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What Is Unlimited Bandwidth and Why It Matters

Here's a scenario that happens more often than hosting companies would like to admit: you sign up for a VPS, launch your project, everything runs great for a few weeks. Then one day your app slows to a crawl, or worse, goes offline. You check your dashboard and see a message: "bandwidth limit exceeded." You didn't even know there was a limit.

Bandwidth caps are one of the most misunderstood aspects of VPS hosting. Let’s clear it up.

Bandwidth vs. speed — they're not the same thing

People mix these up constantly.

Bandwidth (or data transfer) is the total amount of data your server sends and receives in a month. Think of it as a monthly data quota. If your plan includes 4 TB of bandwidth, that means your server can transfer 4 terabytes of data total before the provider either charges you extra, throttles your speed, or shuts you off.

Speed (or port speed) is how fast data flows at any given moment. A 1 Gbps port means data can move at up to 1 gigabit per second. But even with a fast port, if your monthly bandwidth cap is low, you can burn through it quickly.

A 1 Gbps port running at full capacity would transfer about 330 TB in a month. Obviously, most servers don’t sustain that. But the point is that speed and total transfer are two different constraints, and you need to understand both.

What happens when you hit the cap?

It depends on the provider, and this is where things get ugly.

Overage charges: Some providers charge per GB over the limit. AWS is famous for this — bandwidth bills have surprised plenty of startups. DigitalOcean charges $0.01 per GB over their included transfer.

Throttling: Others don’t charge you, but they reduce your port speed to something barely usable — sometimes 10 Mbps or less. Your site still technically works, it just loads like it’s 2005.

Hard cutoff: A few providers will straight-up suspend your server until the next billing cycle. Your site goes down, and you can’t do anything about it except wait or pay more.

None of these are great options, especially if you didn’t see it coming.

Who actually hits bandwidth limits?

More people than you'd think. Here are the common culprits:

Game servers. A Minecraft server with 20 active players can easily transfer 500 GB to 1 TB per month. Add mods that sync large files, and it climbs faster. A FiveM server for GTA V RP is even more demanding.

Media-heavy sites. If your site serves images, videos, or downloadable files, bandwidth adds up. A single popular blog post with embedded images can generate surprising traffic if it goes viral.

AI assistants and bots. Tools like OpenClaw maintain persistent WebSocket connections to multiple messaging platforms. The data transfer isn’t huge per message, but it’s constant. Over a month, it accumulates.

Backups and syncing. If you're running automated backups to an external location, or syncing files between servers, that counts toward your bandwidth too.

What "unlimited" actually means

Let’s be honest: truly unlimited bandwidth doesn’t exist. There's always a physical constraint somewhere. When a hosting provider says "unlimited bandwidth", they typically mean one of two things:

The good version: you get a set port speed (say 1 Gbps), and you can use as much data transfer as you want within that speed. No monthly cap, no overage fees, no throttling. You're only limited by the physics of your port speed.

The bad version: "unlimited" with a fair use policy buried in the terms, where they can throttle or suspend you if you use "too much". This is basically a hidden cap without a number on it.

Always read the terms. If a provider says unlimited but doesn’t specify a port speed or fair use policy, be suspicious.

Why we offer unlimited bandwidth at Dedimax

All our VPS and Cloud plans include unlimited data transfer on a 1 Gbps port. No monthly cap, no overage charges, no throttling based on usage.

Why? Because we think bandwidth caps are a bad deal for customers. They create anxiety, punish success (your app grows, you get charged more), and they’re often invisible until it’s too late.

Compare that with some popular competitors:

  • Hostinger VPS: 4 to 8 TB/month depending on the plan
  • DigitalOcean: 1 to 6 TB/month, $0.01/GB overage
  • Vultr: 1 to 4 TB/month

For a gaming server, a busy blog, or an AI assistant running 24/7, those limits can actually matter. With Dedimax, you don't have to think about it.

The bottom line

Bandwidth caps are one of those things you don't worry about until you get burned. If your project involves any kind of sustained traffic — gaming, streaming, automation, bots, or just a site that might have a good day on Reddit — make sure you understand what you’re buying.

Check the actual bandwidth included in your plan, not just the price. And if you want one less thing to worry about, go with a provider that doesn’t play games with data transfer limits.

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