Pakistani host Host Bring was founded in 2000. It claims to be Pakistan’s top web hosting service provider in terms of customers, to offer 20 times faster service, and to be Pakistan’s only hosting company to offer a 30-day money-back guarantee. It boasts about serving 27,000+ websites for 77,000 happy customers, including 10,000+ business websites and 20+ government websites.
Host Bring’s website is in English.
Features and Ease of Use
Host Bring offers three web hosting, three shared hosting, and three WordPress plans, although it’s hard to tell how different they are apart from the number of hosted domains.
The three web hosting plans provide you with:
- 99.9% server uptime guarantee
- cPanel control panel
- 1 GB to unmetered SSD storage
- 10 GB to unmetered bandwidth
- 2 to unmetered subdomains
You can create your website using the free website builder that has a user-friendly drag-and-drop user interface. Alternatively, you can create a CMS-backed website with the one-click installer that lets you install WordPress, Drupal, Joomla, and many more applications with a single click.
Your website will sit on SSD storage that is up to 20 times faster (and more reliable) than traditional HDD storage.
Multiple security tools are available to safeguard your website, and analytics let you gain valuable insights into your visitors.
Pricing and Support
Host Bring’s web hosting plans start cheap, and you could get a free domain for as long as you’re hosted by the company. Although you should be able to pay for plans in Pakistani rupees or U.S. dollars by various methods (PayPal, Visa, Mastercard, or Maestro) on monthly or annual billing cycles, it looks like you can’t purchase plans online. You have to fill out a booking form.
First-time customers get a 30-day money-back guarantee that gives you a month to change your mind.
You can contact the 24/7 customer support team via telephone, email, online contact form, or Facebook Messenger, but I was unable to summon support via Messenger. The lack of a pre-sales support response might not be so bad, were it not for the fact that the self-support resources (including frequently asked questions) are insufficient.