Where your website is hosted is not a boring back office detail. For a European business it affects speed, legal exposure under the GDPR, and who can access your data. This guide explains what managed WordPress hosting in the EU actually means and why location matters more than the lowest monthly price.
What “managed” really includes
Cheap shared hosting hands you an empty server and wishes you luck. Managed WordPress hosting means the provider runs the stack, the security and the updates so you do not have to. In practice that should cover server tuning for WordPress, a caching layer, daily backups, malware scanning, and a firewall. We break down the full scope in our guide to what a WordPress maintenance plan includes.
The difference you feel
On unmanaged hosting, a traffic spike from a press mention can take a hotel site offline at the worst moment. On well managed hosting with proper caching, the same spike is absorbed. The monthly cost is higher, but a single lost booking weekend usually outweighs a year of the difference.
Why EU location and data residency matter
Physical distance adds latency. A server in Amsterdam answers a visitor in Maastricht far faster than one in Texas. For a Dutch or European audience, hosting inside the EU is simply quicker. Unsolve runs client sites on dedicated infrastructure in Amsterdam for exactly this reason.
Location also decides which laws apply to your data. Data stored in the EU sits under EU law. Data on US owned infrastructure can fall under US legal reach even when the server is physically in Europe, which is why data residency and the operator’s ownership both matter. If compliance is a priority, read our deeper piece on GDPR compliant hosting.
Hosting and the GDPR in plain terms
Under the GDPR your hosting provider is a processor of personal data, which means you need a data processing agreement with them. You also need to know where backups live and who can access them. A provider that cannot tell you which country your data sits in is a red flag.
Three questions that reveal a lot
- In which country are my site and its backups physically stored?
- Do you provide a signed data processing agreement?
- Who legally owns the data centre, and under which jurisdiction does it fall?
A checklist before you sign up
Before moving your site, confirm the essentials so you do not get stuck later. Check that backups run daily and that restores are actually tested, not just promised. Confirm there is a staging environment, a firewall, and free SSL. Ask about caching technology, since this drives real world speed. Finally, make sure migration is included or supported, because moving a website without downtime is a skill, not a button.
If you would rather not manage any of this, our managed EU hosting handles the full stack on infrastructure in Amsterdam.