Netcup vs Linode
Netcup is a European alternative to Linode — same cloud & hosting use case, built under EU data-protection law.
By the EU Alternatives team Last updated
German web hosting and server provider with ISO 9001/27001/27701/14001 certifications, 100% renewable energy, and award-winning pricing from €2.69/month.
- Jurisdiction
- EU / EEA
- GDPR by default
- Yes
- US CLOUD Act exposure
- No
- Open source
- No
- Free tier
- No
Linode by Akamai.
- Jurisdiction
- US
- GDPR by default
- Requires DPA + TIA
- US CLOUD Act exposure
- Yes
About Netcup
Netcup is a German web hosting and server provider operating from Karlsruhe, known for aggressively competitive pricing on high-performance infrastructure. Part of the Anexia Group, Netcup runs its own data centres powered entirely by renewable energy and holds an impressive stack of certifications (ISO 9001, 27001, 27701, 14001).
The provider has won "Service Provider of the Year" gold in reader's choice awards and consistently ranks top in German hosting comparisons — combining German engineering with transparent, predictable pricing.
Key features:
- Web hosting from €2.69/month — email storage included
- Virtual servers (vServer x86) — from €5.91/month or €0.01/hour
- ARM64 servers — efficient workloads from €7.78/month
- Root servers — dedicated AMD EPYC from €12.78/month
- Domain registration — 500+ TLDs, .de from €0.42/month
- Multiple payment methods — bank transfer, PayPal, credit card, SEPA
- ISO certified — 9001, 27001, 27701, 14001
- 100% renewable energy — green electricity powered data centres
- 24/7 German support and active community forum
Winner of the Reader's Choice Service Provider Awards 2025 Gold and HOSTtest Web Host of the Year 2025. A top pick for German developers and SMEs seeking predictable, certified EU hosting.
Why choose Netcup over Linode?
The decisive argument is data jurisdiction. Linode is headquartered in US, which means personal data processed through it can be subject to non-EU legal regimes — the US CLOUD Act, FISA 702, or similar laws depending on the provider. After the 2020 Schrems II ruling, EU organisations must carry out a transfer impact assessment for every such data flow.
Netcup removes that overhead. As a Germany-based provider, it operates natively under GDPR, and data stays inside the EU/EEA by default. For regulated sectors — health, public administration, finance — that's not a nice-to-have but a requirement. For everyone else, it's concentration-risk insurance: you avoid depending on a single non-EU jurisdiction that can change the rules without warning.