
When we tested BelHost for the HostAdvice Web Hosting Awards 2026, we kept finding evidence that the provider operates differently from its competitors.
They own every server and every piece of networking equipment. They staff on-site engineers at their data center 24/7.
When we asked their support team a hard question about NVMe storage limits, the agent responded in 36 minutes, citing specific Samsung drive models by name, not marketing specs from a product page.
You do not get that level of hardware intimacy from a company that leases rack space from an upstream provider.
That combination of hardware ownership, technical expertise, and verified performance is why BelHost earned a Top 25 Dedicated Server Hosting 2026 award.
What We Tested and How
We ordered BelHost’s 2xSilver-4116 configuration (2x Intel Xeon Silver 4116, 24 cores, 48 threads, 64 GB RAM, 2 x 480 GB SSD in RAID 1) at €133 per month from their Sofia, Bulgaria data center.
We ran the same benchmark suite used for every provider in the 2026 awards cycle.
| Metric | Result | Why It Matters |
| CPU (single-core) | 386.22 events/sec | Baseline per-core processing power |
| CPU (24 cores) | 7,384.93 events/sec | 19.12x scaling, 80% efficiency across dual sockets |
| Memory throughput (1 MB) | 17,054 MiB/sec | Bulk data processing capacity |
| Memory throughput (1 KB) | 5,403 MiB/sec | Real-world application memory speed |
| Sequential read speed | 4,878 MiB/sec | SSD RAID array delivering 4.8 GB/s |
| Random read IOPS | 9,306 ops/sec | Nearly 3x what a typical NVMe VPS delivers |
| Random write IOPS | 6,204 ops/sec | Strong write performance for databases |
| Fsync operations | 19,855 ops/sec | Critical for database transaction safety |
| Network (down / up) | 941 / 940 Mbps | Full 1 Gbps link utilization, perfectly symmetric |
| Ping to Google | 0.585ms average | Clean European network peering |
| 3-min stress test | 7,410 events/sec | 0.3% faster than the 60-second test |
These are not VPS numbers dressed up with marketing language. This is bare metal performing like bare metal should.
1. Performance: 24 Cores With Zero Degradation Under Load
The headline number is the stress test. We maxed out all 24 cores for 3 continuous minutes and measured 7,410 events per second. The 60-second test had delivered 7,384 events per second.

Read that again: the server performed 0.3% better under sustained maximum load than during the shorter benchmark.
- Average latency: Held steady at 3.24ms
- 95th percentile: Locked at 3.25ms with virtually no outliers
- Throttling events: Zero. No performance cliffs, no gradual degradation
This result is only possible with dedicated hardware. On a VPS, even a good one, sustained full-core utilization eventually triggers contention with other tenants on the same physical host.
On BelHost’s bare metal, there are no other tenants. The server’s thermal management had time to stabilize during the longer test, allowing the CPUs to sustain higher turbo frequencies consistently. That is why the number went up instead of down.
The single-core performance of 386 events per second reflects the Xeon Silver 4116’s design philosophy: moderate per-core clock speed (2.1 GHz base, 3.0 GHz turbo) in exchange for high core density.

This processor is built for parallelism, not single-threaded speed. If your workload can distribute across cores, the 7,384 aggregate events per second provides serious headroom for:
- Containerized microservices spread across multiple cores
- Multi-threaded database queries serving concurrent users
- CI/CD pipelines running parallel build and test jobs
- Game servers handling dozens of simultaneous player connections
- Video transcoding and batch processing workloads
2. Storage: SSD RAID That Outperforms Most NVMe VPS Setups
The 2 x 480 GB SSD RAID 1 array delivered numbers that surprised us:
- Sequential reads: 4,878 MiB/sec (4.8 GB/s), roughly 9x what a single SATA SSD delivers
- Random reads: 9,306 ops/sec, nearly 3x a typical NVMe VPS
- Random writes: 6,204 ops/sec with 0.03ms average latency
- Fsync operations: 19,855 ops/sec, critical for database integrity

The sequential read speed benefits from the RAID controller reading both drives simultaneously, effectively doubling bandwidth. But the random I/O results are what matter for production applications.
At 9,306 random reads per second, this setup handles database queries, web server requests, and application workloads with headroom to spare.
The fsync figure deserves attention. At 19,855 operations per second, BelHost’s RAID controller (likely equipped with a battery-backed write cache) combines write speed with data durability.
3. Network: Full Gigabit With Sub-Millisecond Routing
The network test delivered exactly what a 1 Gbps dedicated port should:
- Download: 941 Mbps
- Upload: 940 Mbps
- Idle latency: 0.25ms
- Ping to Google (Frankfurt): 0.585ms average with 0.063ms variance
- Packet loss: 0%

The near-perfect symmetry between download and upload confirms a true gigabit port, not an asymmetric connection throttled in one direction.
The sub-0.6ms ping to Google’s Frankfurt servers demonstrates clean network peering out of Sofia, which translates to fast response times for applications serving European users.
One important caveat: BelHost’s free shared 1 Gbps bandwidth is guaranteed at a minimum of 100 Mbps, with average real-world speeds of 200 to 250 Mbps according to their documentation.
The 941 Mbps result reflects a same-datacenter test showing maximum port capacity. If your workload needs consistently high bandwidth, dedicated 1 Gbps unmetered is available for €49/month, with options up to 20 Gbps.
4. Support: The Kind of Answer Only a Hardware Owner Can Give
We submitted a deliberately technical question: what are the maximum burst IOPS on your NVMe storage, and does your fair-use policy cap throughput during sustained I/O?
The response arrived in 36 minutes. Here is what made it exceptional:
- Specific hardware identified: Samsung 980 Pro, 980, and 970 EVO Plus class drives installed locally in each machine
- Concrete IOPS figures: 500k to 1M burst read IOPS, 500k to 800k burst write IOPS depending on model and queue depth
- Honest limitation disclosed: Thermal throttling may occur under sustained heavy workloads, which the agent called “expected behavior”
- Architecture clarified: Local NVMe drives, not part of a shared storage cluster, with no software-level IOPS caps

This is not a scripted response from a tier-1 agent reading a knowledge base article. This is someone who knows the specific drive models installed in the physical machines they manage.
That level of hardware familiarity is a direct consequence of BelHost owning its infrastructure rather than renting it.
What Makes BelHost Different: Ownership Changes Everything
Several providers sell dedicated servers in the €100 to €200 range. What distinguishes BelHost is its ownership model and the downstream effects that ripple through every part of the experience.
- They own the hardware. BelHost explicitly states that they own all networking and server equipment. They do not rent from upstream providers. This means they control maintenance schedules, replacement timelines, and quality standards. When a drive fails, their on-site engineer replaces it, not a ticket to a third-party data center operator.
- They staff the data center. 24/7 on-site engineers at the S3 Data Center in Sofia means physical hardware issues get resolved by human hands, not automated alerts waiting for a remote technician to drive in. Many budget dedicated server providers rely entirely on remote monitoring, leaving physical problems unaddressed for hours.
- They offer lease-to-own. This is genuinely rare. You can pay a higher monthly rate for 1 to 4 years, after which you own the server hardware outright. From that point, you only pay colocation costs for power, rack space, and network connectivity. For businesses with predictable long-term needs, this can dramatically reduce total cost of ownership.
- They include 500 Gbps DDoS protection. On all Bulgaria servers, at no extra cost. This is built in-house and monitored by their NOC team, not a third-party add-on. For any public-facing service, this level of protection removes a significant operational risk.
Who Benefits Most From BelHost
Ideal For
- System administrators and businesses running resource-intensive applications that need guaranteed hardware without virtualization overhead.
- Game server operators, high-traffic web platforms, database clusters, CI/CD build farms, and any workload where consistent performance under sustained load is non-negotiable.
- Also well-suited for businesses that want eventual hardware ownership through the lease-to-own program, and for any public-facing service that needs robust DDoS protection without paying extra.
Not Ideal For
- Users who need data centers outside Europe (BelHost’s infrastructure is EU-only).
- Teams that expect a polished, modern dashboard experience (the interface is functional but dated).
- Workloads requiring frequent OS reinstalls (capped at 2 per month, €10 each after that).
- Users on the free shared bandwidth tier who need consistently high throughput should budget for a bandwidth upgrade.
Why This Earned the Award
HostAdvice’s Top 25 Dedicated Server Hosting recognition requires more than competitive specs at a reasonable price.
The provider must demonstrate verified performance, operational transparency, infrastructure quality, and the kind of support that dedicated server customers depend on when hardware issues arise.
BelHost earned its place because the evidence pointed in one consistent direction:
- 24-core CPU performance that improved by 0.3% under sustained 3-minute load instead of degrading
- SSD RAID storage delivering 9,306 random read IOPS and 19,855 fsync ops/sec, outperforming most NVMe VPS setups
- 941 Mbps symmetric network with sub-millisecond European routing and zero packet loss
- Support that cited specific Samsung drive models and disclosed thermal throttling honestly in 36 minutes
- Full hardware ownership, on-site engineers, and a lease-to-own path that no competitor in this price range matches
Dedicated servers are supposed to give you hardware you can trust. BelHost gives you hardware they trust enough to put their name on, because it is theirs.

