VPS vs Dedicated Server

Hosting basics

VPS vs dedicated server: when should you upgrade?

A VPS is the right home for most workloads until, one day, it is not. Here is how the two compare and the concrete signs it is time to move to bare metal.

Published 2026-07-04 · 5 min read · Examar

Most workloads start on a VPS, and most should. It is the right balance of cost, control, and performance for the majority of sites and applications. But every VPS has a ceiling, and knowing when you have hit it, versus just needing a bigger plan, is what this comes down to.

What each one actually is

A VPS is a guaranteed slice of a physical machine: you get dedicated vCPU, RAM, and NVMe storage, isolated from other tenants, but the underlying hardware is shared. A dedicated server is the whole physical machine, reserved for you alone, with no neighbors and no virtualization layer between you and the metal.

How they compare

Performance: a VPS with guaranteed resources performs well for most workloads; a dedicated server wins for heavy, sustained load where virtualization overhead and shared hardware start to matter. Cost: a VPS is cheaper and scales in smaller steps; dedicated costs more but delivers more performance per dollar at the top end. Control: both give you full root, but dedicated adds hardware-level control, custom components, and single-tenant isolation.

The signs it is time to upgrade

  • You are maxing out the largest VPS plan and still resource-constrained.
  • Performance is inconsistent under load in ways more resources do not fully fix.
  • You need single-tenant isolation for compliance or data-handling reasons.
  • You need specific hardware, particular CPUs, GPUs, or storage layouts.
  • Latency matters and you want to remove virtualization overhead entirely.

The good news: it is not a cliff

Moving from a VPS to a dedicated server should not mean re-architecting or migrating twice. On a provider that offers the whole stack, you step up in place, same network, same support, same account, just more machine underneath you. And if you would rather not manage the hardware, managed services keep it hands-off.

The rule of thumb

Stay on a VPS while your load is light-to-moderate and your growth fits within plan upgrades. Move to dedicated when you consistently hit the ceiling, need isolation or specific hardware, or when the math tips toward more performance per dollar. Not sure where you are on that curve? Examar will look at your workload and tell you straight.

FAQ

Common questions

What is the difference between a VPS and a dedicated server?
A VPS is a guaranteed slice of a shared physical machine, you get dedicated vCPU, RAM, and storage allocations, but the hardware is shared with other isolated tenants. A dedicated server is an entire physical machine reserved for you alone, with no other tenants and no virtualization overhead.
When should I move from a VPS to a dedicated server?
Upgrade when you consistently hit the ceiling of the largest VPS plan, need full hardware control or specific components, require single-tenant isolation for compliance, or want to eliminate virtualization overhead for latency-sensitive workloads. If performance is steady and predictable at scale, dedicated usually delivers more per dollar.
Is a dedicated server always faster than a VPS?
For heavy, sustained workloads, yes, a dedicated server gives you the full machine with no virtualization overhead or neighbors. For light or moderate workloads, a well-provisioned VPS with guaranteed resources performs great and costs less. The question is not which is faster in the abstract, but which fits your load.

Need help choosing? Talk to Examar.

Tell us the workload and we will recommend the right mix of colocation, servers, and hosting.