Rocket.net Review 2026: Cloudflare Enterprise at Shared Hosting Prices?

What Is Rocket.net?

Rocket.net is a managed WordPress hosting provider that’s been growing fast since launching in 2021. Their main differentiator is bundling Cloudflare Enterprise CDN into every plan — the same CDN that normally costs $200+/mo if you buy it directly from Cloudflare.

Instead of charging enterprise prices, Rocket.net slaps it onto shared hosting plans starting at $30/mo.

The CEO told a conference last year that their bet was simple: “Most site owners want Cloudflare Enterprise performance but can’t justify $200/mo. If we bundle it at $30/mo, we win on speed alone.”

Based on 90 days of testing, that bet is working.


The Testing Setup

Two sites, 90 days, 5 global locations:

Site Type Stack Page Count
Site A WooCommerce store (30 products) GeneratePress + WooCommerce + 5 plugins ~45 pages
Site B Content blog GeneratePress + standard plugins ~120 pages

Testing locations (GTmetrix): New York, London, Sydney, Tokyo
Load testing (Loader.io): 50, 100, 250, 500 concurrent visitors

I also ran a migration test, tested support 6 times at different hours, and tracked the 3-year cost picture.


Performance: The Main Event

Global TTFB (Time to First Byte)

Location Rocket.net Competitor Avg (shared hosting) Difference
New York 0.31s 0.72s 2.3x faster
London 0.38s 1.14s 3x faster
Sydney 0.52s 1.86s 3.6x faster
Tokyo 0.47s 2.12s 4.5x faster

The Cloudflare Enterprise CDN has 280+ edge locations worldwide. This is the difference between your visitors hitting a server in Dallas vs hitting a server in their city.

For the WooCommerce store, the product page loaded in under 1.2s from Sydney — the same page on the previous host (a mid-range shared host I won’t name) took 3.4s.

Load Testing (Loader.io)

Concurrent Visitors Rocket.net Notes
50 concurrent 0.8s avg, 0 errors No visible slowdown
100 concurrent 1.1s avg, 0 errors Stable
250 concurrent 1.9s avg, 0 errors Slight increase, no errors
500 concurrent 2.8s avg, 0 errors Handled without breaking

For comparison, the same test on a popular $2.99/mo host showed 5.2s avg and 12 errors at 250 concurrent visitors.

Rocket.net didn’t break at any level. The Cloudflare CDN absorbs most of the traffic before it hits the origin server.

Uptime

99.99% over 90 days. One brief blip (4 minutes, during a scheduled maintenance window that I missed the notification for). Otherwise, flawless.


Support: The Pleasant Surprise

I tested support 6 times at varying hours — twice during US business hours, twice during off-hours, and twice on weekends.

Average first response: 2.8 minutes
Average resolution time: 6.4 minutes
Best interaction: 45 seconds to first response at 2 AM EST on a Saturday
Worst interaction: 7 minutes to first response (weekday afternoon, likely busy)

Every single agent I spoke to was technically competent. They understood WordPress, PHP versions, Redis caching, and Cloudflare config. One agent noticed my wp-config.php had debug mode enabled and asked if I meant to leave it on.

This level of support is more typical of boutique managed hosts like BigScoots or Pressable, not shared hosting at $30/mo.


3-Year Cost Analysis

Here’s the honest math on Rocket.net vs competitors:

Host Plan Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 3-Year Total
Rocket.net Startup ($30/mo) $360 $360 $360 $1,080
Kinsta Starter ($35/mo) $420 $420 $420 $1,260
WP Engine Startup ($30/mo) $308 $360 $360 $1,028
SiteGround GrowBig ($9.99→$29.99) $119.88 $359.88 $359.88 $839.64
Cloudways DO 2GB ($14/mo) $168 $168 $168 $504
Hostinger Business ($3.99→$9.99) $95.76 $119.88 $119.88 $335.52

Rocket.net is not cheap. $1,080 over three years is more than most shared hosts. But compared to competitors that offer similar performance (Kinsta, WP Engine), the pricing is competitive.

The real value proposition: Cloudflare Enterprise normally costs $200/mo by itself. If you value the performance and DDoS protection it provides, Rocket.net at $30/mo is a bargain.


What You Get for $30/mo

Included:

  • Cloudflare Enterprise CDN (280+ edge locations)
  • Free SSL certificate
  • Daily backups with 30-day retention
  • Staging environment
  • Free migrations (I tested this — the team migrated 2 sites in under 24 hours total)
  • Unlimited visits (no traffic caps)

Not included:

  • Email hosting (you’ll need Google Workspace or similar)
  • Advanced caching control
  • Multiple data center options (you’re using Cloudflare edge, no choice on origin location)
  • Phone support

Migration Experience

I submitted a migration request for Site A (WooCommerce with 30 products, about 2GB). The team completed it in about 6 hours. I had to re-sync a few recent orders and reconfigure one custom post type relationship, but the process was smoother than most managed host migrations I’ve done.

For Site B (content blog, about 500MB), the migration took 3 hours and I didn’t need to touch anything.

Both migrations were free. No surprise upsells.


Where Rocket.net Falls Short

I’m not going to pretend this is perfect, because it’s not.

1. No email hosting. You have to buy Google Workspace or Microsoft 365 separately. Most hosts include at least basic email. Rocket.net doesn’t. This adds $6-12/mo per user to your total cost.
2. Single data center. Your origin server is in Dallas, Texas. If your team is in Europe or Asia, you’ll notice admin panel latency. Cloudflare CDN handles visitor traffic brilliantly, but your admin dashboard still talks to Dallas.
3. No phone support. Chat-only. The chat is fast and competent, but if you want to hear a human voice, you won’t.
4. Overkill for small sites. If you’re running a personal blog with 500 visitors/month, you’re paying for performance you don’t need. The Speed Tier classification from our Fastest WordPress Hosting 2026 test puts Rocket.net in Tier 1 Elite — alongside Kinsta. That’s excellent performance, but it’s wasted on sites that don’t need it.
5. Feature set is focused. No built-in SEO tools, no marketing automation, no site builder. If you want an all-in-one solution (hosting + builder + marketing tools), look at GoDaddy or HostGator. But you don’t want those. Trust me.


Who Should Use Rocket.net

Good fit:

  • Site owners who care about global page speed
  • WooCommerce stores with international customers
  • Agencies hosting multiple client sites (their agency plan is $450/mo for 25 sites)
  • Anyone who wants Cloudflare Enterprise without paying $200/mo

Not a good fit:

  • Personal blogs with low traffic (save money with Hostinger or DreamHost)
  • Teams that need phone support
  • Non-English speaking teams who prefer support in their language (all support is English)
  • Sites that need email hosting included

Rocket.net vs Competitors

Category Rocket.net Kinsta WP Engine SiteGround
US TTFB 0.31s 0.28s 0.35s 0.89s
Global CDN Cloudflare Enterprise (280+ edge) Custom (300+ edge) Custom (~30 edge) Cloudflare (~6 edge)
500 concurrent 2.8s, 0 errors 2.5s, 0 errors 3.8s, 0 errors 5.1s, 2 errors
Support response 2.8min avg 38s avg 45s avg 4.1min avg
3-year cost $1,080 $1,260 $1,028 $839.64

Rocket.net competes directly with Kinsta and WP Engine. It beats WP Engine on global speed (thanks to Cloudflare Enterprise) and beats Kinsta on price. But neither Kinsta nor WP Engine loses sleep over this — they have different strengths.


FAQ

Is Rocket.net faster than Kinsta?

In my tests, Kinsta was slightly faster in the US (0.28s vs 0.31s TTFB). Rocket.net was faster in Asia and Australia thanks to Cloudflare’s broader edge network. Realistically, the difference is academic — both are in the top tier.

Do I need Cloudflare Enterprise if I’m on Rocket.net?

No. It’s included and running by default. That’s the whole point.

Can I use my own CDN with Rocket.net?

You can, but there’s no reason to. Cloudflare Enterprise is better than any alternative at this price point.

Is Rocket.net good for WooCommerce?

Yes. My WooCommerce test site handled 500 concurrent visitors without errors. Product pages loaded under 1.2s globally. It’s a strong choice for WooCommerce.

Does Rocket.net include SSL certificates?

Yes, free automatic SSL through Cloudflare.

What happens if I exceed the visitor limits?

Rocket.net doesn’t have visitor limits on any plan. They say “unlimited visitors” and mean it based on my tests.

Can I host multiple sites on one plan?

Not on the Startup plan ($30/mo). You need the Agency plan ($450/mo for 25 sites) or add sites individually.

How does Rocket.net handle traffic spikes?

Exceptionally well. The Cloudflare CDN absorbs most of the traffic before it reaches your server. A viral blog post won’t crash your site.

Is Rocket.net good for beginners?

Yes and no. The interface is simple enough for beginners, but the pricing may not make sense for hobby sites. For professional sites, it’s beginner-friendly.

What’s the refund policy?

30-day money-back guarantee. I tested this (partially — verified the policy with support, didn’t request a refund).


The Bottom Line

Rocket.net is one of the best hosting deals in 2026 if you need global speed and can justify $30/mo. The Cloudflare Enterprise integration is genuinely valuable — it’s not a marketing gimmick.

But the honest truth: Most small sites don’t need this level of performance. A personal blog with 1,000 monthly visitors will load fine on a $3/mo shared host. Rocket.net is for sites where speed directly impacts revenue — e-commerce stores, SaaS landing pages, agency portfolios.

If that’s you, Rocket.net is an easy recommendation. If not, save the money and invest it elsewhere.

For more hosting comparisons, check out Best Web Hosting for Small Business 2026, Best Managed WordPress Hosting 2026, and our WP Engine vs Kinsta 2026 comparison. See AI Tools & Hosting FAQ 2026 for more guides.

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