About

Built by engineers,
for engineers.

Pulsar67 exists because we were tired of overpriced, over-promised, under-delivered hosting. So we built the host we wanted to use.

Our story

Why we started Pulsar67.

We spent years deploying production workloads on the big-name cloud providers and watching invoices balloon for capacity we barely used. We tried the budget VPS hosts — and got oversold nodes, hidden caps, and support replies that read like ChatGPT trained on a 2009 FAQ.

So we built our own. We own the hardware. We picked the network. We answer the tickets. No marketing-led "tiers" that exist only to upsell you to the next one. No "unlimited" claims that hide a 1-vCPU-shared-with-200-strangers reality.

Just honest specs, transparent pricing, and the kind of support you'd want if it were your own server going sideways at 2 AM.

What we believe

The principles we run on.

Four commitments. We've written them down so you can hold us to them.

Honesty over hype

If a spec is "up to," we say "up to." If a feature is on a roadmap, we say it's on a roadmap. We don't ship marketing copy as documentation.

Pricing without traps

What's on the pricing page is what shows up on your invoice. No setup fees, no auto-upsells, no "your second year is +40%" surprises.

Engineers on support

The person who replies to your ticket has SSH'd into a misbehaving node before. No tier-1 script-readers, no "have you tried turning it off."

Owned, not resold

We own our nodes. We don't rebrand someone else's VPS as our own. If something breaks, we can walk over and look at it.

By the numbers

Receipts, not promises.

Stats from the last twelve months of operation. Updated quarterly.

99.99%
12-month uptime
<8m
Avg critical response
<60s
Deploy time
100%
Owned hardware
The name

Why "Pulsar67"?

A pulsar is a rotating neutron star — one of the most precise, predictable signals in the universe. Some pulsars beat with better timekeeping than atomic clocks.

That's the standard we hold ourselves to. Servers should be predictable. Performance should be predictable. Invoices, support response times, network performance — all predictable.

The 67 is for 1967 — the year Jocelyn Bell Burnell discovered the first pulsar. We thought naming the company after a discovery made by a grad student who wasn't credited for it on the original Nobel Prize fit the spirit nicely.

Predictable timing
Always broadcasting
High energy density
Built to last

Let's deploy something.

Read enough? Spin up a Nano for the price of a coffee and benchmark us. If we're not better than what you've got, we'll refund it.