Hostinger Just Launched a New eCommerce Tool That Removes the Website Altogether

Hostinger Just Removed Needing A Website
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Hostinger just launched an AI-powered eCommerce platform that lets users start selling from a checkout link. Aptly called Hostinger Ecommerce, the new tool is simple: All solopreneurs have to do is upload a product photo, let Kodee — Hostinger’s in-house AI — generate the listing, connect a payment method, and share the checkout link.

Nope, no website needed.

Each link has the cart, checkout, payments, and shipping, and it can go anywhere, whether that’s a TikTok bio, an Instagram DM, a WhatsApp thread, or a LinkTree. Hostinger likens it to a kitchen: In the official press release, it described the new platform as “the kitchen behind the business.”

As in: Ecommerce is the kitchen handling every order, while websites, TikTok shops, and social channels are just dining rooms. And anyone selling hosting may want to pay attention to what some of the orders are telling them.

Not Every Seller Needs a Website

According to Salesforce’s 2025 Connected Shoppers Report, 76% of Gen Z has discovered products on social media, but only 39% has actually bought there. Hostinger thinks Ecommerce could be the missing link between those two disparities.

More Shoppers Are Discovering Products on Social Media

The share of shoppers discovering products through social platforms increased from 46% in 2023 to 53% in 2025, according to Salesforce.

Twenty years ago, the typical SMB owner would buy a domain, choose a host, build their site, and voila, start selling. But these days, a number of sellers are going in another direction — from TikTok creators, Instagram shops, craft sellers, influencers promoting products. (We’ve all seen the “Comment ‘SHOP’ for the link!” influencer-partnership posts.) For them, the audience already exists.

The social media profile is new storefront; the new landing page, if you will.

But the website is not dead. It can’t be, anyway: DreamHost's local business survey found that businesses with websites are seen as 41% more trustworthy than those without. And there’s a funny part: Gen Z — the same generation driving the solopreneur wave Hostinger is following — wants websites more than anyone. In that same survey, 72% said a website is necessary for credibility.

This really can't be replaced by a TikTok bio. In fact, by Hostinger’s own words: “Adding a new channel doesn’t mean rebuilding — it means opening another door.”

Hosting Is Splitting Into Two Markets

Though primarily targeted at solopreneurs, Hostinger's Ecommerce platform is actually a major sign of the times, one that shows just how much web hosting is changing in a diverging market. One side is racing deeper into infrastructure — how do growing businesses and enterprises scale? — and the other is focused on a more hands-off market that removes infrastructure entirely.

It’s what Hostinger’s VP of product, Saulius Lazaravičius, calls delivering “outcomes.”

“People stopped chasing AI features and started looking for hosting that helps them ship something real,” Lazaravičius previously told HostingAdvice. “Value became less about novelty itself and more about outcomes: performance, cost efficiency, smart integrations, and tools that actually support the way they work.”

“Value became less about novelty itself and more about outcomes: performance, cost efficiency, smart integrations, and tools that actually support the way they work.”

— Saulius Lazaravičius

And it turns out that selling to people who don’t care about hosting is good for business. Hostinger has spent years building on its services — hosting, domains, an AI website builder, app-building platform, business email, AI assistants — and now it’s added eCommerce tools that don’t need a website at all.

It's obvious that Hostinger is undercutting the big eCommerce platforms by removing the website, but it is on price, too. Ecommerce starts at $2.99 per month against Shopify's and Wix's $29 entry points.

Even so, it’s as they say: You get what you pay for. The press release doesn’t say how many products Ecommerce supports, but for reference, we do know Hostinger's Website Builder caps out at 1,000 products. It’s a tall ceiling for solopreneurs but a low one for any serious retailer.

Then again, maybe the two sides aren't so different: Every AI-generated listing, every Kodee conversation, every outcome Hostinger sells runs on the exact infrastructure the other side of the market is racing to build. The solopreneur who never deals with a server is still a server customer...they just don't have to know it.