Paying for Hosting in Crypto: How It Works at VPSoto
We accept Bitcoin and a range of other coins alongside cards. Here is exactly what happens at checkout, how the amount is locked in, and what to do if a payment is slow to confirm.
By VPSoto Team · Billing · December 5, 2025 · 4 min read

Plenty of customers prefer to pay for infrastructure in crypto — for privacy, for cross-border simplicity, or just because it's what they hold. Here's how it works with us.
What we accept
Bitcoin plus a range of major coins and stablecoins, processed through our payment provider. Cards (including Apple Pay and Google Pay) are also available — you pick at checkout.
What happens at checkout
- You pick a plan, location, and billing cycle and go to checkout.
- Our server recomputes the price from the live catalog in your selected currency (this is an anti-tampering step — the amount is never trusted from the browser).
- You choose "Pay with crypto." We create a hosted invoice with the exact amount and a wallet address, and lock in the fiat-equivalent for a short window.
- You send the payment from your wallet. When the network confirms it, the provider notifies us, we mark the order paid, and provisioning begins.
Confirmation times
Most coins confirm within minutes; Bitcoin can take longer at busy times. The invoice page shows live status — you don't need to keep it open, you'll get an email when it clears.
If something goes sideways
- Underpaid (sent slightly too little, e.g. fee miscalculation): the invoice shows the shortfall; top it up to the same address.
- Overpaid or paid after the window expired: contact us with the transaction ID — we'll reconcile it manually. Nothing is lost.
- Sent the wrong coin to the address: tell us immediately with the txid.
Renewals
Service renewals work the same way — you'll get a renewal notice with a fresh invoice. You can also keep a card on file for auto-renewal and still pay one-off top-ups in crypto.
Questions about a specific payment? Open a ticket with the transaction ID and we'll sort it.
