Key Takeaways
- OpenClaw — you know, the talk of the town — allows hosts to deploy AI agents and run them as managed services.
- Hostinger is one of the first to take the bite, having just rolled out a one-click deployment feature with OpenClaw.
- But if agents become products, it's yet another layer to the already thick stack that hosting providers have to manage.
Six months ago, hosting providers were helping customers deploy AI agents. Now, it looks like they’re the ones actually running them.
OpenClaw is sitting right in the middle of yet another change in web hosting: It’s one of the first tools that lets providers deploy agentic AI that actually simplifies the process.
Hostinger is officially the first major player to hop on the OpenClaw train and sell it as part of a service. Its one-click deployment for OpenClaw pretty much takes away every step that used to literally make setting up agentic AI a pain in the neck.
But for anyone who is thinking about doing the same, once things like OpenClaw get packaged like a product — it’s yet another thing hosting providers have to consider on their stacks, isn’t it?
OpenClaw, And Why It Took Off So Fast
To understand why this matters, it helps to look at what OpenClaw actually does and why it’s all anyone’s been talking about the past couple of weeks. Instead of just responding to prompts, OpenClaw can:
- Connect to tools like Slack, WhatsApp, Discord, and web browsers
- Actually perform multistep tasks across those platforms
- Run continuously in the background
- Can make decisions based on instructions and context
Sure, it’s the same kind of thing that powers your favorite LLM. But this is no chatbot.
And yet, with all its flexibility, OpenClaw is not plug-and-play enough for the average website owner. It’s exactly where hosts have to step in again to help translate it into something more accessible.
What This Looks Like In Practice
At the core, Hostinger is doing what it’s always done — simplifying the tech aspect of web hosting (and everything that comes with it), which now includes the new standards of marketing tools and AI.
It’s part of the larger one-click deployment train that so many people are curious about, but have always steered away from traditionally speaking due to a lack of technical expertise, explained Giedrius Zakaitis, Hostinger’s CPTO.
“Many of our customers around the world are just getting started online,” he said. “For them, this one-click solution removes the need for costly hardware like a Mac mini and keeps their AI agent running efficiently and available 24/7.”

Let’s take a look under Hostinger’s hood. It’s offering:
- containerized environments
- nexos.ai model access
- 24/7 runtime
- Hostinger’s Kodee layer (350+ admin actions, NLP control)
“Each OpenClaw deployment comes pre-installed with built-in security, integrated AI credits, and a stable, always-on environment,” Zakaitis explained.
Time to Pick a Side?
So, where could this go for hosts who follow suit? They may have a couple of paths available because no matter what, the market is clearly splitting.
One is to become an agentic platform: here you bundle infrastructure, models, and management altogether, basically “selling the outcome,” as many experts have told us dozens of times before.
Many non-technical users — from Gen Z entrepreneurs to older business owners getting online — are more curious about what they can build without learning to code, or they’re hiring someone to do it for them.
The other option for hosts is to stay closer to what they’ve always been: infrastructure providers. Still very much in demand, still necessary: Complex businesses still need hosting providers with technical expertise that goes beyond vibe coding and agentic AI.
Just remember, once it becomes a product, it’s another thing you’ll have to manage. So make sure you’re prepared.




