When someone calls us about starting a reseller hosting business, the first thing we ask them is: how many customers do you have?
Not which plan are you interested in. Not what's your budget. How many customers do you have.
The answer tells us everything we need to know. Because the right reseller plan for someone with three clients is completely different from the right plan for someone with thirty. And someone who answers "none yet, I'm planning to get some" needs a different conversation entirely — one about what they're getting into before they spend a dollar.
This post is that conversation.
What Reseller Hosting Actually Is
The mechanics are simple. You purchase a block of hosting resources — disk space, bandwidth, accounts — at wholesale pricing. You divide those resources among your clients, brand the whole thing under your own name, set your own prices, and keep the margin. Your clients see your brand. They pay you. They call you when something breaks. HostDango — the infrastructure running underneath it all — is invisible.
Done well, it's a clean recurring revenue model. Done poorly, it's a second job you didn't apply for.
The difference between those two outcomes is almost entirely preparation.
The Question Nobody Thinks to Ask Before Starting
Most new resellers think about the money first. What can I charge? What's the margin? How many clients do I need to turn a profit? Those are legitimate questions, and we'll get to them.
But the question that actually determines whether a reseller business survives its first year is this one: how am I going to manage my customers' software?
Your clients are running websites. Those websites run on software — WordPress, plugins, themes, PHP versions, database configurations. That software has vulnerabilities. Those vulnerabilities get discovered constantly. And in 2026, with AI-powered bots scanning the internet around the clock looking for outdated installations to exploit, the window between "vulnerability discovered" and "sites getting hit" is measured in hours, not weeks.
If you're running twenty client sites and one of them gets compromised because a WordPress plugin wasn't updated, that's your problem. Not in a legal sense, necessarily — but in a 2am phone call sense. In a "my client's site is down and they're losing sales" sense. In a "I have to explain to someone who trusted me what happened to their business" sense.
"The technical part of reseller hosting isn't setting up the accounts. It's keeping twenty different websites healthy at the same time — forever."
Before you sign up for a reseller plan, have a concrete answer to these questions:
- How will you know when a client's WordPress core, theme, or plugin is outdated?
- Who updates it — you, or the client? And if it's the client, what happens when they don't?
- What's your malware scanning strategy? Are you checking, or hoping?
- If a site gets compromised, what's your restoration process and how fast can you execute it?
- Do your clients know what your responsibilities are versus theirs?
If you can answer all of those confidently, you're ready. If you're staring at the screen right now, that's useful information — it means you have some planning to do first.
The Thing Most New Resellers Underestimate: Support Load
Everyone underestimates the support load. Everyone.
It's not that clients are unreasonable. Most of them aren't. It's that every client, no matter how technically capable, will eventually have a question you need to answer, a problem you need to solve, or a situation that requires your attention at an inconvenient time. Multiply that by your client count and add the fact that problems rarely space themselves out politely, and you start to understand why reseller businesses that grow too fast tend to collapse under their own weight.
We wrote about this in an earlier post — biting off more than you can host — and it applies here directly. Ten well-supported clients who renew every year are worth more than thirty clients who leave angry after six months.
Security is now the biggest support driver
This has changed significantly in the last few years. AI and automated bots have made the security landscape genuinely harder. Attacks are faster, more sophisticated, and more targeted than they used to be. Your clients' sites are targets whether they know it or not — and the smaller and less technical the client, the less likely they are to have done anything to protect themselves.
As their reseller, you are their first line of defense whether you signed up for that role or not. Which means you need a real security posture — not just a hope that nothing bad happens.
At minimum, every client site you host should have:
- Automated daily backups with offsite storage and a tested restore process
- An active malware scanner — not just a plugin, something that actually alerts you
- A current SSL certificate — non-negotiable in 2026
- Software kept current — WordPress core, themes, plugins, PHP version
- A firewall or WAF (web application firewall) in front of the site
On backups specifically
A backup that exists but has never been tested is not a backup — it's a false sense of security. Run a test restore before you need one. Make sure you can actually get a client's site back from a clean backup in under an hour. If you can't, fix that before you take on another client.
The Business Side: Pricing, Margins, and What to Charge
Reseller hosting margins vary widely depending on your plan, your pricing strategy, and how much value you add on top of raw hosting. Raw hosting — just disk space and bandwidth with nothing else — is a race to the bottom. The big hosts will always beat you on price for commodity resources. You cannot compete there and you shouldn't try.
What you can compete on is everything else. Support that answers in minutes. Someone who knows their client's site by name. Proactive security management. A human being on the other end of the phone. These things have real value, and clients who've experienced the alternative will pay for them.
A reasonable starting framework for pricing reseller hosting services:
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1
Know your floor
Your wholesale cost per account from your reseller plan. This is your absolute minimum — you can't price below it and survive.
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2
Add your support cost
How much time do you actually spend per client per month? Be honest. If you're spending two hours a month on a client paying $10, you're losing money regardless of what the hosting costs.
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3
Price for the value, not the resource
You're not selling gigabytes. You're selling peace of mind, availability, and expertise. Price accordingly. Most small business clients will gladly pay $30–$60/month for hosting that includes real support and someone who actually picks up.
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4
Build in a growth buffer
Your prices should be able to absorb a bad month — a site that needs extra attention, a security incident, an unusually demanding client — without making you question whether the business is worth running.
Getting Started: The Practical Checklist
Once you've thought through the above, the actual setup is straightforward. Here's the order we'd recommend:
- Choose a reseller plan sized for your current client count, not your aspirational one
- Set up your WHM environment and create your first cPanel account before you onboard anyone
- Configure your backup solution and test a restore before you host a single real site
- Set up your nameservers — private nameservers keep your infrastructure invisible to clients
- Write down your support policy: what hours are you available, what's your response time commitment, what's out of scope
- Draft a simple hosting agreement — even one page is better than nothing
- Then, and only then, onboard your first client
Resellers are who we were when we started.
When HostDango began in 1999, we were resellers. We know what that first year feels like — the excitement, the learning curve, the 2am calls, the moment it clicks and starts to work. That history shapes how we treat every reseller who comes to us today. Not as an account number. As a relationship. We are genuinely invested in your success, because your clients are depending on you, and you're depending on us. That chain of trust matters to us.
If you're thinking about starting a reseller business and want to talk it through before you commit to anything, we're happy to have that conversation. No sales pitch. Just a straight discussion about whether it makes sense for where you are right now.
Learn about our reseller plans →Ready to talk reseller hosting?
Tell us how many clients you have, what they're running, and what you're trying to build. We'll tell you what plan makes sense and what to think about before you start — even if the answer is "not yet."
Start the conversation →