Overview

Product video
Plesk is the leading WebOps platform to build, secure and run applications, websites and hosting businesses. The Plesk Business & Collaboration Edition delivers real value to your business without cutting of flexibility or security. A special edition bundled with relevant top extensions at a discounted bundle price.
=BUILD= The Welcome Guide helps you during the first steps with Plesk before the advisor takes over. Directly start creating your email addresses and websites with a few easy steps.
=SECURE= With Acronis we selected one of the most trusted partners for backup and security for you. Together with both of our antivirus scanners for mails and websites we make sure you have everything to be highly secured.
=RUN= Building your Website is one side of the medal but the real challenge is to keep them up-to-date and highly visible to all visitors. These are the strength of our Smart Updates and SEO Toolkit! The Business & Collaboration Edition contains:
- Plesk Web Host Edition
- 10 Plesk Premium Email Mailboxes
- Acronis Server Backup
- SEO Toolkit Personal Edition
- ImunifyAV
- WordPress Smart Updates for 10 websites
- Backup to Cloud Pro
- Google PageSpeed Insights
- Fully Integrated DIY Website Builder by Sitejet Plesk runs smoothly on a t3.micro instance for less than 10 websites or applications with a small load. We recommend using an m5a.large instance with SSD or higher for larger workloads.
Highlights
- *Plesk Premium Mail powered by Kolab* - Secure business class Email and collaboration tools, 10 Mailboxes. Upgrades available separately.
- Enhanced security core that protects your server from brute force attacks and protects your web sites from common malware attacks.
- Ready-to-code environment with LAMP and NGINX, PHP, Javascript, NodeJS, Docker, Ruby and Python - with Git support.
Details
Introducing multi-product solutions
You can now purchase comprehensive solutions tailored to use cases and industries.
Features and programs
Financing for AWS Marketplace purchases
Pricing
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Dimension | Cost/hour |
|---|---|
m7a.large Recommended | $0.313 |
t3.micro | $0.313 |
t2.micro | $0.156 |
c7i.metal-48xl | $1.25 |
m7i.16xlarge | $0.625 |
t2.small | $0.156 |
c6a.4xlarge | $0.625 |
m6i.16xlarge | $0.625 |
m7i.48xlarge | $1.25 |
c7a.4xlarge | $0.625 |
Vendor refund policy
Please contact our Support Team, flagging your ticket as a licensing issue, if you have any refund requests: https://www.plesk.com/support/
Custom pricing options
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Delivery details
64-bit (x86) Amazon Machine Image (AMI)
Amazon Machine Image (AMI)
An AMI is a virtual image that provides the information required to launch an instance. Amazon EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud) instances are virtual servers on which you can run your applications and workloads, offering varying combinations of CPU, memory, storage, and networking resources. You can launch as many instances from as many different AMIs as you need.
Version release notes
Resources
Vendor resources
Support
Vendor support
Support is available 24x7 - through our live chat, e-mail based ticket system, online forums, and online documentation. A license key is required to receive email support and you can find your license key in Plesk by navigating to 'Plesk' > 'Tools & Settings' > 'License Management'.
AWS infrastructure support
AWS Support is a one-on-one, fast-response support channel that is staffed 24x7x365 with experienced and technical support engineers. The service helps customers of all sizes and technical abilities to successfully utilize the products and features provided by Amazon Web Services.
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Customer reviews
Enterprise-Grade Control Panel with Best-in-Class WordPress Toolkit
Here’s what I think is currently best about Plesk, along with the specific problems it solves.
First, the “WordPress Whisperer” (the Toolkit). The problem is that managing 10+ WordPress sites quickly turns into a mess of separate logins, constant pending updates, and that lingering “will this plugin break my site?” anxiety. The benefit is that the WordPress Toolkit is arguably the best in the industry. With Smart Updates, Plesk’s AI-driven updates clone your site, run the update in a sandbox, perform a visual regression test to catch anything that looks “off,” and only then push changes to production. Staging and cloning are also straightforward: you can spin up a staging environment in one click, sync data back and forth, and harden the security of every site on the server with a single toggle.
Second, multi-OS flexibility. The problem with most control panels is that they’re Linux-only, so if you need to run a .NET 10.0 application on Windows Server, you often end up stuck with clunky, manual configuration work. The benefit with Plesk is that it’s the only major player that offers a near-identical experience on both Linux and Windows, which makes it much easier to manage a mixed server fleet through one interface. In 2026, its support for .NET 10.0 and MariaDB 11.8 across both OS types feels seamless.
Third, security without “gatekeeping.” The problem is that hardening a server typically demands deep knowledge of iptables, fail2ban, and SSL protocols. The benefit is that Plesk simplifies this with the Security Advisor, which provides a “security score” and actionable one-click fixes. SSL It! handles the full lifecycle of short-lived SSL certificates (which have become the industry standard in 2026), automatically reissuing them so you don’t end up with a “Your connection is not private” error. On top of that, proactive protection through integrated Imunify360 and ModSecurity helps block brute-force attacks and web exploits before they ever touch your code.
Finally, a developer-first workflow. The problem is that many developers find control panels restrictive and would rather work directly with Git, Docker, or Node.js. The benefit is that Plesk treats these tools as first-class citizens. With Git integration, you can set up a push-to-deploy workflow so that when you push code to GitHub or GitLab, Plesk automatically pulls it and restarts your Node.js or Python app. Docker support is also built in, letting you manage containers directly from the UI and deploy microservices alongside more traditional websites.
Plesk is owned by WebPros (the same parent company as cPanel), and 2026 has brought yet another noticeable price hike—around 26% on average across most tiers.
That “nickel and dimed” feeling: Even though the core control panel is powerful, a lot of features that feel essential—such as specialized antivirus (Imunify360), certain backup rotation options, and more advanced SEO tools—sit behind separate, often pricey, monthly licenses.
Tier limitations: If you’re on the “Web Admin” edition and suddenly need an 11th domain, you’re pushed into upgrading to “Web Pro.” That’s a big jump in cost for what is, in practice, just one additional site.
2. Resource “Bloat”
Plesk is a heavy-duty suite, and it’s simply not built for “lean and mean” setups.
RAM hunger: In 2026, an idle Plesk server typically uses roughly 600MB to 1.2GB of RAM just to keep the panel running. If you’re trying to run it on a cheap $5/month VPS with 1GB of RAM, Plesk will likely bog down the system before you even get a website installed.
Slower UI: Compared with lighter panels like DirectAdmin or newer open-source alternatives, the Plesk interface can feel sluggish at times—especially when loading the “Extensions” catalog or opening the WordPress Toolkit.
3. The “Black Box” Problem (Abstraction)
Plesk makes complicated server tasks easier by abstracting them away, but for advanced sysadmins that convenience can become a drawback.
Custom configs: If you edit an Apache or Nginx configuration file manually from the command line, Plesk may overwrite those changes the next time you click “Save” in the GUI. To avoid that, you have to learn the “Plesk way” (templates and its own workflow), which is frustrating if you’re used to standard Linux administration.
Troubleshooting: When something breaks with mail or a database, the UI error messages can be vague. You often end up digging through deeper, Plesk-specific log paths (like /var/log/plesk/) that don’t always match the conventions you’d expect on a typical Linux server.
4. Backup & Migration Clunkiness
Massive backups: The built-in backup manager is generally reliable, but it can be very slow and resource-intensive on large sites. On high-traffic servers, it also seems prone to “timeout” issues during the compression stage.
Migration failures: The “Plesk Migrator” tool is a good idea in theory, but it often stumbles on custom PHP settings or more complex database permissions when moving sites from cPanel or older Plesk versions. In those cases, I’ve found it tends to require manual intervention to finish the job properly.
Here are the specific problems Plesk is solving, and how they translate into direct benefits for you.
1. Problem: “Update Anxiety” and Broken Sites
The Solution: AI-Powered Smart Updates
Manual updates are risky; one incompatible plugin can take down a high-traffic site.
The Benefit: Plesk’s Smart Update clones your site into a sandbox, runs the update, and uses AI-driven visual regression testing to compare the “before” and “after.” If it detects a broken layout or a 404 error, it stops the update. The result is a 100% success rate on updates without you having to manually check a staging site.
2. Problem: Managing Fragmented Tech Stacks
The Solution: Native Multi-Stack Support (Docker, Node.js, .NET 10)
In 2026, most developers aren’t just running “simple PHP.” They might have a WordPress site, a Node.js microservice, and maybe a legacy .NET app.
The Benefit: Plesk gives you one unified dashboard for all of it. You can manage Docker containers, deploy from Git, and switch PHP or .NET versions on a per-domain basis. You spend less time “context switching,” because you don’t need five different tools to manage one project.
3. Problem: The “Security Skills Gap”
The Solution: The Security Advisor & Auto-Healing
Hardening a server typically requires a specialized sysadmin to configure Web Application Firewalls (WAF) and fail2ban rules.
The Benefit: Plesk’s Security Advisor provides a “one-click” hardening path. It automates the re-issuance of short-lived SSL certificates (now the 2026 standard) and uses Self-Healing tools to automatically restart services (like MySQL or Nginx) if they crash. You get enterprise-grade security without needing a dedicated security officer.
4. Problem: Client/User “Micro-Management”
The Solution: Granular Role Delegation
If you manage sites for others, giving them “too much” access is a recipe for support tickets when someone accidentally deletes a database.
The Benefit: You can create custom Service Plans and User Roles. A client can access their email settings and file manager, but still be locked out of server-wide PHP settings. You end up with fewer support tickets, plus a professional, branded interface to present to your clients.
All-in-One, Easy-to-Use Platform for Deployment, Monitoring, and Website Management
Clean, Unified Dashboard for Easy Server & Website Management
It allows easy handling of domains, emails, databases, DNS, and SSL from a single dashboard.
Plesk also offers strong built-in security like Let’s Encrypt, firewalls, and malware protection.
Its support for both Linux and Windows servers makes it flexible for different hosting needs.
The licensing model can become expensive as the number of domains grows.
Occasionally, updates or extensions may cause compatibility or stability issues.
For advanced custom server configurations, manual control is more limited compared to pure command-line setups.
It reduces manual effort in managing websites, databases, emails, DNS, and SSL, saving time and minimizing errors. Automated tools for WordPress management, backups, and security improve reliability and consistency. This benefits me by speeding up deployments, reducing operational overhead, and allowing me to focus more on application and business work instead of server maintenance.
The best control panel for managing servers and hosting
It enables me to automate many recurring tasks such as backups and, today, it is compatible with major storage providers .
Hosting control panel
Its unified dashboard handles site deployment, security configurations, database administration, and SSL management efficiently. The interface simplifies complex server tasks through intuitive controls, making it accessible even for less technical users.
Centralized management works consistently across server environments, allowing unified control over domains, applications, and security protocols without switching interfaces. The automation capabilities handle tasks like one-click WordPress deployments and bulk SSL installations reliably, reducing manual configuration time.
Resource management struggles on lower-tier servers, occasionally causing performance bottlenecks during peak loads.
The standardized interface accelerated onboarding for junior IT staff while maintaining enterprise-grade security protocols. However, budget constraints emerged as the primary operational hurdle due to unpredictable licensing costs.