BuyVM OPENVZ 128, $ 15.00/yr. on Linux VPS
OPENVZ 128 has been updated on (added ), Aggregate Rating (1 out of 10 from 2 reviews)
| 💪 CPU/Cores : | 1 Core @ 2.00+ GHz |
|---|---|
| 🔋 RAM : | 128 MB |
| 🔌 Hosted domains : | 1 |
| 🆓 free domains : | 0 |
| 📌 Dedicated IPs : | 1 |
| 💳 Payment Methods : | Credit / Debit / Prepaid CardsPayPalAliPayBitcoin |
| 🔨 Control Panel : | [In-house] |
| 🔧 Category : | VPNDDoS Protection |
| ✍️ Support Options : | EmailHelp DeskPhone / Toll-FreeLive ChatAvailable 24/7 |
| 🌏 Server Locations : | Luxembourg United States |
| ⚑ Targeting : | CA US |
| 💰 Money-back guarantee : | 3 days |
| 🚀 Uptime : | 99.9 % |

See also initial OPENVZ 128 plan location on their website!
*📜 Plan description
The entry OpenVZ 128 plan includes 128 MB RAM, 15 GB SATA III storage with SSD read cache acceleration, 500 GB monthly transfer, and 1 IPv4 address for 15.00 USD per year. Its 1 core at 2.00+ GHz and very small memory footprint make it suitable only for extremely lean Linux roles such as a tiny relay, tunnel endpoint, simple monitoring target, or a minimalist utility process. Because this is the 128 MB tier, it does not inherit the free nightly backup and snapshot features reserved for 256 MB and larger OpenVZ plans. The attraction here is the lowest possible entry cost into the OpenVZ range, while still retaining the same network footprint, DDoS add-on availability, and Stallion-based lifecycle controls used across the platform.
These OpenVZ VPS plans are tuned for low-cost Linux hosting with SSD-backed performance and Anycast-ready networking. The platform is built on dual-hexa Intel Xeon servers with 64 GB or more of RAM per node and RAID-10 arrays using at least 8 drives. Plans from 256 MB upward use pure SSD storage, while the entry 128 MB service uses SATA III storage accelerated by SSD read cache. Nightly backups are included free on 256 MB and larger plans and can be restored from Stallion, while snapshots are also available on 256 MB and higher tiers for cloning or rollback work. The environment supports OpenVPN, PPTP, IPSEC, IPIP, SIT, and GRE tunnels, and it also supports FUSE so custom filesystem tools such as SSHFS and GlusterFS can run cleanly. Management is done through Stallion, the in-house control panel that handles reboots, usage graphs, networking changes, reverse DNS, and reinstall workflows, backed by a catalog of more than 100 templates and appliances. Filtered DDoS protection can be added for 3.00 USD per protected IPv4 each month in every location. Service is unmanaged, but 24x7 support remains available through the provider's regular channels. Locations shown for the product line are in the United States and Luxembourg. The broader policy set includes a 99.9 percent uptime target and a 3-day refund window on initial PayPal or credit card payments, while cryptocurrency and AliPay payments are not refundable.
These OpenVZ VPS plans are tuned for low-cost Linux hosting with SSD-backed performance and Anycast-ready networking. The platform is built on dual-hexa Intel Xeon servers with 64 GB or more of RAM per node and RAID-10 arrays using at least 8 drives. Plans from 256 MB upward use pure SSD storage, while the entry 128 MB service uses SATA III storage accelerated by SSD read cache. Nightly backups are included free on 256 MB and larger plans and can be restored from Stallion, while snapshots are also available on 256 MB and higher tiers for cloning or rollback work. The environment supports OpenVPN, PPTP, IPSEC, IPIP, SIT, and GRE tunnels, and it also supports FUSE so custom filesystem tools such as SSHFS and GlusterFS can run cleanly. Management is done through Stallion, the in-house control panel that handles reboots, usage graphs, networking changes, reverse DNS, and reinstall workflows, backed by a catalog of more than 100 templates and appliances. Filtered DDoS protection can be added for 3.00 USD per protected IPv4 each month in every location. Service is unmanaged, but 24x7 support remains available through the provider's regular channels. Locations shown for the product line are in the United States and Luxembourg. The broader policy set includes a 99.9 percent uptime target and a 3-day refund window on initial PayPal or credit card payments, while cryptocurrency and AliPay payments are not refundable.
📄 Editorial Review
BuyVM is a very focused infrastructure provider rather than a broad mass-market hosting brand. On this domain, the business is built around virtual servers, storage, networking, and add-on infrastructure tools instead of classic beginner shared hosting. The storefront is essentially English-only, pricing is shown in USD, and the whole catalog is aimed more at developers, small infrastructure projects, self-managed services, game servers, storage-heavy workloads, and buyers who want unusually low entry pricing without giving up technical flexibility.The company history is a little unusual because the brand sits in a transition period. BuyVM grew out of Frantech Solutions, and Francisco is the founder behind Frantech and the mind behind BuyVM. At the same time, the current info places BuyVM jointly managed by Cloudzy and Frantech Solutions / frantech.ca / namecrane.com , and the Terms of Service state that BuyVM was officially acquired by Cloudzy AI on January 6, 2025. For a future customer, that means the brand still carries the old Frantech identity in many technical and documents, while the legal and corporate layer now points clearly toward Cloudzy.
The strongest part of the service lineup is the VPS and slice ecosystem. The core products are Dedicated KVM Slices, standard KVM VPS, Storage VPS, Block Storage Slabs, Anycast, and DDoS Protection. There are also older OpenVZ VPS pages and Windows VPS pages still online, so the catalog has both current and legacy layers. The modern center of gravity is clearly around KVM-based slices with add-on storage, DDoS filtering, and custom network features.
The standout product is the Dedicated KVM Slice family. It is positioned between an ordinary VPS and a traditional dedicated server: small, inexpensive, but with stronger isolation and a more "serious infrastructure" flavor than many budget VPS offers. These slices use SSD storage, unmetered bandwidth, and scale from tiny yearly plans up into larger monthly configurations with multiple cores and much more RAM. For users who want to run Linux, Windows, containers, custom networking, or specialized workloads, this is the product that best represents what BuyVM does well.
The standard KVM VPS range and the older OpenVZ VPS range are the lower-cost entry point. They are attractive for hobby deployments, test systems, lightweight applications, VPN roles, and small services. The OpenVZ pages are still online with full plan tables, but the company now pushes buyers more strongly toward KVM slices. The Windows VPS line is also still present, with Microsoft Windows Server included on the plan pages, although stock visibility and the rest of the catalog make the KVM slice family look like the more active flagship direction.
Storage is another major advantage here. Storage VPS plans are clearly aimed at buyers who need large disk allocations more than raw compute, while Block Storage Slabs act as attachable volumes for KVM slices in the same facility. This is one of the more distinctive parts of the BuyVM platform because the slabs are tied directly into the company’s custom control layer and can be moved between compatible instances in the same location without the awkwardness that often comes with budget block storage.
Networking features are unusually strong for this price tier. Anycast is a real part of the platform rather than a decorative checkbox, and DDoS protection is a first-class add-on with published pricing, filtering scale, and technical documentation. There is also Offloaded SQL / Shared SQL, a cheap managed database-style add-on for customers who want to move MySQL workloads off the VPS itself. That makes the platform more capable than a basic low-end VPS seller.
Another important point is the software layer. BuyVM built its own in-house control panel, Stallion, instead of relying on the usual commodity VPS panels. It also bundles or documents access to DirectAdmin, Softaculous, and Blesta, plus a paid CloudLinux license. This gives the service a hybrid identity: part low-cost VPS host, part toolkit for people who want to build their own hosting stack, panels, or small infrastructure services on top.
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Unlimited traffic on 10 Gbit/s port, KVM virtualisation and instant deployment in [...]

