Clouvider is what happens when a network company sells servers: an own autonomous system across 14 points of presence, a claimed 9 Tbit/s+ of capacity on Juniper silicon, ports up to 25 Gbps — and dedicated servers in 11 cities (London, Manchester, Amsterdam, Frankfurt, plus seven US metros) that exist substantially to sell that network. Valebyte is the opposite animal: an aggregator that optimizes hardware per dollar across 30+ cities. Put the configs side by side and the pattern is unmistakable — and useful, because it tells you exactly which provider fits which workload.
The configs, row by row
| Class | Clouvider | Valebyte |
|---|---|---|
| London entry | E3-1270v5, 16 GB, 240 GB SSD — €69 | Xeon-E 2136, 32 GB ECC, 2×512 GB NVMe — $59 |
| Modern 6–8 core NVMe | E-2276G, 16 GB, 512 GB NVMe — €114 (Amsterdam) | Ryzen 5 3600X, 64 GB ECC, 2×512 GB NVMe — $97 (London/Frankfurt) |
| 8-core workhorse | E-2388G, 32 GB, 960 GB NVMe — €143 (Los Angeles) | Ryzen 7 9700X, 64 GB DDR5, 2×512 GB NVMe — $126 (Roubaix) |
| Traffic policy | 50 TB @ 1 Gbps unmetered standard, up to 25 Gbps | Line-dependent; OVH-sourced lines unmetered 1 Gbps class |
Read the first row twice, because it summarizes the whole comparison: at the same entry price point, Clouvider gives you a 2015-era CPU with 16 GB and a single SATA SSD; we give you a newer CPU, double the ECC RAM and mirrored NVMe. Clouvider is not being greedy — you are paying for the network attached to that box, and their network is genuinely good. The question is whether your workload notices.
Workloads that notice the network
Some do, unambiguously. If you push sustained gigabits — streaming origin, CDN fill node, large-file distribution, DDoS-exposed services that benefit from a well-run AS with serious peering — a network-first host earns its premium. The 25 Gbps port options and the 14-PoP backbone are capabilities most aggregator stock simply does not offer, and Clouvider's reputation among network engineers is earned. If that paragraph describes your traffic profile, buy the network; the modest hardware behind it will not be your bottleneck.
Workloads that do not
Most workloads are not that. A database, an app backend, a game server, a CI runner or a SaaS monolith pushes a few hundred megabits at peak and spends its life bound by CPU, RAM and disk — the three dimensions where the comparison table above tilts hard the other way. For these, paying the network premium means renting capacity you never use while running on thinner hardware. The $59 London Xeon-E with 32 GB and mirrored NVMe from our catalog is the honest default for a UK-based application box, and the same logic repeats in Frankfurt, Amsterdam and the US cities where our stock overlaps Clouvider's map.
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Geography and the long tail
Clouvider's 11 cities cover the UK, the EU core and the US well. What they do not cover: Canada, all of APAC, Scandinavia, the Baltics, Poland. If your footprint includes Singapore, Tokyo, Sydney, Warsaw or Beauharnois, the aggregator model carries you there on the same invoice — our Asia comparison shows that side of the map. Conversely, we have no Manchester and no 25 Gbps ports; if either is a hard requirement, Clouvider is the shortlist.
Verdict
- Clouvider: bandwidth-heavy and network-quality-critical workloads in UK/EU-core/US; teams that talk in PoPs and route quality.
- Valebyte: hardware-bound workloads (most of them), budget tiers, and any footprint touching APAC, Canada or Eastern Europe.
- Both legitimate: this is a rare comparison where the two providers are optimizing different variables rather than one doing the same thing worse.
Prices verified July 6, 2026 on clouvider.com and our catalog; both fluctuate with stock. Spot a stale row — tell support.