically for managing cloud servers rather than padded with decorative panels.
The left sidebar handles all navigation: New Service, Dashboard, Services, SSH Keys, Networking, Applications, Billing, Support, and Account. The center of the dashboard displays your active Services List, showing each server’s name, OS image, and IP address at a glance. The right panel shows your credit balance, monthly spending to date, an Add Credit button, and an activity log of recent account events.

My newly deployed server appeared immediately in the Services List as debian-US-Utah-24gb, with the 8 vCPU, 24 GB RAM, 450 GB disk configuration, and its IP address visible right away. No navigation required to find it.
Clicking the server name from the Services List opens the management interface, where the day-to-day control over your VPS lives.
At the top of the page, four primary controls handle the most common operations:

Below those controls, a details panel displays the server hostname, SSH key assignments, and the login password. Below that, six management tabs organize the full range of server options:
The interface is responsive and well-organized. Common operations like resizing and switching operating systems are simplified into a few clicks, keeping management overhead low even for users who are not working with VPS infrastructure daily.
My only observation is that the tabbed layout is more intuitive for users who already have some VPS familiarity. A brief guided walkthrough on first login would lower the barrier for complete beginners, but this is a minor gap in an otherwise polished interface.
From the Products dropdown to a live, managed server, the entire Cloudzy onboarding journey is well thought out.
The single-page configuration flow, the real-time order summary, and the clearly labeled dashboard all contribute to an experience that feels fast and honest rather than designed to confuse you into upsells.

Cloudzy covers several support channels: a ticket system accessible directly from the dashboard, email support at sales@cloudzy.com, phone support for general inquiries, and a knowledge base organized into categories covering VPS management, connections, and operating systems.
I tested the ticket system, as it is the most telling channel for understanding whether a support team actually knows what they are doing or simply copies answers from a script.
From the dashboard, I clicked Support in the left sidebar and opened a new ticket. The form asked for a subject, department, and my message.

I selected the Support department and submitted a technical question about SSH access at 13:24.
The issue was a permission denied error when attempting to SSH into my server using this command:
ssh debian-US-Utah-24gb@144.172.91.61
The server was accepting the connection attempt, prompting for a password, and then rejecting the input. I submitted the ticket and waited.

At 14:03 on the same day, so just 39 minutes after submission, I had a full reply from Vera G, listed as a support agent. The response identified the root cause immediately: I had used the server hostname as the username rather than the correct default login, which is root.

Vera provided the corrected command with the right username and confirmed I should use the password provided during initial server deployment. The reply was specific to my exact issue rather than a generic troubleshooting checklist.

I followed up at 19:55 with an additional question. After applying the corrected command, I was still encountering a permission denied error and wanted to clarify whether the VPS password was the same as my Cloudzy dashboard login password.
Vera responded at 21:21, approximately 86 minutes later, confirming that the VPS login password is entirely separate from the dashboard account password. She explained that the VPS password is sent by email at the time of deployment and can be reset at any point from the Access tab in the VPS management panel using the Reset Password button.

Both responses were accurate, clearly written, and stayed focused on the actual problem rather than redirecting to documentation without context.
The main gap is the absence of live chat. For users dealing with time-sensitive production issues, the ticket system works reliably but cannot fully substitute for real-time assistance. That said, for the majority of support scenarios, the experience here is professional and dependable.

Yes, I recommend Cloudzy VPS for developers, small businesses, and anyone who needs a reliable, performant cloud server without paying enterprise-level prices.
The performance results were the high point of this review. Memory throughput exceeding 19 GB/s and CPU results that stayed consistent across all threads are not numbers you see from every VPS provider at this price tier. Add clean NVMe disk I/O and a well-designed provisioning flow, and the value case is straightforward.
The support experience reinforced that impression. A real technical SSH issue, resolved accurately in 39 minutes, grounded in actual knowledge rather than a script.
Where Cloudzy VPS falls short is live chat and managed hosting. If you need someone else to handle server configuration, or instant answers when your production environment goes down at 2am, those gaps will matter. But for users comfortable managing their own VPS, this is a platform I would trust with a live workload.
| Plan Name | Space | CPU | RAM | OS | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starter Linux | 25 GB | 1 x 4.2GHz | 1 GB | MYR 16.66 | Details | |
| Basic Linux | 60 GB | 1 x 4.2GHz | 2 GB | MYR 35.84 | Details | |
| Basic Win | 60 GB | 1 x 4.2GHz | 2 GB | MYR 35.84 | Details | |
| Advanced Linux | 120 GB | 2 x 4.2GHz | 4 GB | MYR 69.39 | Details | |
| Advanced Win | 120 GB | 2 x 4.2GHz | 4 GB | MYR 69.39 | Details | |
| Professional Linux | 240 GB | 8 x 4.2GHz | 8 GB | MYR 126.92 | Details | |
| Professional Win | 240 GB | 4 x 4.2GHz | 8 GB | MYR 126.92 | Details | |
| Enterprise | 350 GB | 16 x 4.2GHz | 16 GB | MYR 239.59 | Details | |
| GPU RTX 4090 Basic | 1.5 TB | 48 x 4.2GHz | 256 GB | MYR 3,112.18 | Details | |
| GPU RTX 5090 Basic | 1000 GB | 1 x 4.2GHz | 144 GB | MYR 3,991.10 | Details | |
| GPU A100 Basic | 500 GB | 12 cores | 48 GB | MYR 4,390.61 | Details | |
| GPU RTX 6000 PRO | 1.27 TB | 24 x 4.2GHz | 200 GB | MYR 5,193.63 | Details | |
| GPU RTX 4090 Standard | 2.93 TB | 48 x 4.2GHz | 512 GB | MYR 6,228.36 | Details | |
| GPU RTX 5090 Standard | 1.95 TB | 2 x 4.2GHz | 192 GB | MYR 7,986.20 | Details | |
| GPU A100 Standard | 1000 GB | 24 cores | 96 GB | MYR 8,785.22 | Details | |
| GPU RTX 4090 Advanced | 5.86 TB | 64 x 4.2GHz | 768 GB | MYR 12,460.71 | Details | |
| GPU A100 Advanced | 1.95 TB | 48 cores | 192 GB | MYR 17,574.44 | Details |
Yes. Cloudzy VPS delivers strong performance backed by AMD EPYC processors, NVMe SSD storage, and full root access on every plan, making it a competitive choice for developers and businesses comfortable managing their own server environment.
Yes. Cloudzy provides a full refund within the first 7 days of your initial VPS order. Between days 8 and 14, a partial refund based on unused credit is available. No refunds are issued after day 14.
No. Cloudzy does not require a credit card to get started. Payment options include cryptocurrency, PayPal, Alipay, and credit and debit cards.
Cloudzy operates VPS servers across more than 10 locations including Utah, Dallas, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New York City, Amsterdam, London, Frankfurt, Bern, Dubai, Sydney, and Miami.
Cloudzy VPS is unmanaged. You get full root access and complete control over your server environment, but configuration and ongoing management are your responsibility. Their knowledge base and ticket support are available to assist when needed.

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