How to Pick a European Cloud Host You Can Grow Into
A practical European cloud hosting guide for choosing between Hetzner, Scaleway, OVHcloud, IONOS, Nextcloud, and DNScale based on what you actually need to run.
The EuroMakers Editorial Team
Researching European software

The Journal · Made in Europe
Cloud hosting is where European software stops being a neat preference and becomes a real architectural choice. You are deciding where your application runs, how your team deploys, who answers when something is down, and how much surprise you can tolerate on the bill.
That is why the right first question is not which European cloud is best? It is what kind of cloud decision are we making? The Cloud category in EuroMakers spans classic hosting, larger cloud infrastructure, collaboration software, and DNS. Those are related, but they are not interchangeable.
Start with the thing you run
Before comparing providers, name the workload. A marketing site, a SaaS product, a GPU experiment, a shared file system, and authoritative DNS all have different failure modes. Pricing pages blur that distinction. Production does not.
- A simple app or website needs reliable compute, backups, and a bill you can read.
- A growing product needs managed services, networking, observability hooks, and room to split systems apart.
- An internal team workspace may need files, calendars, contacts, and document collaboration more than raw infrastructure.
- A serious DNS layer needs automation, DNSSEC, anycast, and tooling your infrastructure process can own.
Once you describe the workload, the shortlist gets calmer. You stop asking one provider to win every category and start matching the tool to the job.
Six European options, six jobs
The directory currently lists six cloud-related tools. Think of them as different parts of the same European infrastructure shelf.
Hetzner — honest servers with serious value
Hetzner, based in Germany, is the name to know when you want strong infrastructure without enterprise ceremony. Dedicated servers, cloud instances, managed servers, storage, colocation, GPU servers, and the famous server auction all point to the same personality: practical, high-performance hosting at prices that make teams re-check their current bill.
Choose Hetzner when you already know how to run your stack and want dependable compute close to home. It is especially attractive for bootstrapped products, agencies, indie developers, and teams that would rather own a small amount of operational complexity than rent a maze.
Scaleway — a builder-friendly European cloud
Scaleway is the French option for teams that want more of the modern cloud menu: compute, Kubernetes, object and block storage, managed databases, serverless functions, load balancing, and an explicit sustainability angle through eco-designed data centers.
Pick Scaleway when your product needs managed building blocks, not only virtual machines. It fits teams that want a European provider but still expect cloud-native workflows: containers, APIs, storage buckets, databases, and a developer experience that feels current.
OVHcloud — broad infrastructure at European scale
OVHcloud, also based in France, is one of Europe's largest cloud infrastructure providers. Its range covers public cloud, private cloud, dedicated servers, VPS, hosting, backup, disaster recovery, and a global data center network. The company is also known for water-cooling technology that reduces energy use in its data centers.
Choose OVHcloud when breadth matters. If you need a provider with both classic infrastructure and larger cloud programs, or you expect the stack to become more formal over time, OVHcloud belongs on the shortlist.
IONOS — hosting that meets normal businesses where they are
IONOS is the German provider for teams that do not want every cloud decision to feel like infrastructure engineering. It spans web hosting, domains, website building, ecommerce, managed WordPress, email hosting, cloud servers, storage, and support.
That makes IONOS useful for small businesses, agencies, and mixed teams where the website, domain, email, and hosting story need to live near each other. It is not the most romantic choice. That is part of the point. Many businesses need a dependable provider desk, not a control plane they study on weekends.
Nextcloud — the cloud as a team workspace
Nextcloud is different from the infrastructure providers above. It is a German collaboration suite for file sync, calendars, contacts, tasks, document editing, video conferencing, and more. You can operate it on private infrastructure and give your team a European alternative to the familiar file-and-collaboration bundle.
Choose Nextcloud when the problem is not where do we host servers? but where does our team keep its working life? It pairs well with European hosting because it turns infrastructure into something your colleagues actually touch every day.
DNScale — DNS for teams that automate infrastructure
DNScale, operated from Estonia, focuses on managed authoritative DNS. Anycast networks, DNSSEC, DDoS-protected nameservers, query analytics, REST APIs, Terraform support, and DNSControl integration make it a specialist rather than a general cloud provider.
Choose DNScale when DNS is part of your deployment system, not a screen someone clicks twice a year. It is the kind of layer people forget until it fails. That is exactly why it deserves a deliberate choice.
A shortlist by workload
- You want excellent value for servers → start with Hetzner.
- You want managed cloud building blocks → compare Scaleway and OVHcloud.
- You need hosting, domains, email, and support in one familiar place → look at IONOS.
- You want a European file and collaboration workspace → evaluate Nextcloud.
- You need automated authoritative DNS → shortlist DNScale.
- You are migrating a serious production system → do not pick one winner from a table; prototype the riskiest workload first.
The point is not to crown a universal champion. European cloud is healthier when it looks like a strong market, not one giant default. Germany, France, and Estonia all show up here with different strengths. That variety is useful.
How to run a low-drama trial
Cloud trials get messy when teams try to migrate something important too early. Start with a workload that is real enough to expose friction and small enough that nobody panics if you rebuild it.
- Pick one workload: a staging app, a documentation site, a test database, a file workspace, or a secondary DNS zone.
- Write down the two things that must be true: monthly cost, deploy speed, backup comfort, support response, latency, or team usability.
- Run one deploy-and-maintain loop. Include one boring maintenance task, not only the happy-path setup.
- Delete and recreate something on purpose. A cloud provider shows its character when you recover, not when the wizard succeeds.
- Only then decide whether to move the next layer.
This is slower than clicking migrate now. It is also how you avoid turning a good European choice into an avoidable incident.
Where Made in Europe feels premium
Made in Europe matters here when it shows up as engineering discipline: efficient data centers, clear contracts, practical support, sensible defaults, and tools that respect the fact that infrastructure is a long relationship. It is a premium label when it means restraint, durability, and promises kept.
There is also a unity story worth liking. A European stack does not have to mean one country or one provider. It can mean German compute, French cloud services, Estonian DNS, and a collaboration layer your team controls. That is the stronger picture of Europe: connected strengths, not one flattened identity.
Pick the cloud provider whose boring day you trust.
— EuroMakers Editorial
Start here
Open the Cloud category, read the listings that match your workload, and choose one small trial. If infrastructure is not the next move for your team, browse the software directory or keep reading with our guides to European web analytics and European search engines. Missing a European cloud tool we should know about? Tell us.
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