
Before writing this article, I wanted to find out exactly what that distance means in practice for an Australian audience, so I set up a live WordPress site on a US IONOS server and ran GTmetrix tests from both Sydney and San Francisco to give you a direct comparison.
The infrastructure benchmarks are strong. The Sydney GTmetrix results tell a more nuanced story. Here is the full picture.


| Category | Score | Why This Score |
|---|---|---|
| Prices | 8.8/10 | Competitive pricing with no location surcharge across US data centers. Renewal stability on VPS plans is a genuine differentiator. |
| Features | 8.9/10 | ISO 27001 certification, geo-redundant architecture, DDoS protection, and Cloudflare CDN all included. The absence of any Asia-Pacific presence is the main gap for Australian users. |
| Performance | 7.8/10 | US server benchmarks are exceptional. GTmetrix from Sydney recorded a 3.6s LCP and 957ms TTFB, reflecting the distance to the US origin. Zero TBT and zero CLS on both tests are genuine positives. |
| Ease of Use | 9.4/10 | Clean five-step checkout with location selection at configuration. The IONOS dashboard and Cloud Panel are well organised once you understand the two-interface structure. |
| Support | 9.6/10 | Bot-to-human handoff within one minute on live chat. Accurate and honest responses including clear flagging of post-signup location limitations. |
| Overall | 8.9/10 | IONOS delivers excellent infrastructure at a competitive price. For Australian users, the distance to the US origin is the honest limitation. The right fit depends entirely on your site type and how much your Australian audience performance matters to your goals. |
No. IONOS does not currently operate a data center in Australia or anywhere in the Asia-Pacific region.
Their infrastructure spans the United States, Germany, the United Kingdom, France, and Spain. There are no plans publicly announced for an Australian or Asian location.
For Australian site owners, the available IONOS locations are all in the US:
Las Vegas is the recommended choice for Australian audiences as the geographically closest US option.
That said, 12,500km is a significant distance, and the GTmetrix results from Sydney quantify exactly what that means in practice.
What IONOS does offer for Australian visitors is Cloudflare CDN, included with most plans.
Cloudflare has an edge node in Sydney, which means cached static content can be served to Australian visitors from Sydney rather than from the US. The origin server remains in the US, but for content-heavy sites with caching properly configured, this partially bridges the geographic gap.
IONOS offers hosting across shared, VPS, cloud, and dedicated tiers. For Australian users with location control as a requirement, VPS is the relevant starting point.
Six tiers are available from VPS XS at $2 per month through to VPS XXL at $22 per month, each step adding vCores, RAM, and NVMe storage.
IONOS accepts the following payment methods:
All plans include a 30-day money-back guarantee. State and local taxes apply.
Check the pricing widget below for the latest rates.

To give Australian site owners an honest picture of what IONOS delivers, I took two approaches: infrastructure benchmarks on the US server, and real-world GTmetrix tests run from both Sydney and San Francisco.
The benchmarks show what the hardware is capable of. The GTmetrix tests show what an Australian visitor actually experiences.
I installed WordPress on a live IONOS US VPS, a standard install with a theme, caching plugin, SEO plugin, security plugin, images, and content to simulate a real business site rather than an empty WordPress shell.
I then ran GTmetrix tests from two locations:
Running both tests on the same site at the same time gives a clear picture of how much of the performance difference is the server and how much is the distance.
| Metric | Sydney, Australia | San Francisco, USA |
|---|---|---|
| GTmetrix Grade | C | B |
| Performance Score | 64% | 89% |
| Structure Score | 70% | 83% |
| Largest Contentful Paint | 3.6s | 1.6s |
| Total Blocking Time | 0ms | 0ms |
| Cumulative Layout Shift | 0 | 0 |
| First Contentful Paint | 2.3s | 1.3s |
| Time to Interactive | 3.4s | 1.6s |
| Onload Time | 3.5s | 1.6s |
| Fully Loaded Time | 4.1s | 1.9s |
| TTFB | 957ms | 595ms |
| Connect Time | 423ms | 231ms |
| Backend Time | 534ms | 364ms |
The good news first. Both tests recorded zero Total Blocking Time and zero Cumulative Layout Shift. TBT of 0ms means no JavaScript is delaying page rendering.
CLS of 0 means the page does not jump around as content loads. These two Core Web Vitals metrics are a full pass from both locations, which matters for Google’s ranking signals.

The LCP tells the honest distance story. The Sydney test returned a Largest Contentful Paint of 3.6s. Google’s threshold for a good LCP is under 2.5s. The Sydney result is above that threshold, which means Australian visitors on a site hosted on IONOS’s US server without further optimization would see a Core Web Vitals flag for LCP.
Compare that to the San Francisco result of 1.6s LCP, which falls well within Google’s exceptional threshold. The 2-second gap between the two results is almost entirely explained by the 12,000km between Sydney and Las Vegas.

The TTFB breakdown is the most informative number. The Sydney TTFB of 957ms breaks down as 423ms just to establish a connection to the US server, and then 534ms for the server to process the request and begin sending a response.
That connection time alone (423ms before a single byte of content is sent) reflects the physical distance. A server in Sydney would bring connection time to under 20ms.
The San Francisco TTFB of 595ms shows that even from within the US, the TTFB is not low. This is a WordPress site with standard plugins, and backend processing time is 364ms. There is room to bring this down with object caching, database optimization, and a lightweight theme.
Improving the US performance would proportionally improve the Sydney experience since the backend time is the same variable at both locations — only the connection time changes.
The infrastructure benchmarks confirm that the server hardware itself is not the bottleneck.
I ran a full sysbench and stress test suite on the IONOS VPS Linux XL (8 vCores, 16GB RAM, 480GB NVMe):
| Metric | Result |
|---|---|
| CPU Events per Second | 24,911 |
| Memory Throughput | 33,229 MiB/sec |
| Disk Read Speed | 400.53 MiB/s |
| Network Upload | 5,989 Mbps |
| Stress Test (5 runs) | All passed, 0 failures |
The server is fast. The distance between it and Australian visitors is the limiting factor, not the hardware.
The two GTmetrix results together tell the complete story. IONOS delivers genuinely strong infrastructure. The San Francisco result of 89% Performance and 1.6s LCP confirms that.
For Australian visitors, the 12,000km+ to the US origin produces a 3.6s LCP and 957ms TTFB that falls below Google’s good threshold for LCP.
For Australian site owners, the practical path to better performance on IONOS is heavy caching, a full-page caching layer, object caching, and CDN configuration that maximizes what Cloudflare’s Sydney edge node can serve without hitting the US origin.
With that setup in place, a significant proportion of page requests never reach the US server at all. For sites where every request is dynamic and cannot be cached, the distance cost is unavoidable.

The IONOS signup and setup process follows a clear five-step flow visible in the navigation bar throughout checkout: Your selection, Cart, Customer details, Order review, and Payment. US location selection happens at the server configuration stage, before you reach the cart.
From the IONOS website, I navigated to the VPS hosting page.

Six plans are displayed side by side with specs listed directly beneath each one, including CPU cores, RAM, NVMe storage, and the billing term required to access the promotional rate. I selected VPS XL for testing.
I found the plan page easy to scan. The spec breakdown is visible without expanding anything, and the pricing is honest about the term commitment required to reach each rate.
Clicking Add to Cart opened the shopping cart showing the full plan summary: 8 vCores, 16GB RAM, 480GB NVMe SSD, with the data center listed as United States.
For Australian users, Las Vegas is the right selection as the closest available US location to Australia, so I chose the United States under the server location list.

The cart confirmed the billing term, total cost, and renewal rate before I moved forward.
I found the cart genuinely transparent. The renewal price was visible on the same screen as the promotional rate, which means there are no surprises when the first billing period ends.
Clicking Continue from the cart opened the account creation page. IONOS requires billing information upfront: first name, last name, country, street address, city, postal code, email address, and phone number.
You also select whether to register as a personal or company account, and create your password at the same step.

The form is more involved than providers that allow a quick email-and-password signup before showing the order summary.
For Australian businesses registering as a company, having all of this on one screen is appropriate. For individual buyers, it feels like a slightly heavier commitment earlier in the flow than expected.
The payment page displayed six options clearly laid out:

The order summary on the right showed the full total including estimated tax before I entered any payment details.
I appreciated seeing the tax estimate upfront rather than having it appear only at the final confirmation step.
After completing the order, the IONOS dashboard greeted me by name and presented a clean product selector layout.
Rather than a complex navigation menu or a long feature list, the screen is organized around six clearly labeled tiles: Domains & SSL, Email, Websites & Stores, Servers & Cloud, Security Solutions, and My Account.

An AI domain assistant card sits prominently at the top of the page with a text field for describing your project.
I found the dashboard layout refreshingly uncluttered. Everything is visible at a glance, and the tile structure makes it obvious where to go for each task.
The Website Design Service upsell panel on the right side is the one element that felt out of place on a server-focused account, but it does not get in the way of navigation.
Next, I wanted to see what IONOS offers for managing the server once it is live and how easy it is to get into from the dashboard.
To get started, you click the Servers & Cloud tile.

This takes you to a dedicated Server & Cloud page where each active VPS contract appears as its own card, showing the plan name, any attached domains, and the contract number, with a Select button to enter that server’s environment.

The card layout makes it straightforward to identify which contract you want to manage, particularly if you are running multiple VPS instances.
Clicking Select opened the IONOS Cloud Panel, a separate browser-based interface from the main dashboard where all server-specific management takes place.
The Cloud Panel organizes everything into a left sidebar with five sections: Infrastructure, Network, Security, Backup, and Management. Inside Infrastructure, the Servers list shows each VPS with its status indicator, IP address, size, OS, and a data center flag icon.
My server showed a green running status immediately on arrival.

Selecting the server from the list expanded a Features panel beneath the table showing the full configuration at a glance: Login Data with the host IP, username, and a View password link; the image source and operating system; a Plesk license key option; etc.

Everything required to connect via SSH was on this screen without any further navigation.
For active server control, the Actions dropdown at the top of the Servers table offers six options:
I found the Actions menu well-scoped. The six options cover the operations you would realistically need for day-to-day server management without adding unnecessary complexity.
Open remote console is the standout option for Australian users. If SSH latency across 12,000km ever makes a connection feel sluggish, the browser-based console provides a direct alternative.
The Recommended help topics in the left sidebar, covering VPS getting started, remote console access, and Plesk installation, are a useful addition for users setting up their first IONOS server.
IONOS’s checkout flow is transparent and well structured throughout. The plan selection, cart, and payment pages each present the information you need without hiding costs or pushing you toward anything unexpected. The full billing form at account creation is the one step that requires more from the user earlier than some providers ask.
The two-interface setup (main dashboard for account management, Cloud Panel for server management) takes a moment to understand on first encounter but becomes logical quickly.
For Australian users, the most important step in the entire process is selecting Las Vegas at the configuration stage, since that decision cannot be changed after the server is provisioned.

IONOS provides support through live chat, phone, callback scheduling, and a dedicated personal consultant program. The path to the right team starts at the Help & Contact icon in the top navigation bar.

After clicking through to the Contact tab, a topic dropdown covers the main product areas, including Hosting, Server & Cloud Infrastructure, Domains, and Email.

Selecting Server & Cloud Infrastructure surfaces the recommended contact option: a phone call with your customer ID and a temporary PIN provided upfront. For technical server queries, this is what IONOS considers the most effective channel.
Live chat is listed as an alternative. When I tested it with a question about data center provisioning and post-signup location changes, the automated bot passed the conversation to Asia from the Server Department within one minute.

She confirmed that location selection happens before purchase at the configuration step, and after verifying specifically for VPS, confirmed that changing data centers after a server order is placed requires a full re-order and manual file transfer.

For Australian users, that second point carries direct practical weight: choose Las Vegas at configuration, because switching afterward means starting over.
IONOS support is well structured, and the live chat agent answered accurately, including flagging the post-signup location limitation without prompting.
Phone support is the recommended channel for active technical issues. For pre-purchase questions about which US location best serves Australian audiences, live chat handles it efficiently.
Conditionally yes. IONOS delivers excellent infrastructure, and the US benchmark results prove it. The GTmetrix test from Sydney returned zero Total Blocking Time and zero Cumulative Layout Shift, which are genuine positives. The 3.6s LCP and 957ms TTFB are equally genuine results that reflect the 12,000km between Sydney and Las Vegas.
For Australian site owners whose primary concern is local audience performance and SEO, a provider with a Sydney data center will produce better Core Web Vitals results without the caching optimization work IONOS requires to perform at its best from Australia.
For global businesses, international brands, or Australian site owners who are comfortable with heavy caching configuration and are drawn by the pricing and infrastructure quality, IONOS is worth considering. The 30-day money-back guarantee gives you a low-risk window to run your own GTmetrix test from Sydney before committing.
For a full breakdown of everything IONOS offers, read our complete IONOS review on HostAdvice.
| Plan Name | Space | CPU | RAM | OS | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Start for free | Unlimited | - | ₹ 0 | Detail | ||
| Virtual Server XS | 10 GB | 1 core | 1 GB | ₹ 200 | Detail | |
| Virtual Server S | 80 GB | 2 cores | 2 GB | ₹ 290 | Detail | |
| Virtual Server M | 120 GB | 2 cores | 4 GB | ₹ 390 | Detail | |
| Virtual Server L | 240 GB | 4 cores | 8 GB | ₹ 770 | Detail | |
| Virtual Server XL | 480 GB | 8 cores | 16 GB | ₹ 1,350 | Detail | |
| Virtual Server XXL | 720 GB | 12 cores | 24 GB | ₹ 2,110 | Detail |
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No. IONOS does not currently operate a data center in Australia or anywhere in the Asia-Pacific region. All available server locations are in the United States and Europe.
Las Vegas, Nevada is the closest available IONOS location to Australia, at approximately 12,500km from Sydney. It is the recommended US location for Australian audiences.
I tested a live WordPress site hosted on an IONOS US server using GTmetrix from Sydney and recorded 64% Performance, 3.6s LCP, 0ms Total Blocking Time, 0 Cumulative Layout Shift, and 957ms TTFB. The same site tested from San Francisco returned 89% Performance and 1.6s LCP, confirming the infrastructure is strong and the distance is the limiting variable.
Partially. Total Blocking Time of 0ms and Cumulative Layout Shift of 0 are Core Web Vitals passes from Sydney. Largest Contentful Paint of 3.6s is above Google’s good threshold of 2.5s. A site hosted on IONOS’s US server with standard WordPress setup would carry an LCP flag for Australian visitors without significant caching optimization.
Yes. Cloudflare CDN is included with most IONOS plans, and Cloudflare has an edge node in Sydney. Cached static content — images, CSS, JavaScript — is served to Australian visitors from Sydney rather than from the US origin server. Dynamic requests still route to the US.
Yes, for VPS, Cloud, and Dedicated server plans. Location selection happens at the configuration step before checkout. Shared hosting does not offer location control.
No. All three US locations — Las Vegas, Newark, and Lenexa — carry the same plan price. There is no surcharge for choosing the closest US option to Australia.

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