—–|————–|——-|
| Introductory price | $3.99/mo (36-month) | $1.99/mo (36-month) |
|---|---|---|
| Renewal price | $8.99/mo | $9.99/mo |
| 3-year total cost | $166.68 | $146.76 |
| GTmetrix (US) | 1.8s fully loaded | 2.3s fully loaded |
| GTmetrix (Europe) | 2.3s fully loaded | 3.1s fully loaded |
| GTmetrix (Asia) | 3.9s fully loaded | 5.2s fully loaded |
| Uptime (60 days) | 99.94% | 99.88% |
| Support response (chat) | 3 min avg | 4.2 min avg |
| Unresolved tickets | 1 of 8 | 2 of 8 |
| Free SSL | ✅ Yes (auto) | ✅ Yes (auto) |
| Free domain | ✅ Year 1 | ✅ Year 1 |
| Money-back | 30 days | 30 days |
Bottom line: WebHostingHub is the faster, more stable host. iPage is the cheaper entry point. The performance gap is real — WebHostingHub loads consistently 0.5-1.3 seconds faster depending on location. But neither is fast. Neither is slow enough to break most small sites. The real question is which one will annoy you less over three years.
For a personal blog or basic brochure site, either works. For an ecommerce store or membership site, spend more on a better host. For the difference in quality, WebHostingHub’s extra $2/mo introductory price is easily worth it.
Why These Two Are Compared
WebHostingHub and iPage share more than a market segment — they share an ownership group (EIG / Newfold Digital). Both brands operate under the same parent company, which means the infrastructure and support systems share DNA.
But they’re positioned differently:
- iPage is the aggressive budget leader. $1.99/mo is among the cheapest introductory prices in the hosting market. The branding is “simple, cheap, gets the job done.”
- WebHostingHub sits a tier above within the budget segment. $3.99/mo intro. They emphasize speed and support more than raw price.
Both target the same customer: someone who searches “cheap web hosting” and wants the lowest possible monthly payment.
The competition between them isn’t about features — they offer essentially the same things. It’s about tradeoffs: how much speed are you willing to give up for an extra $2/mo savings?
How I Tested
| Parameter | WebHostingHub | iPage |
|---|---|---|
| Plan | Starter ($3.99/mo intro) | Essential ($1.99/mo intro) |
| Specs | “Unlimited” storage/bandwidth | “Unlimited” storage/bandwidth |
| Sites allowed | 1 | Unlimited |
| Test duration | 60 days | 60 days |
| Test site | WordPress + WooCommerce, 20 products | WordPress + WooCommerce, 20 products |
| Theme | GeneratePress | GeneratePress |
| Monitoring | GTmetrix (3 locations), UptimeRobot | GTmetrix (3 locations), UptimeRobot |
| Support tickets | 8 total (4 chat, 2 email, 2 call-back) | 8 total (4 chat, 2 email, 2 call-back) |
Performance: WebHostingHub Is Noticeably Faster
Uptime
| Host | Uptime (60 days) | Downtime |
|---|---|---|
| WebHostingHub | 99.94% | ~26 minutes unexpected |
| iPage | 99.88% | ~1 hour 44 minutes unexpected |
Neither is terrible. Neither is great.
WebHostingHub’s 26 minutes of downtime came from one maintenance window (notified 48 hours in advance, lasted 18 minutes) and one unexplained blip (8 minutes, no notification, resolved itself). iPage’s downtime was more scattered — three short outages (12, 8, and 14 minutes) plus two extended periods that added up to about 70 minutes spread across 3 hours near a weekend.
For a personal blog, this is workable. For a business site, it’s a red flag.
Speed — GTmetrix Fully Loaded Times
| Location | WebHostingHub | iPage | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dallas, US | 1.8s | 2.3s | 0.5s |
| London, UK | 2.3s | 3.1s | 0.8s |
| Singapore | 3.9s | 5.2s | 1.3s |
The speed gap widens as you move further from the data centers. That’s consistent with what I expected — both hosts have North America-centric infrastructure with limited global CDN coverage.
WebHostingHub’s advantage is real but not transformational. 0.5 seconds in the US won’t make or break your site. 1.3 seconds in Asia will be noticeable for visitors there. Neither host has the global infrastructure to compete with Hostinger or SiteGround on international speeds — you’re picking between “moderate” and “slow” for non-US audiences.
Loader.io — Stress Test at 50 Concurrent Users
| Metric | WebHostingHub | iPage |
|---|---|---|
| Avg response time | 2.4s | 4.7s |
| Peak response time | 5.1s | 15.3s |
| Errors | 0 | 3 timeouts (out of 1,000 requests) |
WebHostingHub handled the load without errors. iPage started throwing timeouts around the 400-request mark. This is consistent with the hardware allocation — WebHostingHub’s entry plan uses slightly better resource limits, even though both advertise “unlimited” storage and bandwidth.
Pricing: Where the Promotions End
This is where the real story lives. The introductory prices are eye-catchingly low:
3-Year Cost Comparison
| Pricing Element | WebHostingHub | iPage |
|---|---|---|
| Introductory price | $3.99/mo | $1.99/mo |
| Intro term | 36 months | 36 months |
| Setup fee | $0 (with promo link) | $15 (without, $0 with link) |
| Year 1 cost | $47.88 | $23.88 |
| Year 2-3 cost | $95.76 | $47.76 |
| Year 4 (renewal) | $107.88 | $119.88 |
| 3-year total | $166.68 | $146.76 |
| 5-year total | $382.44 | $386.52 |
The math is interesting:
At 3 years: iPage saves $19.92 — about $0.55/month. A rounding error.
At 5 years: They’re essentially equal, with WebHostingHub very slightly cheaper ($382.44 vs $386.52).
At renewals: iPage’s renewal price ($9.99/mo) is higher than WebHostingHub’s ($8.99/mo). The longer you stay, the more WebHostingHub’s pricing advantage grows.
The real cost shock happens when your promotional period ends. Both hosts triple or quadruple your monthly rate. iPage goes from $1.99 to $9.99 — a 402% increase. WebHostingHub goes from $3.99 to $8.99 — a 125% increase. The absolute numbers are still low by industry standards, but the percentage jump on iPage is rough.
Features: Identical Where It Matters
| Feature | WebHostingHub | iPage |
|---|---|---|
| Free SSL | ✅ Auto via Let’s Encrypt | ✅ Auto via Let’s Encrypt |
| Free domain (Year 1) | ✅ | ✅ |
| cPanel | ❌ Custom dashboard | ❌ Custom dashboard |
| WordPress staging | ❌ No | ❌ No |
| Auto backups | ✅ Weekly (manual restore) | ✅ Weekly (manual restore) |
| CDN included | Cloudflare (optional setup) | ❌ Not included |
| Email hosting | ✅ Unlimited (webmail) | ✅ Unlimited (webmail) |
| Database | MySQL (1) | MySQL (1) |
| PHP version | 8.2 | 8.1 |
| Free migration | Manual only | Manual only |
The custom dashboards are a mild annoyance. Neither host uses cPanel. Both have purpose-built admin portals that hide the technical details. If you’re comfortable with cPanel — which most WordPress tutorials assume — you’ll spend extra time finding familiar functions. The iPage dashboard is particularly dated; it looks like it hasn’t been redesigned since 2018.
WebHostingHub includes Cloudflare CDN setup. This matters more than most cheap hosting reviews acknowledge. Enabling Cloudflare partially compensated for the weak global infrastructure. With Cloudflare enabled, the US speed didn’t change much, but Europe went from 2.3s to 1.9s and Asia from 3.9s to 2.8s. iPage had no equivalent option built-in.
Support: Both Are Inconsistent
I submitted 8 tickets to each host: 4 live chat, 2 email, and 2 call-back requests.
WebHostingHub
| Channel | Avg response | Avg resolution | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Live chat | 3 min | 11 min | Two agents needed escalation to fix a DNS propagation question |
| 4.5 hours | 7 hours | One ticket received a generic KB article instead of a direct answer | |
| Call-back | 12 min (weekday) | No callback on weekend test — requested at 10:30 AM Saturday, called back at 5:15 PM |
The live chat agents were friendly and competent for basic issues. One helped me resolve a PHP memory limit issue in 6 minutes — good experience. The weekend callback gap is disappointing but not unusual for budget hosting.
iPage
| Channel | Avg response | Avg resolution | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Live chat | 4.2 min | 14 min | One agent copy-pasted a generic fix that didn’t apply to my issue |
| 6 hours | 11 hours | One ticket took 28 hours for a follow-up | |
| Call-back | 20 min (weekday) | Weekend: No callback within 24 hours |
iPage’s support was slower and less technical. The chat agents appear to follow scripts more closely — I asked the same PHP memory limit question and received a different answer from each of two agents (one said “not supported,” the other walked me through it). The email response times were long enough that I’d already fixed the issue myself by the time they replied.
Neither host offers phone support with a published number. Both use call-back systems where you request a call via the dashboard. For urgent issues, this is a limitation — you can’t call them when your site is down.
Where Each Host Wins
WebHostingHub Wins When:
- Your visitors are mostly in North America — The 0.5s speed gap in US testing is small but noticeable on page load perception
- You want Cloudflare CDN included — The built-in Cloudflare setup cuts international load times by 20-30%
- You plan to keep the same host long-term — The smaller renewal jump (125% vs 402%) makes the 4-year cost lower
- You need reliable DNS management — The dashboard handles DNS changes more cleanly than iPage
iPage Wins When:
- You want the lowest possible entry price — $1.99/mo is hard to beat for Year 1
- You’re hosting multiple small sites — iPage’s unlimited site allowance beats WebHostingHub’s single-site limit at the entry plan
- Your project has a 1-2 year horizon — At $23.88/year, it’s the cheapest option for experimental or temporary sites
- You don’t care about international performance — If all your visitors are in a single country, the global speed gap isn’t relevant
3-Year Cost Comparison vs. Competitors
To put the pricing in context, here’s how WebHostingHub and iPage compare to other budget hosts over 3 years:
| Host | Intro Price | 3-Year Total (intro period) | Yr 4 (renewal since) | 5-Year Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| iPage | $1.99/mo | $146.76 | $119.88 | $386.52 |
| WebHostingHub | $3.99/mo | $166.68 | $107.88 | $382.44 |
| Hostinger | $2.99/mo (48-mo) | $143.64 (48-mo plan) | $119.88 | $263.52 |
| DreamHost | $2.59/mo (36-mo) | $93.24 | $93.24 (Same price) | $186.48 |
| GreenGeeks | $4.99/mo (36-mo) | $215.64 | $190.80 | $406.44 |
| SiteGround | $2.99/mo (12-mo) | $467.64 | $359.88 | $827.52 |
DreamHost’s price-lock approach makes it more competitive over 5 years than either WebHostingHub or iPage. Hostinger’s 48-month plan beats all of them for long-term cost. The “starter” budget hosts aren’t actually the cheapest option past Year 2 if you factor in renewal pricing.
Category: Who Should Choose Which
| If you… | Pick… | Because… |
|---|---|---|
| Are building your first-ever website | WebHostingHub | Cleaner dashboard, slightly more helpful support for beginners |
| Want the absolute lowest monthly cost | iPage | $1.99/mo for Year 1, $8.99/mo at renewal — math works for short-term |
| Are running a test or temporary project | iPage | Cheapest entry point, don’t worry about Year 3 costs |
| Have visitors outside North America | WebHostingHub | Cloudflare CDN narrows the global speed gap |
| Need multiple sites on one account | iPage | Unlimited sites vs WebHostingHub’s single-site limit |
| Plan to scale beyond a hobby project | Neither | Both max out at low traffic — upgrade to Hostinger or DreamHost |
| Care about support more than price | Neither | Both budget hosts offer budget-tier support — KnownHost or DreamHost are better for support quality |
My Personal Recommendation
For a personal blog, a portfolio, or a side project: WebHostingHub at $3.99/mo. The performance gap over iPage is small but real, the Cloudflare CDN helps if you have international readers, and the renewal shock is less painful. It’s not the best cheap host — Hostinger and DreamHost offer better performance at similar prices — but it’s the better choice in this specific comparison.
For an experimental site or temporary project: iPage at $1.99/mo. Build it, test it, leave it. Don’t plan on staying past Year 2. Set a calendar reminder at month 22 to decide whether to renew or migrate.
For an ecommerce store or business site: Skip both. You’re losing more money in slow page loads than you’re saving on the hosting bill. DreamHost at $2.59/mo (locked for 3 years) or Hostinger at $2.99/mo (locked for 4 years) deliver 0.5-1s faster load times for about the same long-term cost. If you want support that can actually help with technical issues, KnownHost starts at $5.08/mo with a 4-minute support response guarantee.
The uncomfortable truth about budget hosting: you’re not really paying less. You’re paying with performance and support, then making up the difference in time and frustration. Sometimes that tradeoff is worth it. For a first blog that might not survive the first six months? Absolutely. For a business? Usually not.
FAQ
Is iPage good for beginners?
For absolute beginners who want the cheapest possible entry, yes. The control panel is simplified to avoid technical complexity. But the support scripts can be frustrating when your issue doesn’t match a common template. WebHostingHub is slightly more beginner-friendly due to quicker chat response and better documentation.
Does WebHostingHub include free SSL certificates?
Yes. Both hosts include automatic free SSL certificates via Let’s Encrypt. WebHostingHub also offers the option to install a paid SSL certificate if you need organization validation (OV) or extended validation (EV) — iPage doesn’t make this easy through their dashboard.
What happens when the promotional price ends?
Both hosts increase to their standard renewal rate. WebHostingHub goes from $3.99/mo to $8.99/mo. iPage goes from $1.99/mo to $9.99/mo. You can often negotiate a discount by contacting support before renewal — neither host advertises this, but both offered me a “loyalty discount” when I asked (WebHostingHub: $6.99/mo, iPage: $7.99/mo for 12 months).
How do these compare to Hostinger?
Hostinger wins on speed (US: 0.9s vs 1.8s for WebHostingHub), global infrastructure (data centers on 4 continents vs 2), and long-term pricing (48-month lock at $2.99/mo). The main reason to choose WebHostingHub or iPage over Hostinger is price psychology — seeing $1.99/mo vs $2.99/mo affects the initial decision. But Hostinger is clearly the better value over 3-4 years.
Can I upgrade from shared hosting later?
Both hosts offer VPS plans, but the VPS tiers are competitively weak. WebHostingHub’s VPS starts at $59.99/mo — you’re better off migrating to Cloudways ($10/mo) or Linode ($5/mo). If you think you’ll outgrow shared hosting within 2 years, neither of these budget hosts is the right starting point.
Is the custom control panel a problem?
It’s an annoyance, not a blocker. Both hosts use simplified dashboards that hide server-level settings. If you’re comfortable with WordPress admin for most tasks, you’ll rarely visit the hosting dashboard. If you need to manage DNS records, create email accounts, or check server logs, the custom dashboards are slower than cPanel — WebHostingHub’s is better organized, iPage’s feels dated.
Which host loads faster for non-US visitors?
WebHostingHub, by a meaningful margin. With Cloudflare CDN enabled, the gap grows: London 2.3s vs 3.1s, Singapore 3.9s vs 5.2s. Cloudflare doesn’t fix the fundamental infrastructure difference, but it narrows the gap by about 30% on international routes.
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