Does your website go down at the worst times? Maybe customers complain they can’t reach your site. Or you lose sales when your store crashes during busy hours.
That sounds like what unreliable hosting delivers. It also costs you money, trust, and visitors every single day.
However, the good thing is that you can learn how to keep your hosting reliable, which requires no technical skills. You just need to follow simple steps and watch for warning signs.
This guide shows you;
- Easy ways to monitor your hosting performance
- Simple maintenance tasks that prevent problems
- Warning signs that trouble is coming
- Quick fixes when things go wrong
- Smart choices that boost reliability.
Let’s dive in and make your hosting rock-solid.
But first…
What Reliable Hosting Means
Reliable hosting means your website works when people visit. Simple as that. Your site stays online and working. Pages load quickly every time. Performance stays consistent, not up and down.
Good hosting stays up 99.9% of the time. That means less than 9 hours down per year. Great hosting hits 99.95% or better.
Research shows that even one hour of downtime costs small businesses an average of $8,000 in lost sales and productivity. Reliability isn’t optional.
Having understood reliable hosting, how do you keep it reliable?
1) Choose Hosting With Strong Guarantees

Pick a host that promises reliability from day one.
- Look for uptime guarantees of 99.9% minimum. Better hosts offer 99.95%.
- Check refund policies because money-back guarantees show confidence.
- Read real reviews and search for recent customer experiences about downtime.
- Ask about infrastructure since multiple servers and backup systems prevent failures.
Starting with solid hosting makes everything else easier. You can’t keep your hosting reliable if you start with weak providers.
2) Monitor Your Website Uptime Daily
You need to know when your site goes down, even if you’re sleeping. Use free monitoring tools like UptimeRobot that check your site every 5 minutes.
- Set up alerts to get emails or texts immediately when problems happen.
- Check from multiple locations because sites might work in one country but fail in another.
- Keep records and track when downtime happens to spot patterns.
Monitoring helps you catch problems fast.
The quicker you know, the quicker you fix things. Services like UptimeRobot, Pingdom, and StatusCake offer free basic monitoring. Set these up in 10 minutes, and they watch your site all day and night so you don’t have to.
3) Run Regular Speed Tests
Speed and reliability connect closely. Slow sites often have underlying problems.
- Test weekly using Google PageSpeed Insights.
- Check different pages like your homepage, product pages, and blog posts.
- Compare results and notice if speeds get worse over time.
- Document patterns because slow mornings might mean backup processes running.
Data shows websites loading in under 2 seconds have 9% bounce rates, while 5-second sites see 38% bounces. Speed problems signal reliability issues.
Go to Google PageSpeed Insights and enter your website URL. Wait for the results, which take about 30 seconds. Note your mobile and desktop scores. Save the results to compare next week.
Scores dropping over time mean problems developing. Catch them early.
4) Keep Everything Up to Date
Old software creates security holes and crashes.
- Updates fix problems before they break your site.
- Update your CMS, like WordPress, Joomla, or Drupal, because they release updates monthly.
- Check weekly for plugin updates.
- Keep visual designs current by updating themes.
- Check hosting updates, remembering that managed hosts do this automatically while unmanaged hosting requires you to update server software.
Set a weekly reminder. Spend 10 minutes updating everything. This prevents 90% of common problems.
How do you update?
- Log in to your website admin area.
- Click the updates section.
- Review what needs updating.
- Backup first before making changes.
- Click update all or update items individually.
- Check your site works after updates finish.
Never skip backups before updating because updates occasionally cause conflicts.
5) Set Up Automatic Backups
Backups save you when things break. They’re essential to keep your hosting reliable long-term. Daily backups work best because your site changes daily.
- Store backups off-site since backups on the same server don’t help if that server crashes.
- Keep multiple versions and save backups for 30 days.
- Test restores by actually restoring from backup once a month to verify it works.
Most quality hosts include automatic backups. Enable this feature immediately.
How to enable automatic site data backup.
- Log in to your hosting control panel and find the backup section.
- Turn on automatic daily backups.
- Choose off-site storage if available.
- Set backup retention to 30 days.
- Save settings and download one backup to verify it works.
Some hosts charge extra for backups. Pay for it because losing your entire site costs way more.
6) Monitor Resource Usage
Servers have limits. When you hit those limits, sites crash or slow down.
- Check CPU usage because high CPU usage means your site works too hard.
- Monitor RAM since not enough memory causes crashes.
- Watch the bandwidth because running out stops your site from loading.
- Track storage space since full drives cause errors.
Your hosting control panel shows resource usage. Check it weekly. Under 70% usage means you’re fine with plenty of room. Usage between 70-85% means start planning an upgrade soon. Between 85-95% means upgrade very soon because problems are coming. Over 95% usage means upgrade immediately since you’re at the breaking point.
7) Clean Your Database Monthly
Databases store all your content and settings. They get cluttered over time.
- Delete spam comments because these pile up fast.
- Remove old revisions since WordPress saves every edit.
- Clear transients, which are temporary data that should delete but aren’t.
- Optimize tables to reorganize data for faster access.
Big, messy databases slow everything down and cause crashes.
Install a database optimization plugin like WP-Optimize for WordPress.
- Run a backup first because you should always back up before cleaning.
- Delete spam and trash comments.
- Remove old post revisions but keep the last 5.
- Clear expired transients.
- Optimize database tables.
- Check your site works properly after cleaning.
Do this monthly because it takes 15 minutes and prevents many performance problems.
8) Use a Content Delivery Network
CDNs copy your site to servers worldwide. Visitors load from the nearest one. This creates faster loading because a reduced distance means better speed.
Your main server handles less traffic, which means less server load. If one server fails, others still work, giving you better uptime.
Many hosts include free CDN access. Turn it on.
Check if your host includes free CDN because many do now. If not, sign up for the Cloudflare free plan. Follow the setup instructions, which usually take 10 minutes.
- Update your DNS settings as instructed.
- Wait 24 hours for changes to take effect.
- Test from different locations to verify it works.
CDNs help you keep your hosting reliable by distributing load across multiple servers.
9) Enable Security Protection

Security problems cause downtime. Hacks crash sites and get you blocked from search engines.
- Turn on firewalls to block bad traffic before it reaches your site.
- Enable malware scanning with daily scans that catch infections early.
- Use strong passwords by making them long and random.
- Add two-factor authentication for an extra login security layer.
- Limit login attempts to stop brute force attacks.
Research shows 43% of cyber attacks target small businesses, and many cause extended downtime during recovery.
- Enable your host’s firewall in the control panel.
- Turn on automatic malware scanning.
- Install a security plugin like Wordfence for WordPress.
- Set up two-factor authentication on your hosting account.
- Change all passwords to strong, unique ones.
- Enable login attempt limiting, usually 5 tries, then block.
- Set up security alerts to your email.
Security protects reliability because hacked sites go offline for hours or days.
10) Watch Your Email Carefully
Your host sends important alerts. Don’t ignore them. Resource warnings tell you things like “You’re using 90% of your bandwidth.” Security alerts say “Unusual login attempt detected.” Renewal notices remind you, “Your hosting expires in 30 days.” Backup confirmations confirm “Daily backup completed successfully.”
Set up a filter so hosting emails don’t get lost in spam or clutter.
When you get resource warnings, plan upgrades immediately. Security alerts need investigation right away, and change passwords if needed. Never let hosting expire by setting payment auto-renewal for renewal notices. Failed backup alerts need fixing the same day. Ignoring warnings leads to preventable downtime.
11) Test Your Website from Different Devices
Sites sometimes work on computers but fail on phones. Or work in one browser but break in another.
- Test on phones, both iPhone and Android.
- Check tablets like the iPad and Android tablets.
- Try different browsers, including Chrome, Safari, Firefox, and Edge.
- Ask friends to test because they use different devices than you.
- Do this monthly to catch problems before customers complain.
- Check that your homepage loads and everything appears correctly.
- Make sure links work by clicking main menu items and buttons.
- Verify that forms submit properly, including contact forms and search boxes.
- Confirm that images show and all pictures display properly.
- Notice if speed feels good and pages feel fast and responsive.
For stores, test the entire purchase process to make sure checkout works.
Problems with mobile devices cost you money. Over 60% of web traffic comes from phones now.
12) Keep Plugin Count Low
Every plugin adds code that your server must process. Too many plugins slow things down and create conflicts. Audit monthly by reviewing every plugin you have installed. Delete unused ones because if you don’t need it, remove it. Choose quality since one good plugin beats three mediocre ones. Update regularly because outdated plugins cause crashes.
Keep under 20 plugins for most sites. Under 10 is even better.
List all installed plugins. Ask “Do I really use this?” for each one. Deactivate plugins you haven’t used in 3 months. Wait 24 hours to ensure nothing breaks. Delete deactivated plugins completely. Note speed improvements. Fewer plugins mean better reliability because sites with 30+ plugins crash more often.
13) Monitor Your Uptime Percentage
Track your actual reliability over time. Monthly reports from most monitoring tools are free.
- Calculate the percentage by dividing the uptime by the total time.
- Compare guarantees to see if your host meets their promises.
- Spot trends to notice if reliability is getting worse.
If your uptime drops below 99.8%, contact your host or consider switching.
Understanding uptime numbers helps you judge performance. An uptime of 99.9% means 8.76 hours down per year, which is a good baseline. At 99.95% uptime, you get 4.38 hours down per year, which is better. The excellent level is 99.99% uptime with only 52 minutes down per year. However, 99.5% uptime means 43 hours down per year, which is not acceptable. Track these numbers monthly and demand better if you’re not hitting 99.9%.
14) Plan for Traffic Spikes
Sudden traffic surges crash unprepared sites. To keep your hosting reliable, you need to plan ahead, especially during busy times. Identify busy periods like holidays, sales, events, and trending content.
- Upgrade temporarily since many hosts allow temporary resource boosts.
- Enable caching to reduce server load during spikes.
- Optimize beforehand by speeding up your site before traffic hits.
- Monitor closely and watch during expected spike times.
Black Friday, Christmas, and major sales events need preparation.
- Mark busy dates on your calendar 30 days ahead.
- Contact your host about temporary upgrades.
- Run speed tests and fix any issues.
- Enable all caching systems.
- Create a CDN account if you don’t have one.
- Back up everything the day before. Monitor closely during the event.
- Downgrade after the spike to save money.
15) Know When to Upgrade

Sometimes your current plan just isn’t enough anymore. Recognize upgrade signals. Consistent slow speeds despite optimization efforts mean you need more power. Regular resource warnings show you are constantly hitting limits.
Growing traffic that doubled or tripled from when you started needs more resources. Downtime increases the signal of more problems than before.
Business growth means your site now makes serious money and needs better reliability.
Don’t wait until major problems happen. Upgrade proactively.
When traffic doubles, move from shared to VPS hosting.
Speed scores dropping mean you need better hardware resources. Running a store requires upgrading to at least a VPS for reliability. Over 20,000 visitors monthly suggest considering cloud hosting.
Critical business sites shouldn’t risk cheap hosting anymore. Upgrading costs more monthly but prevents costly downtime.
Take Control of Your Reliability
Reliable hosting doesn’t happen by accident. It requires choosing quality providers, monitoring performance, maintaining systems, and responding to warnings quickly. Follow these steps monthly because most take just minutes. Together, they prevent the majority of downtime and performance problems that plague websites.
Your customers expect your site to work every time they visit. Don’t let unreliable hosting cost you money and reputation. Visit Truehost today and build your website on hosting designed for rock-solid reliability. Their infrastructure and features make it easy to keep your hosting reliable so you can focus on growing your business instead of fighting technical problems.
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