Zomro Crosses the Atlantic: VPS Infrastructure Launches in the USA

Hosting provider Zomro has launched a new US location for its virtual servers, expanding its Cloud VPS infrastructure beyond Europe. The company now offers VPS deployment in the United States for customers targeting Western traffic or simply tired of watching transatlantic latency turn websites into slow-motion theatre.

The new American location joins Zomro’s “Cloud Premium VPS” lineup, which is aimed at resource-intensive projects where every millisecond matters and “loading” is not supposed to become part of the user experience. The platform is powered by Intel Xeon Gold processors clocked at up to 3.7 GHz, NVMe and SSD storage, 1 Gbps connectivity, and unmetered traffic. The latter is particularly useful for anyone who no longer enjoys monitoring bandwidth charts like utility bills during winter.


Built for Western Traffic and Latency-Sensitive Projects

According to Zomro, the US-based infrastructure is designed for services working with North American audiences. The location is expected to suit SaaS platforms, online stores, gaming services, VPN platforms, media projects, APIs, and other applications where network response times directly affect user experience.

The launch may also attract developers and businesses integrating with US-based cloud ecosystems, CDN providers, and external platforms. Hosting an application thousands of kilometres away from its primary audience tends to produce the digital equivalent of shouting through a tunnel — technically functional, but not especially elegant.

The entry-level plan in the new location starts with the Essential Intel configuration, which includes 1 vCPU, 2.5 GB RAM, and 15 GB NVMe storage for $7.48 per month. Larger configurations are also available, scaling up to 24 CPU cores, 60 GB RAM, and 420 GB of storage.

Four Countries, One VPS Portfolio

With the addition of the United States, Zomro now operates VPS infrastructure across four countries: Germany, the Netherlands, Poland, and the USA.

The expansion reflects a broader trend in the hosting market, where providers increasingly position infrastructure closer to regional audiences rather than expecting users to patiently tolerate half-second delays. In modern web services, even minor latency issues can feel suspiciously similar to using the internet through a satellite dish during a thunderstorm.

For Zomro, the American launch also marks another step in competing for international workloads in a market where geography still matters — despite years of promises that “the cloud” would somehow make physical distance irrelevant.

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