Let's talk about the part nobody explains: the bill.
Most businesses meet their host through a monthly charge they never quite understood and never quite escaped. A line item that renews on its own, climbs on its own, and turns out to be the string that ties your whole website to one company. You didn't buy hosting. You started paying rent on your own front door.
Here is the version we build instead, in one sentence you can hold onto: your finished site is served as plain files from a global network, on an account registered to your name, for a bill that sits near zero and never bites.
That is not a discount or a promotion. It is what static hosting actually costs when a site is built right. A page assembled ahead of time and handed over as a finished file is cheap to store and cheap to serve, so the numbers stay small on their own. We're not being generous. We're passing along a fact of how the modern web works.
So this page has an unusual job for a hosting page. Most of them sell you on capacity, dashboards, and tiers. This one is mostly about subtraction: what the bill isn't, what the login can't be taken away from, and what simply cannot break at 3 a.m. because it was never there to break. Hosting done our way is the boring, reliable floor under everything else you own, which is exactly what hosting was supposed to be.

Cheap hosting usually means a catch. This doesn't.
When you hear "hosting for near nothing," your guard should go up, because cheap hosting is normally a trap with a timer on it. A low intro rate that renews at triple. A crowded shared server where your site slows to a crawl at the worst moment. An "unlimited" plan that turns out to have very real limits the day you get busy. You've probably lived at least one of those.
Ours is cheap for a completely different reason, and the reason matters. A site we build isn't a program that runs on a server every time someone visits. It's a stack of finished pages. Storing finished pages and handing them out costs a network almost nothing, so it charges almost nothing. The low bill is the natural shape of a site with no database to run, no software to keep alive, and no engine idling in the background waiting for traffic.
“You're not renting a machine that runs your site. Your site is already finished.”
Compare that to the usual arrangement. A typical site is a program that rebuilds each page on demand, which means a server has to be awake, patched, and paid for around the clock, whether ten people visit or none. That machine is what you're really renting, and its cost is what gets marked up and handed to you monthly. Take the running machine out of the equation and the bill has almost nothing left to be made of.
The speed comes from the same place. Because your pages are finished, they can live on a global delivery network and be served from wherever your visitor happens to be standing, in the city closest to them rather than one distant server everyone waits on. That's why a static site loads fast worldwide and shrugs off a traffic spike that would flatten a cheap shared plan. Cost and speed aren't two features here. They're the same fact, seen from two sides.
To be fair about it: near zero is not exactly zero. A domain name carries a small yearly fee that is simply the cost of owning your address, and a store or a custom application has real moving parts that cost more to run than a set of static pages. We'll tell you which bucket you're in before you sign anything, in plain numbers, with no surprise renewal waiting a year out.

The word that changes everything: yours.
Cheap hosting would still be a trap if the account weren't yours. Plenty of shops will host your site inexpensively and still own the login, which means the day you want to leave, you discover the site was theirs the whole time. The low price was the bait. The locked account was the hook.
We set it up the other way, on purpose, from the first day. The hosting account is created in your name. The domain sits in your own login. The analytics and the search accounts are yours too. There is nothing to "transfer" if we ever part ways, because you were the account holder all along. That is the entire point, and it is worth saying plainly.
This is the same promise the whole company is built on, applied to the layer most agencies count on you never checking. Ownership isn't a slogan on the homepage. It's a set of logins that have your name on them. If you ever want to walk, everything walks with you, and any competent developer can pick it up the same day and keep it running. The door is never locked because we never held the key.
None of this makes the arrangement flimsy. Real work runs on real terms: there's a setup fee, a clear process, and commitments that match how long the work actually takes. What you'll never sign is a trap. Owning your accounts and working with us on solid terms are two separate promises, and we keep both. You are never stuck, and the relationship is never vague.
If you want the fuller version of this idea, it's the same handover you get with a custom website built to be owned outright. Hosting is just where the ownership either holds up or quietly falls apart, and ours holds up.

You've been billed by these before. We named them.
Hosting has a small cast of recurring villains, and once you can see them, you can't unsee them. We build so that none of them can reach you. It's worth naming them out loud, because a practice you can name is a practice you can refuse.
- Hosting markup. A host rents a machine cheaply, adds your logo to a dashboard, and bills you a healthy multiple for the privilege. You pay for a markup, not for hosting. Static delivery leaves almost nothing to mark up, so the game doesn't work on us.
- Renewal-price bait. The famous low rate that renews quietly at two or three times the price, timed for a year out when you've forgotten and moving feels like too much trouble. Our numbers are the real numbers from day one. Nothing lurks on a calendar.
- The monthly ransom. The charge you keep paying not because you're getting monthly value, but because stopping means losing your site. That only works when someone else holds your accounts. Yours are in your name, so there is no ransom to pay and no hostage to free.
- The vague "unlimited" plan. Unlimited until you get popular, at which point the fine print arrives. A static site on a global network genuinely absorbs traffic spikes, so there's no throttle waiting to punish your best day.
“If leaving means losing your site, you never owned it. You were renting it.”
The rule under all of itWe're not claiming hosting is free or that nothing ever needs attention. We're claiming the specific tricks above are choices, and we've chosen against every one of them. When a bill is small and honest and the login has your name on it, there's simply no leverage left to squeeze you with. That's the whole design.
The plainest promise a site can make: it's there when someone looks.
The real job of hosting is unglamorous. Someone types your name, and your site is there. No error page, no spinning wheel, no "this site can't be reached" the one afternoon a customer finally went looking for you. Everything else is commentary on that one moment.
Static hosting is built to win that moment. There's no database to fall over, no software update to break the layout overnight, no server to overload when a post takes off. A finished file, copied across a global network, is about the most durable thing the web knows how to serve. Fewer moving parts is fewer things that can be down. That's not marketing. It's arithmetic.
We keep an eye on things so you don't have to. Your site is served securely over HTTPS by default, your pages sit on more than one machine at once by the nature of the network, and the whole surface a hacker would poke at is mostly absent: no login page to break into, no database to raid, no plugin to exploit. A site that presents almost nothing to attack is a site that mostly stays quietly up. The strongest security is the code you never had to write because you never needed the risky part.
And because there's no fragile stack to babysit, hosting stops being a thing you think about. That's the goal. Good hosting is invisible. You should notice it exactly never, which is the highest compliment this particular layer can earn. When you do want a human watching the whole picture over time, that's ongoing website maintenance by choice, not a subscription you're trapped inside.

Four steps. No mystery, no lock-in.
Setting up hosting our way is deliberately dull, which is how you want it. Here's the whole shape of it, start to finish, so nothing about the arrangement is a black box you have to trust blindly.
STEP 1Accounts in your name+
Before anything is served, we create the hosting and domain accounts under your name and your email, not ours. You are the account holder from the first minute. If you already have a domain, we point it without prying it out of anyone's grip. This step is quiet, but it's the one that makes everything after it genuinely yours.
STEP 2Ship the finished site+
Your built pages are pushed to a global delivery network as finished files. Nothing is assembled on request, so there's no server to configure, secure, or keep awake. HTTPS is on by default, and your pages start being served from the location nearest each visitor automatically.
STEP 3Wire the plumbing+
Contact forms are connected to reach your inbox, analytics land in your own account, and the search accounts are set up in your name too. Everything that makes the site actually work for your business is wired to accounts you hold, not to a dashboard we control.
STEP 4Hand you the keys+
We walk you through where everything lives: the hosting login, the domain, the analytics, and how a change gets published. You leave knowing what you own and how it fits together. If you ever want to move it all elsewhere, you can, and it goes with you cleanly.
That's it. There's no step where we quietly register something in our own name, and no step where the arrangement becomes hard to leave. Boring on purpose. The interesting part of your web presence should be the site and the results, never the plumbing under it.

Asked and answered, before the call.
Q1What does it cost?+
Honestly: for a static site we build, hosting runs near zero, because finished files are cheap to store and cheap to serve. The main standing cost is your domain name, a small yearly fee for owning your address. We charge a setup fee to build and configure everything correctly, quoted before we begin, and we won't invent a fake monthly hosting number to pad an invoice. A store or a custom application has real moving parts that cost more to run, and we'll tell you plainly if that's you. No renewal-price surprise, ever.
Q2Is the hosting account really in my name?+
Yes, from day one. The hosting login, the domain, and the analytics and search accounts are created under your name and email, not ours. There's nothing to "transfer" later because you were the account holder the whole time. If you leave, everything leaves with you, and any developer can pick it up the same day.
Q3How can it be that cheap without a catch?+
Because your site is finished pages, not a program running on a rented machine around the clock. Storing and serving finished files costs a global network almost nothing, so it charges almost nothing. The catch you're bracing for, a low rate that renews at triple, is exactly the practice we build against.
Q4Can you guarantee my site never goes down?+
No honest host can promise perfect uptime, so we won't. What we can say is that static hosting has very little in it that can fail, and your finished pages sit on many machines at once across a global network, so a single hiccup rarely means your site is dark.
Q5Do I need a contract?+
There's a setup fee and clear terms for the work we do, because real work runs on real terms. What you'll never sign is a trap. Owning your accounts and working with us on solid terms are two separate things, and both are true: you're never stuck, and the relationship is never vague.
Q6Can I move to another host later?+
Yes, cleanly. The accounts are yours, the site is finished files, and there's no proprietary system holding it captive. If you ever want to move, the whole thing goes with you, which is the entire point of building it this way.
Q7Does this work for an online store?+
Yes, with a note. The pages of your store host the same cheap, fast way, and we build the checkout custom so you keep the customer list and the payment account. The moving parts of a store cost a bit more to run than static pages, and we'll quote that plainly. It's covered under custom e-commerce development.
Q8How do you know the site is actually solid before it goes live?+
Every build is tested across devices, browsers, and screen sizes before it's served to anyone, so hosting a broken page is never the failure mode. That verification pass is its own discipline: quality assurance done before launch, not after a customer finds the bug.
If your current host renews on its own, climbs on its own, and holds the login you can't get to, you already know the shape of the problem. Tell us what's bothering you about your hosting and we'll reply within one business day with the honest version: what it should cost, what should be in your name, and how little of it you should ever have to think about again.

