Netcup is the provider every European homelab and dev forum eventually recommends, and the numbers explain why: the current G12 generation sells 4 vCores, 8 GB of DDR5 and 256 GB NVMe for €10.37 a month including VAT — specs that cost 2–4× more at most competitors. This review takes the praise as read and spends its time on the fine print, because netcup's value formula has real conditions attached.
The G12 lineup at a glance
| Plan | vCores | RAM (DDR5) | NVMe | €/mo incl. VAT |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VPS 500 G12 | 2 | 4 GB | 128 GB | 5.91 |
| VPS 1000 G12 | 4 | 8 GB | 256 GB | 10.37 |
| VPS 2000 G12 | 8 | 16 GB | 512 GB | 19.25 |
| VPS 4000 G12 | 12 | 32 GB | 1 TB | 32.41 |
| VPS 8000 G12 | 16 | 64 GB | 2 TB | 47.95 |
Locations: Nuremberg, Vienna, Amsterdam, Manassas (US-East) and Singapore. Block storage extends any plan at €0.012/GB/month. And the historical dealbreaker has softened: alongside the classic 12-month contracts, G12 plans offer hourly billing with no minimum term — the old "locked in for a year" complaint no longer applies if you choose that mode.
The fine print that actually matters
- Fair-use CPU. vCores are shared; sustained 100%-CPU workloads (miners, constant encoders, always-busy CI) attract throttling. The specs are honest for normal duty cycles — they are not dedicated cores and netcup does not pretend otherwise.
- Five locations. Superb if your users are in the DACH region or Benelux; irrelevant if you need London, Warsaw, Tokyo or Canada.
- Support culture. Competent, ticket-based, German-first with English handled — but this is a value operation: nobody will hand-hold a migration at 2 a.m.
- Process formality. German provider habits: identity verification on signup for some payment routes, cancellation formalities on term contracts. Predictable, not hostile — read the order page.
Where netcup is simply the right answer
Dev and staging boxes, homelab-grade self-hosting (the whole self-hosted stack series runs beautifully on a VPS 1000), personal projects, EU-jurisdiction side services — for these, paying more than netcup's rate is simply donating money. We say that as a competitor whose VPS line does not match this spec-per-euro, and there is no shame in it: netcup's scale and own-DC model in Nuremberg makes that price possible.
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Where it stops being the answer
- Dedicated hardware. Netcup's root servers give dedicated RAM but the house has no real bare-metal line — when the workload needs physical cores, IPMI, custom disk layouts or 10 Gbps guarantees, you are shopping in a different market: that is the dedicated catalog, from $9 Atoms to Ryzen 9950X.
- Geographic spread. Five cities versus, for regional latency plays, our 30+ — a Warsaw, London or Sydney requirement disqualifies netcup instantly.
- Sustained-CPU workloads. Game servers at full tick, render farms, busy build fleets — fair-use shared cores are the wrong product class regardless of price; see our CI runner sizing notes for what those loads really need.
Verdict
Netcup in 2026 is the honest budget king of European VPS: real DDR5/NVMe hardware, transparent pricing, and the old contract-term objection largely neutralized by hourly billing. Use it for what it is — outstanding shared-resource VPS in five locations — and pair it with dedicated hardware elsewhere when cores, geography or guarantees start mattering. Prices checked July 8, 2026 on netcup.com (incl. 19% German VAT; your local VAT may differ).