Lithuania rarely makes the shortlist for dedicated servers, and that is precisely the opportunity: an EU member state with GDPR jurisdiction, some of the best connectivity in the Baltics, and datacenter pricing that undercuts the Frankfurt–Amsterdam corridor at equal or better specs. Our Šiauliai stock currently lists 44 configurations, from a $69/mo Xeon E3 to a 16-core Ryzen 9950X with 192 GB DDR5 on a 10 Gbps port — and the standard traffic allowances (30–100 TB monthly) are the kind of numbers the big hubs sell as paid add-ons.
Where Šiauliai actually is, network-wise
Šiauliai sits in northern Lithuania between Riga and Kaunas, and traffic reaches the wider internet through the Baltic fiber corridors toward Warsaw, Stockholm and Frankfurt. Typical round-trip latencies from our stock there:
- Vilnius / Riga: 5–10 ms — effectively local for the whole Baltic market.
- Warsaw: ~15–20 ms; Stockholm/Helsinki: ~20–25 ms.
- Frankfurt: ~30–35 ms; London: ~40 ms.
Translation: for users in the Baltics, Poland, Scandinavia and western CIS-adjacent markets, a Šiauliai box performs like a local server. For a pan-European audience it is a solid secondary region; for US or APAC audiences pick our other locations instead — this is a regional play, and pretending otherwise would be dishonest.
The stock, from budget to brute force
| Config | RAM | Disks | Traffic / Port | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Xeon E3-1240v3 | 16 GB ECC | 250 GB SSD | 30 TB @ 1 Gbps | $69/mo |
| Xeon E3-1240v5 | 32 GB ECC | 2 × 250 GB SSD | 30 TB @ 3 Gbps | $83/mo |
| Xeon Gold 5315Y | 32 GB ECC REG | 2 × 250 GB NVMe | 30 TB @ 3 Gbps | $194/mo |
| EPYC 7402P (24c) | 64 GB ECC REG | 2 × 250 GB NVMe | 100 TB @ 3 Gbps | $207/mo |
| Ryzen 7700X | 64 GB DDR5 ECC | 2 × 1 TB NVMe | 100 TB @ 3 Gbps | $207/mo |
| Ryzen 7950X | 128 GB DDR5 ECC | 2 × 1 TB NVMe | 100 TB @ 3 Gbps | $258/mo |
| Ryzen 9950X | 192 GB DDR5 | 2 × 1 TB NVMe | 100 TB @ 10 Gbps | $336/mo |
Two patterns worth noticing. First, the traffic-to-price ratio: 100 TB on a 3 Gbps port at $207/mo is the headline here — comparable Frankfurt offers meter you at 20–30 TB or charge for the port upgrade. Second, the modern-CPU density: EPYC 7402P/7543 and Ryzen 7000/9000 with DDR5 and NVMe at prices where the big hubs still sell you Comet Lake.
What runs well from Lithuania
- Traffic-heavy services: media delivery, backup targets, update mirrors, relay nodes — the 100 TB allowances absorb what metered hubs bill painfully.
- Regional SaaS and game servers for the Baltic–Polish–Nordic triangle, where the latency table above beats Frankfurt on every row.
- EU data residency on a budget: Lithuania is full EU/GDPR jurisdiction — the compliance checkbox costs $69, not $199.
- Build farms and CI runners: the Ryzen 7950X/9950X tier is top-of-market single-thread performance; geography barely matters for batch work, so buy the cheapest fast cores — these are them.
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Honest limits
Šiauliai is one datacenter region, not a metro market: no multi-DC redundancy inside the country from our stock, and if your audience is concentrated in the US or Southeast Asia the latency math simply favors other cities. Delivery on these lines is automated on stock configs; hardware customization goes through a ticket like everywhere else. And Lithuanian IP geolocation is exactly that — if your product needs to look German or Dutch to geo-sensitive services, pick Frankfurt or Amsterdam from the European comparison instead.
Bottom line
If your users live between Stockholm, Warsaw and Tallinn — or your workload eats terabytes of traffic — Šiauliai is one of the best price-performance corners of the European map right now, and one almost nobody prices in. The full Lithuanian stock with live availability is in the dedicated catalog. Prices and stock verified July 6, 2026.