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What is Unlimited Hosting? The Truth Behind “Unlimited” Plans

What is Unlimited Hosting? The Truth Behind “Unlimited” Plans (2026)

What is Unlimited Hosting | myglobalHOST


The Most Misunderstood Word in Web Hosting

Type “unlimited hosting India” into Google and you will find hundreds of hosting plans promising unlimited storage, unlimited bandwidth, unlimited email accounts, and unlimited websites — all for a few hundred rupees a month.

It sounds perfect. It sounds too good to be true.

It is not quite either.

“Unlimited” hosting is one of the most effective marketing terms in the hosting industry — and also one of the most misrepresented. The truth lies somewhere between the optimistic promise on the plan page and the cynical “it’s all fake” narrative that some technical blogs push.

This guide gives you the complete, honest picture: what “unlimited” actually means technically, what is genuinely unlimited and what is not, when unlimited hosting is perfectly appropriate for your website, when it will cause you problems, and how myglobalHOST’s Unlimited Hosting plans are different from the vague claims that give this category a bad reputation.

By the end of this article, you will understand something most Indian website owners never learn — until they hit a wall they did not know existed.


Part 1: The Physics of “Unlimited” — Why Nothing Is Actually Infinite

Let us start with the most important concept in this entire guide.

A web hosting server is a physical machine. It has a finite CPU with a specific number of cores and a specific clock speed. It has a finite amount of RAM. It has finite disk space. Its network connection has a finite bandwidth capacity. These are hardware facts — not policy decisions.

No hosting provider can offer genuinely infinite resources because no server has genuinely infinite resources. Physics does not allow it.

When a hosting company says “unlimited,” they do not mean infinite. What they mean — and what the industry has standardised around — is unmetered: you will not receive a specific allocation that shows a number ticking down. You will not be charged overage fees when you exceed a storage quota. You will not receive a warning email saying “you have used 8 GB of your 10 GB storage.”

But you are still subject to the server’s physical limits, enforced through software controls that most hosting providers hide in their Terms of Service rather than on their plan pages.

The best answer to “is unlimited hosting actually unlimited?” is: “Unlimited” means unmetered until you hit other controls. Hardware has limits — there are finite CPU, RAM, storage, IOPS, and network bandwidth on each server, so providers employ policy and rate limiting rather than hard-numbered quotas.

Understanding those controls is the entire point of this article.


Part 2: The 5 Real Limits Behind Every “Unlimited” Hosting Plan

These five constraints exist on virtually every shared hosting plan in India — whether the plan is called “unlimited” or not. On unlimited plans, they are the actual limits that govern your real-world usage.


Limit 1 — Inodes: The File Count Ceiling You Never Hear About

What is an inode?

An inode (index node) is a data structure on the server’s file system that stores metadata about a file or directory — its name, size, permissions, timestamps, and physical location on disk. Every single file and folder on your hosting account occupies exactly one inode, regardless of how large or small that file is.

A 5 KB CSS file: 1 inode. A 50 MB video file: 1 inode. An empty folder: 1 inode. A WordPress installation: approximately 15,000–25,000 inodes. A WordPress site with 10 plugins: approximately 30,000–60,000 inodes. A WordPress site with an image gallery of 1,000 photos: potentially 60,000–100,000+ inodes.

Why inodes matter for “unlimited” hosting:

Every file and folder is assigned an inode number, and many web hosting providers set a limit on how many inodes a website can have. When you hit this limit, you cannot create new files — regardless of how much physical disk space remains.

When you hit the inode limit:

  • No new images can be uploaded to WordPress Media Library
  • No new emails can be received (they bounce back to senders)
  • WordPress plugin updates fail — they cannot write new files
  • WordPress core updates fail
  • Caching plugins stop creating new cache files

None of this has anything to do with how many gigabytes of storage you have left. You could have 8 GB of physical disk space available and still be completely locked out of creating new content because your inode count is exhausted.

Real inode limits on myglobalHOST Unlimited Hosting (from live page, June 2026):

Plan Inode Limit What It Supports
MYIN-1 50,000 inodes 1 standard WordPress site with moderate media
MYIN-1a 1,00,000 inodes 2 WordPress sites with reasonable content
MYIN-2 1,50,000 inodes 5 WordPress sites with good content depth
MYIN-3 2,00,000 inodes Unlimited websites and agencies with large content portfolios

Notice what myglobalHOST does differently: These inode limits are published directly on the plan page — not hidden in Terms of Service footnotes. This is one of the most important transparency signals when evaluating any hosting provider.

Many Indian hosting providers who use “unlimited storage” marketing do not publish their inode limits anywhere visible. You discover the limit only when your website stops working.

By contrast, myglobalHOST’s standard Web Hosting and Cloud Hosting plans explicitly state “100% SSD Storage (No Inode Restrictions)” — a specific, meaningful difference from unlimited hosting with inode caps.

If inodes are a concern for your site, read: How Many Websites Can You Host on One Shared Hosting Plan?


Limit 2 — Entry Processes: The Concurrent Traffic Ceiling

What are Entry Processes?

Entry Processes represent the number of concurrent PHP script executions your hosting account is allowed at any given moment. Every time a visitor loads an uncached dynamic page on your website, one Entry Process slot is consumed for the duration of that page generation.

Why they matter:

Imagine your Entry Process limit is 20. This means your website can simultaneously serve 20 uncached dynamic page requests at any given moment. If 25 visitors simultaneously load uncached pages, 5 of them receive a “508 Resource Limit Reached” error — a blank page that looks like your site crashed.

Entry processes — concurrent Apache/LiteSpeed connections — limit you to 20–30 simultaneous requests on standard shared plans. This error typically appears during traffic spikes, newsletter sends, or WooCommerce sales when too many simultaneous requests hit your site at once.

On myglobalHOST Unlimited Hosting:

MYIN-1, MYIN-1a, and MYIN-2 plans each have 20 Entry Processes. MYIN-3 — the agency-level plan — provides 50 Entry Processes, which handles significantly higher concurrent traffic before any throttling occurs.

The LiteSpeed Cache solution:

This is why enabling LiteSpeed Cache immediately after installing WordPress is non-negotiable. With LiteSpeed Cache active and a high cache hit rate (90%+), cached pages are served from server memory without any PHP execution — consuming zero Entry Processes. A site with 95% cache hit rate effectively needs Entry Processes only for logged-in users, cart pages, and checkout — a dramatically smaller load than serving every visitor dynamically.

LiteSpeed Cache setup: How to Set Up LiteSpeed Cache in cPanel for WordPress

How to fix 503/508 errors: How to Fix Error 503 Service Unavailable in WordPress


Limit 3 — CPU: The Processing Power Cap

What is the CPU limit?

On shared hosting, every account runs inside a CloudLinux LVE (Lightweight Virtual Environment) — an isolated container with its own CPU allocation. The CPU limit defines how much processing power your account can consume before CloudLinux throttles it.

Most shared hosting caps CPU usage at 100% of a single core. This limit is enforced at the kernel level by CloudLinux, which creates an isolated container for each hosting account with hard limits on processing power. Under normal conditions you will never notice. But send a newsletter to 10,000 subscribers, run a WordPress cron job while a traffic spike hits, or trigger a WooCommerce sale that hundreds of people try to checkout simultaneously, and the CPU limit kicks in — resulting in a “508 Resource Limit Reached” error.

Your site does not crash entirely. It just stops responding to new requests until the load drops back under the threshold.

What this means for Indian websites:

A Diwali sale, a viral WhatsApp forward, a regional news mention — all of these create sudden traffic spikes. On well-cached LiteSpeed hosting, most of these visitors hit cached pages and consume no CPU. But without caching, every visitor triggers PHP execution and database queries — rapidly consuming CPU allocation.

The practical advice: install LiteSpeed Cache as your first action after WordPress installation. It converts CPU-intensive dynamic page generation into near-zero-cost memory reads for most visitors.


Limit 4 — I/O Speed: The Disk Read/Write Rate

What is I/O speed?

I/O (Input/Output) speed is the rate at which your account can read and write data to and from the disk — measured in MB/s or IOPS (I/O operations per second).

I/O operations get restricted around 1024 IOPS on typical shared plans. Every database query (reading a blog post from MySQL), every image upload (writing to disk), and every plugin operation (reading configuration files) counts as I/O.

On myglobalHOST Unlimited Hosting, the I/O speed is 10 MB/s on MYIN-1 and MYIN-1a — a specific, published limit. When your account hits this I/O rate, operations queue rather than fail immediately — pages slow down rather than return errors.

This is why NVMe storage makes a meaningful difference: NVMe delivers 5–10x lower latency and significantly higher IOPS than SATA SSD. For sites that regularly hit I/O limits, upgrading to Cloud Hosting with NVMe removes this constraint entirely.

NVMe explained: What is NVMe SSD Hosting and Why is it Faster Than Regular SSD?


Limit 5 — Bandwidth: The “Unlimited” That Is Actually Most Honest

Of all the “unlimited” claims in web hosting, bandwidth (data transfer) is the one where the claim is most often genuinely true for practical usage.

Bandwidth is the total data transferred between your server and visitors. Modern hosting infrastructure has enormous network capacity, and individual shared hosting accounts rarely approach meaningful bandwidth limits under normal traffic conditions.

myglobalHOST’s Unlimited Hosting plans list specific bandwidth allocations:

  • MYIN-1: 50 GB bandwidth
  • MYIN-1a: 75 GB bandwidth

For perspective: 50 GB of monthly bandwidth supports approximately 200,000–500,000 page views per month for a typical WordPress site (assuming an average page size of 100–250 KB). For a new or growing website, this is functionally unlimited.

For high-traffic sites — established news portals, popular WooCommerce stores, viral content sites — bandwidth becomes a meaningful constraint. Cloud Hosting plans provide 500 GB–1 TB bandwidth with auto-scaling for high-traffic needs.


Part 3: The Fair Use Policy — The Hidden Document That Defines “Unlimited”

The key governing document for any “unlimited” hosting plan is not the plan page — it is the provider’s Fair Use Policy or Acceptable Use Policy (AUP).

Search for the words “inode,” “CPU,” “entry process,” and “fair use” in any host’s Terms of Service before signing up. If those words do not appear with actual numbers, the limits are hidden. If they appear with numbers, you have something concrete to compare.

The practical advice: Before purchasing any “unlimited” hosting plan from any provider, search their Terms of Service for:

  • “Inode limit” — look for a specific number
  • “Entry Processes” or “EP limit” — look for a specific number
  • “Fair Use Policy” — read what counts as “normal” usage
  • “CPU throttling” — understand the threshold

What myglobalHOST does: The inode limits on Unlimited Hosting plans are published directly on the Unlimited Hosting page — visible before purchase, not buried in footnotes. This is the transparency standard that every hosting provider should meet.


Part 4: What IS Genuinely Unlimited on myglobalHOST Unlimited Hosting

Despite the technical constraints explained above, several things are genuinely, practically unlimited on myglobalHOST’s Unlimited Hosting plans:

✅ Email Accounts — Genuinely Unlimited

All Unlimited Hosting plans include unlimited professional domain email accounts. Create as many name@yourdomain.com accounts as your business needs — for every team member, department, or project — with no per-account charge and no upper limit enforced.

Set up email accounts: How to Create an Email Account in cPanel

✅ Email Storage — Functionally Unlimited

Each email account’s storage is limited by the overall disk space allocation of your plan (2 GB on MYIN-1, 5 GB on MYIN-1a, 50 GB on MYIN-2, 100 GB on MYIN-3) — but within that, you can allocate storage to individual email accounts as you choose. For most business email users, this is effectively unlimited.

✅ Subdomains — Genuinely Unlimited

Create unlimited subdomains under your primary domain (shop.yourdomain.com, blog.yourdomain.com, app.yourdomain.com) without restriction. Each subdomain can host a separate WordPress installation or web application. Guide: How to Create a Subdomain in cPanel Hosting

✅ FTP Accounts — Genuinely Unlimited

Create unlimited FTP accounts for developers, designers, and contractors who need file access to your hosting account — with individual permissions and directory restrictions per account.

✅ MySQL Databases (Plan-Dependent)

On MYIN-2 (₹185/month) and above, database creation is effectively unlimited — sufficient for any realistic multi-site WordPress deployment.

✅ LiteSpeed Enterprise Web Server — Same as All Plans

Every Unlimited Hosting plan at myglobalHOST runs LiteSpeed Enterprise — the same commercial web server running on all other plans. There is no infrastructure downgrade for unlimited hosting customers.

✅ Free SSL — Unlimited Domains

Free Let’s Encrypt SSL is included for the primary domain and all addon domains — automatically renewed via cPanel AutoSSL. Setup: How to Install and Activate SSL in cPanel Hosting

✅ cPanel — Full Featured

Full industry-standard cPanel is included on all Unlimited Hosting plans with Softaculous for one-click WordPress installation and all standard management tools.


Part 5: myglobalHOST Unlimited Hosting Plans — All Verified from Live Page (June 2026)

All plans include: LiteSpeed Enterprise · SSD Storage · Free SSL · QUIC HTTP/3 · Full cPanel · Softaculous · Daily Backups · Malware Protection · WAF Firewall · 99.99% Uptime · 30-Day Money Back · WhatsApp Support +91-79862-84663

Note: Monthly billing is NOT available on Unlimited Hosting plans — annual (1-year) and 3-year billing only.


MYIN-1 — Entry Unlimited Plan

Spec Detail
Price ₹57/month (3-year) · ₹86/month (1-year)
Websites 1
SSD Storage 2 GB
Inodes 50,000 inodes
Email Accounts 2
Addon Domains None
SQL Databases 2
Bandwidth 50 GB
IO Speed 10 MB/s
Entry Processes 20
Free Domain ✅ .com or .in

Best for: A single WordPress website for a local service business or blog — where the domain count is 1, content is moderate (under 40,000 inodes), and traffic is low-to-medium. The free domain inclusion makes this plan excellent value for new businesses who need domain + hosting in one package.

Buy MYIN-1 — ₹57/month


MYIN-1a — Start-up Unlimited Plan

Spec Detail
Price ₹123/month (3-year) · ₹185/month (1-year)
Websites 2
SSD Storage 5 GB
Inodes 1,00,000 inodes
Email Accounts 10
Addon Domains 1
SQL Databases 5
Bandwidth 75 GB
IO Speed 10 MB/s
Entry Processes 20
Free Domain ✅ .com or .in

Best for: A start-up or small business managing a main website plus a secondary site — blog, regional landing page, or product microsite. 10 professional email accounts cover most small teams. 1,00,000 inodes supports 2–3 content-rich WordPress sites comfortably.

Buy MYIN-1a — ₹123/month


MYIN-2 — Popular Unlimited Plan

Spec Detail
Price ₹185/month (3-year) · ₹277/month (1-year)
Websites 5
SSD Storage 50 GB
Inodes 1,50,000 inodes
Email Accounts Unlimited
Addon Domains 4
SQL Databases 10
Bandwidth 100 GB
IO Speed 10 MB/s
Entry Processes 20
Free Domain ✅ .com or .in

Best for: Small businesses and bloggers managing up to 5 websites with a growing content library, unlimited team email, 4 addon domains, and sufficient inode headroom. The 50 GB SSD storage with 1,50,000 inodes is the sweet spot for established WordPress sites with substantial media libraries.

Buy MYIN-2 — ₹185/month


MYIN-3 — Agency Unlimited Plan

Spec Detail
Price ₹324/month (3-year) · ₹486/month (1-year)
Websites Unlimited
SSD Storage 100 GB
Inodes 2,00,000 inodes
Email Accounts Unlimited
Addon Domains 1,000
SQL Databases 30
Bandwidth 200 GB
IO Speed 10 MB/s
Entry Processes 50 (highest in the Unlimited range)
Free Domain ✅ .com or .in

Best for: Web design agencies, digital marketing firms, and developers managing unlimited client websites from one hosting account. The combination of 1,000 addon domains, unlimited websites, 50 Entry Processes (vs 20 on MYIN-1/1a/2), 100 GB storage, and 2,00,000 inodes makes this the correct plan for anyone running a portfolio of sites professionally. The 50 Entry Processes allocation means significantly higher concurrent traffic handling before any throttling — important for agencies managing sites for clients who may experience unpredictable traffic patterns.

Buy MYIN-3 — ₹324/month

View All Unlimited Hosting Plans


Part 6: Unlimited Hosting vs Regular Web Hosting — Which Should You Choose?

This is the practical question every Indian buyer faces. myglobalHOST offers both — and this section gives an honest, plan-specific comparison to help you choose correctly.

The Key Difference: Inodes

The most structurally important difference between myglobalHOST’s regular Web Hosting and Unlimited Hosting is inode policy:

  • Web Hosting (MYLT-1 to MYLT-3): “100% SSD Storage (No Inode Restrictions)” — no inode cap on storage
  • Unlimited Hosting (MYIN-1 to MYIN-3): Specific inode limits — 50,000 / 1,00,000 / 1,50,000 / 2,00,000

This is counterintuitive but true: The product literally called “Unlimited Hosting” has inode limits, while the standard “Web Hosting” has no inode restrictions.

The reason: Unlimited Hosting is positioned as the plan for users who want multiple websites, unlimited email, and a free domain — without needing the highest inode capacity. Web Hosting offers the no-inode-restriction SSD storage for users who build content-heavy sites.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Feature Web Hosting MYLT-1 Unlimited MYIN-1
Price (3-year) ₹54/month ₹57/month
Websites 1 1
Storage 2 GB SSD 2 GB SSD
Inodes No restriction 50,000 cap
Emails 2 2
Free Domain
Bandwidth Standard 50 GB
LiteSpeed ✅ Enterprise ✅ Enterprise
Monthly billing ✅ Available ❌ Not available

If you need a free domain and do not expect to create more than 40,000 files: MYIN-1 (Unlimited) at ₹57/month is the better value.

If you need maximum content capacity without inode worry: MYLT-1 (Web Hosting) at ₹54/month with no inode restrictions is the better choice.

If you need 5 websites with unlimited email: MYIN-2 (Unlimited) at ₹185/month vs MYLT-2 (Web Hosting) at ₹154/month — MYLT-2 has no inode restrictions; MYIN-2 has 50 GB storage with 1,50,000 inode cap and 4 addon domains.

If you need unlimited websites for agency work: MYIN-3 (Unlimited) at ₹324/month — 1,000 addon domains, 100 GB SSD, 2,00,000 inodes, 50 Entry Processes, unlimited email. For agencies that also need per-client account isolation and custom nameservers, Reseller Hosting with WHM remains the more professional option.

Full comparison: What is Shared Hosting? How It Works and Who Needs It


Part 7: When “Unlimited” Hosting Is Perfectly Fine — And When It Causes Problems

Unlimited Hosting Works Well When:

You have one or two standard WordPress websites — A typical WordPress blog with 50–200 posts and standard media stays well under 50,000 inodes. For this use case, unlimited hosting’s inode limits are genuinely irrelevant.

You need a free domain included — Unlimited Hosting plans include a free .com or .in domain worth ₹1,000–₹1,090. For new businesses registering their first domain and hosting together, this is tangible value.

You run a small business website with a team of 2–10 people — Unlimited email accounts mean every team member gets a professional name@yourbusiness.com account without extra cost. This is the most practically valuable “unlimited” feature for Indian small businesses.

Your website receives moderate traffic under 20,000–30,000 monthly visitors — Combined with LiteSpeed Cache, this traffic level stays comfortably within Entry Process and CPU limits.

You want multiple websites under one billing relationship — MYIN-2 at ₹185/month supports 5 websites with a shared inode pool of 1,50,000; MYIN-3 at ₹324/month supports unlimited websites with 1,000 addon domains and 2,00,000 inodes — both reasonable for small-to-medium content sites and agency portfolios.

Unlimited Hosting May Cause Problems When:

You run a high-media-content site — A photography portfolio, e-commerce store with 1,000+ products, or a news site with daily image-heavy articles can exhaust 50,000–100,000 inodes quickly. Each WordPress media upload creates multiple image sizes (thumbnails, medium, large, full) — a single photo upload typically creates 4–8 inodes.

Your site receives spiky traffic from viral content — Without excellent caching, traffic spikes exhaust Entry Process limits. With LiteSpeed Cache properly configured, this risk is greatly reduced — but not eliminated if your cache hit rate is low.

You run WooCommerce with active inventory — WooCommerce creates significant inode usage: product images (multiple sizes per product), cache files, session files, log files, and plugin data. A store with 500 products can accumulate 100,000+ inodes over time. Better suited to Cloud Hosting with NVMe.

You need monthly billing — Unlimited Hosting plans at myglobalHOST are only available on annual (1-year) and 3-year billing. If you need monthly pay-as-you-go, choose Web Hosting instead.

For WooCommerce hosting requirements: Understanding WooCommerce Hosting Requirements


Part 8: How to Check Your Inode Usage Before You Hit the Limit

Waiting until your website stops working to discover you have hit your inode limit is entirely avoidable. Here is how to monitor it proactively:

Method 1 — cPanel Disk Usage Tool Log in to cPanel → Files → Disk Usage. The Disk Usage page shows storage consumed per directory. While this shows storage in bytes rather than inodes directly, directories with thousands of small files are usually the inode contributors.

Guide: How to Use cPanel Disk Usage Tool to Clean Up Server Space

Method 2 — cPanel Statistics Panel In cPanel’s right sidebar or statistics panel, look for “Inodes” — this shows your current inode count against your limit. This is the most direct view of inode usage.

Method 3 — SSH Terminal Command If you have SSH access, run: find /home/username -maxdepth 2 | wc -l to count files in your home directory.

Common inode consumers to clean regularly:

  • WordPress cache files (clear via LiteSpeed Cache → Purge All)
  • WordPress session files in /wp-content/uploads/
  • Multiple WordPress image sizes for deleted media (run Media Cleaner plugin)
  • Old backup files in your hosting account (store backups outside your account)
  • Spam emails in inbox (delete regularly)
  • WordPress error logs (/wp-content/debug.log)

Part 9: The Upgrade Path — When to Move from Unlimited Hosting

Unlimited Hosting is not a permanent destination for every website. Here are the signals that indicate it is time to upgrade:

Signal 1 — inode usage consistently above 80% of your plan limit Check cPanel statistics. If you are regularly above 40,000 inodes on MYIN-1, you are approaching the wall. Upgrade to MYIN-1a (1,00,000 inodes) or switch to Web Hosting with no inode restrictions.

Signal 2 — Consistent 503/508 errors under normal traffic This indicates Entry Process exhaustion. Ensure LiteSpeed Cache is correctly configured first. If errors persist even with caching, your traffic outgrew shared hosting. Consider Cloud Hosting for auto-scaling.

Signal 3 — cPanel Resource Usage shows CPU regularly at limit Log in to cPanel → Metrics → Resource Usage. If CPU usage regularly hits 100% of allocation, your site needs dedicated cloud resources or a VPS. Decision guide: Shared Hosting vs VPS Hosting: Which One Do You Actually Need?

Signal 4 — WooCommerce store growing rapidly Unlimited Hosting’s 10 MB/s I/O speed and SATA SSD storage (not NVMe) creates database performance bottlenecks for active stores. Cloud Hosting with NVMe provides dedicated cloud resources, NVMe storage, and auto-scaling for WooCommerce.

To upgrade: How to Upgrade a Hosting Plan


The Honest Summary in One Paragraph

“Unlimited hosting” means your storage and bandwidth are unmetered — you will not receive a bill for overage, and you will not see a storage quota bar ticking toward zero. But you are still subject to inode limits (the file count ceiling — 50,000 to 2,00,000 on myglobalHOST’s plans across MYIN-1 through MYIN-3), Entry Process limits (20 on MYIN-1/1a/2, 50 on MYIN-3), CPU allocation per CloudLinux account, and I/O speed caps (10 MB/s across all plans). For most Indian website owners — a local business site, a growing blog, a small business managing 2–5 websites, or an agency managing unlimited client sites on MYIN-3 — these limits are either irrelevant or manageable with proper LiteSpeed Cache configuration. For content-heavy sites, high-traffic WooCommerce stores, and businesses needing dedicated resources per client account, Cloud Hosting with NVMe or Reseller Hosting with WHM is the more appropriate infrastructure.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is unlimited hosting in simple words? Unlimited hosting means your hosting plan does not charge you for exceeding specific storage or bandwidth quotas — you will not receive overage bills or see a quota bar running out. However, “unlimited” refers to the billing model, not truly infinite resources. Physical server limits still apply through inode counts (file number limits), Entry Process limits, CPU allocation, and I/O speed — all enforced through CloudLinux software on the shared server.

Is unlimited hosting really unlimited in India? Not completely. While you will not receive an overage bill, the practical limits are: inode caps (50,000–1,50,000 files on myglobalHOST’s plans), Entry Process limits (20 simultaneous PHP executions), CPU throttling, and I/O speed limits. For most Indian website owners with standard WordPress sites, these limits are rarely hit. For high-content, high-traffic, or WooCommerce sites, they can become constraints.

What is an inode in hosting? An inode is a data structure that represents one file or folder on your server. Every file — regardless of size — occupies exactly one inode. When you hit your inode limit, you cannot create new files even if disk space is available. WordPress installations typically use 15,000–60,000+ inodes depending on plugins and media. myglobalHOST publishes its inode limits on the plan page: 50,000 for MYIN-1, 1,00,000 for MYIN-1a, 1,50,000 for MYIN-2, and 2,00,000 for MYIN-3.

What is the cheapest unlimited hosting in India? myglobalHOST’s MYIN-1 at ₹57/month (3-year plan) is among the cheapest unlimited hosting plans in India with LiteSpeed Enterprise, 2 GB SSD, 50,000 inodes, free .com/.in domain, free SSL, cPanel, and 24/7 WhatsApp support. The range goes up to MYIN-3 at ₹324/month for unlimited websites, 100 GB SSD, 2,00,000 inodes, 50 Entry Processes, 1,000 addon domains, and unlimited email. See: myglobalhost.net/unlimited-hosting

Is unlimited hosting good for WordPress? Yes, for standard WordPress sites. A blog or business website with under 200 posts, standard media library, and moderate traffic (under 20,000 monthly visitors) typically uses under 40,000 inodes — well within MYIN-1’s 50,000 limit. Enable LiteSpeed Cache immediately for best performance. For WooCommerce stores or content-heavy photography sites, Cloud Hosting with NVMe is more appropriate.

What happens when I hit the inode limit? You cannot create any new files. WordPress image uploads fail. Plugin and core updates fail. New emails cannot be received. None of these failures are related to physical disk space — you could have gigabytes of storage available but still be locked out. To prevent this: monitor inode usage in cPanel statistics, clear WordPress cache files regularly, delete unused media, and clean old backup files.

Does myglobalHOST Unlimited Hosting have monthly billing? No. myglobalHOST Unlimited Hosting is available on 1-year (annual) and 3-year billing only — monthly billing is not offered on the Unlimited plans. If you need monthly billing, choose standard Web Hosting plans which are available monthly from ₹219/month.


Related Knowledge Base Articles

Hosting Fundamentals

Comparisons

Performance

cPanel Management

WooCommerce


myglobalHOST Unlimited Hosting Plans

Plan Price Storage Inodes Sites Emails EP Free Domain
MYIN-1 ₹57/mo (3yr) 2 GB SSD 50,000 1 2 20 ✅ .com/.in
MYIN-1a ₹123/mo (3yr) 5 GB SSD 1,00,000 2 10 20 ✅ .com/.in
MYIN-2 ₹185/mo (3yr) 50 GB SSD 1,50,000 5 Unlimited 20 ✅ .com/.in
MYIN-3 ₹324/mo (3yr) 100 GB SSD 2,00,000 Unlimited Unlimited 50 ✅ .com/.in

All plans include: LiteSpeed Enterprise · Free SSL · QUIC HTTP/3 · cPanel · Softaculous · Daily Backups · Malware Protection · 99.99% Uptime · WhatsApp Support +91-79862-84663


This article is part of the myglobalHOST Knowledge Base — honest, technically accurate guides on web hosting, cPanel, WordPress, and server management for Indian website owners.

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