
Hostinger Ecommerce is the multi-channel selling platform Hostinger built inside its existing hosting ecosystem, turning a short AI prompt into a working online store. I tested the signup flow, the AI site builder, payment setup, and both AI and human support on the Growth plan to see whether the whole process actually moves as fast, and works as cleanly, as the marketing page claims.
What follows walks through that testing in the order I actually experienced it, starting with the checkout itself.

Every score below comes out of the same testing that follows in this review, scored against our review methodology that we apply across every host on this site, not a first impression of the marketing page, so I’ll unpack exactly how each number was earned as I walk through registration, setup, and support.
| Parameter | Score | Why This Score |
|---|---|---|
| Prices | 9.3/10 | Real 30-day refund window across plans, but cryptocurrency payments are excluded from any refund. |
| Features | 9.6/10 | AI store builder, Stripe and dLocal Go payments, Shippo and Printful integrations, built-in SEO tools. |
| Performance | 9.4/10 | 96-100% GTmetrix Performance from two continents, sub-second LCP, and a clean 0 CLS. |
| Ease of Use | 9.3/10 | Fast AI onboarding, but the product catalog and admin panel fell out of sync during testing. |
| Support | 9.0/10 | Kodee gives detailed, accurate answers, but escalating to a human took three separate requests. |
| Overall | 9.3/10 | A fast, AI-built storefront with strong global performance, held back by onboarding inconsistencies and support escalation friction. |
Pricing is the natural place to start, since it’s the first real decision a new seller makes, before ever touching the AI builder or the dashboard.

Hostinger Ecommerce runs on three tiers, Starter, Growth, and Scale, priced by how many products you sell and how many sales channels you connect, with Growth marketed as the most popular choice for a small branded storefront.
There is no dedicated free trial, but every plan carries a 30-day money-back guarantee, the same standard refund window Hostinger applies across its hosting products. One thing worth checking before you check out: payments made through Coingate, the cryptocurrency option, are excluded from refunds entirely under Hostinger’s official refund policy. Card, PayPal, Google Pay, Apple Pay, and Alipay+ all fall under the standard 30-day window.
A few things to know before you commit:
Once the plan is picked, the features that come with it are worth knowing up front too, since they shape everything from how checkout looks to what tools sit inside the dashboard.

To put real numbers behind Hostinger Ecommerce’s claims, I ran GTmetrix tests against the live Clay & Co storefront generated earlier in this review, still sitting on its temporary hostingersite.com subdomain on the Growth plan.
Why GTmetrix? GTmetrix runs tests from real geographic locations using an actual Chrome browser, so the numbers reflect what a real visitor experiences rather than a synthetic lab average. For an ecommerce storefront, where slow load times translate directly into abandoned carts, that gives a repeatable, comparable benchmark rather than a marketing claim taken at face value.
Why two tests? Hostinger’s infrastructure for this product runs out of Boston, USA, so I ran the first test from San Antonio, Texas, the closest available GTmetrix node to that origin, to get a realistic best-case reading for a visitor near the server.
A store selling handmade goods isn’t only going to attract nearby traffic, though, so I ran a second test from Frankfurt, Germany, to see what a visitor on another continent actually experiences. Testing only from next door to the server tells you just one side of that story.
| Metric | San Antonio, TX, USA | Frankfurt, Germany |
|---|---|---|
| GTmetrix Performance | 96% | 100% |
| GTmetrix Structure | 99% | 99% |
| Largest Contentful Paint (LCP) | 990ms | 439ms |
| Total Blocking Time (TBT) | 79ms | 33ms |
| Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS) | 0 | 0 |
Both results comfortably clear Google’s “good” LCP threshold of 2.5s, and CLS at a clean 0 in both runs means the layout stays stable regardless of where the request comes from.
| Metric | San Antonio, TX, USA | Frankfurt, Germany |
|---|---|---|
| TTFB | 704ms | 112ms |
| Redirect | 0ms | 0ms |
| Connect | 138ms | 50ms |
| Backend | 566ms | 62ms |
| First Contentful Paint | 990ms | 378ms |
| Onload Time | 1.1s | 368ms |
| Time to Interactive | 1.3s | 662ms |
| Fully Loaded Time | 2.3s | 1.3s |
Here’s the part worth pulling apart rather than skimming past: Frankfurt outperformed San Antonio on every single metric, despite Hostinger’s infrastructure for this product being based in the US and San Antonio sitting geographically closer to it.

Connect time is the clearest tell, at 138ms from San Antonio versus just 50ms from Frankfurt, and backend time tells the same story even more sharply, 566ms from the “closer” US location against 62ms from Germany.

What I think: a US-based origin server should not lose to a European test location on connect time or backend response, not if the request is genuinely traveling all the way back to Boston for both tests. The more likely explanation is that the Website Builder platform serving this storefront sits behind a global CDN, so the Frankfurt test was likely served from a European edge node rather than reaching back across the Atlantic, while the San Antonio test may have hit a less optimized path or a colder cache at the moment of testing.
Either way, this is genuinely good news for sellers. It suggests Hostinger Ecommerce’s storefronts aren’t tied to a single origin’s geography the way a traditional single-region hosting account would be, and performance holds up strongly regardless of which side of the Atlantic a customer is browsing from.
Both test locations returned excellent results for an ecommerce storefront: a 96% to 100% GTmetrix Performance range, sub-second LCP from Frankfurt and just under a second from San Antonio, and a clean 0 CLS in both runs.
The more interesting finding is that the Frankfurt test outperformed the US test on every metric despite Hostinger’s infrastructure being based in Boston, which points to CDN-backed delivery rather than a single origin server determining how fast the store loads. For sellers worried about serving a global customer base from one region, this is a reassuring result rather than a limitation to plan around.

Getting from a Hostinger account to a live, sellable storefront is the entire pitch behind Hostinger Ecommerce, so I went through the process the way a first-time seller actually would: starting from account signup, through Kodee’s AI onboarding chat, and into the Store Manager where the day-to-day work happens.
Before any AI chat comes into it, getting to a paid Ecommerce plan starts in Hostinger’s main Services menu, under a Sell Online section listed alongside the older WooCommerce hosting option.

Clicking through lands on a dedicated Ecommerce page built around a “Sell everywhere, manage it all in one place” pitch, with a View plans button leading to the three-tier pricing page.

I chose the Growth plan and picked a 12-month term.

The cart broke the order down clearly:

From there, account creation is a single form: Google or GitHub login alongside email and password, with only a phone number left optional, and no forced quiz before you can create an account.

Payment came next, on a page that listed billing address, then a payment step offering:

What I think: seeing crypto sitting alongside PayPal and Google Pay on a mainstream ecommerce checkout isn’t something I run into often, and it’s worth knowing about given that Hostinger’s refund policy specifically excludes crypto payments from any money-back guarantee, unlike every other method on that list.
Submitting payment redirected immediately into hPanel, Hostinger’s general account dashboard, with a confirmation email arriving at the same time. There was no dedicated Ecommerce welcome screen at this point, just the same hPanel homepage any Hostinger customer lands on after buying hosting, with a to-do list nudging me to finish setting up the Growth plan I’d just bought.
Registration gets you an account and a confirmation email. It doesn’t get you a store. That’s a separate step, and it’s where I went next.
Logging into hPanel for the first time drops you into a clean, conversational homepage rather than a dense settings grid: “Hi, John! Where do you want to get started?” sits above a prompt box for typing a request, with shortcut buttons underneath for getting a domain, creating a website, or trying vibe coding.
The left sidebar is organized into clear groups rather than one long list:

Below the main prompt box sits a to-do list, and it’s genuinely useful rather than decorative. It opened with an item reading “Start creating or migrating a website, finish setting up your Growth plan,” alongside other nudges like claiming a free email address, claiming a free domain, and finishing a Reach email marketing setup. The count on this list changed as I worked through it, dropping from six items to five once I’d handled the first one, so it does actually track progress rather than sitting static.
What I think: Ecommerce sitting inside Hostinger apps, tagged New rather than pinned near the top, is a reasonable placement for a newer product, but sellers coming specifically for the ecommerce tools will need a moment to find them among VPS, GPU, and AI agent shortcuts aimed at Hostinger’s much broader customer base. The to-do list does a good job of pointing you toward the right first step regardless.
Having a plan and a dashboard is not the same as having a website to sell from. That’s the next thing the to-do list pushes you toward, and it’s where the real setup work starts.
The to-do item itself, “Start creating or migrating a website,” came with a single Create or migrate button.

Clicking it is what kicked off the actual build, and every choice along the way was a real decision with real alternatives on screen, not a single forced path:






That Next button is where the “AI does it all” promise broke down a little. Instead of generating the site right there, it opened a separate screen asking how I wanted to build the website: Vibe code with Horizons (marked Recommended), Drag-and-drop with Builder, or WordPress, plus Web App and Empty PHP/HTML for advanced users further down.
Having already told Kodee to let AI handle everything, seeing a manual build-method picker appear anyway is a real gap between what that option promises and what actually happens next. Of the choices on offer, I picked Drag-and-drop with Builder, since its own description specifically mentions customizing an online store, unlike Horizons, which is pitched more broadly at sites and web apps in general.

From there:




What I think: Two minutes for a fully populated storefront, complete with hero copy, a product page, and brand messaging, is a fair result on its own, and letting you review and edit the brief before committing is a sensible safeguard rather than a forced handoff.
But the full path from account creation to that Continue button broke down like this:
Add those up, and the full setup ran closer to five or six minutes, not the three the homepage advertises. That headline number describes the generation step alone, not the full path a new seller actually walks to get there.
Clicking Continue is what finally took me out of the onboarding chat and into the real workspace: the Website Builder editor, with the generated site already loaded and waiting.
What stood out immediately is that the editor doesn’t open on a blank canvas. It opens directly onto the finished Clay & Co homepage, fully styled and readable, with the same left-hand toolset any Hostinger site editor uses: Setup, Elements, Pages, Styles, AI tools, Store, SEO, and More, plus a top bar for switching between desktop and mobile preview, undoing changes, connecting a domain, and publishing with a Go live button.

The one thing demanding attention before anything else was a yellow banner running across the very top of the screen: “Payment method not connected. To accept payments, add at least one payment method,” paired with a black Connect payment method button sitting right next to it.
What I think: being dropped straight into a working, populated site rather than an empty template is the strongest part of the whole onboarding experience, and it’s a genuinely different feeling from most website builders, where you land on a blank page and have to build your own sense of what “done” looks like.
The payment banner is a smart nudge too, since it puts the one thing that actually matters for a store, getting paid, in front of you immediately, rather than burying it in a settings menu you might not think to open.
The editor itself is where the site lives. The tools sitting behind that Connect payment method button, and a few others tucked into the sidebar, are where the actual running of the store happens, and that’s worth a closer look on its own.
Clicking Connect payment method opened Store Manager as a full-screen panel over the editor, landing directly on the Payments page.

Working through it in order:
| Method | What it offers |
|---|---|
| Stripe | Visa, Mastercard, Amex, Apple Pay, Google Pay, Klarna, Afterpay, Amazon Pay. Orders must total $1 or more to process. |
| PayPal | Standard PayPal Business checkout. |
| dLocal Go | 200+ local payment methods across Latin America, including cards and bank transfers. |
| Manual payment | Cash on delivery, money orders, or bank transfer, approved by hand on the Orders page. |
| Test payment | Simulates a full purchase without moving real money. |
Stripe sat at the top as the “popular in your location” option, with PayPal, dLocal Go, and manual payment appearing further down the same page once I scrolled.

What I think: having a genuine test mode alongside a payment processor built for Latin American markets is more than I expected from a platform pitched mainly at first-time sellers. The Stripe $1 minimum is a specific limit worth knowing if you sell anything priced under that.
With payments checked, I moved to the Products tab in the same Store Manager sidebar, expecting to see the five items Kodee had generated on the homepage and Shop page.

Instead, the Products list showed a different lineup: a Silt Matcha Bowl, a Minimalist Taper Candle Holder Set, a Clay & Co Signature Mug, an Earthy Footed Incense Holder, a Dune Ribbed Serving Bowl, and an Oatmeal Arch Vase, only partly overlapping with what page one of the Shop page displayed.

That’s less alarming than it first looked. The Shop page carries pagination, “1 2” at the bottom, so the storefront’s catalog runs past a single page, and I hadn’t clicked through to the second one to confirm everything lined up.
The AI had clearly generated a fuller catalog than the five products visible on the first page alone.
What I think: the pagination explains the gap rather than pointing to a genuine content mismatch, but it’s still worth knowing that the Products list in Store Manager isn’t a one-to-one visual match with what loads on the Shop page’s first screen. If you’re checking that everything the AI generated actually made it onto the storefront, plan to click through every page of the Shop listing rather than trusting the first page alone.
The rest of the Store Manager sidebar rounds out a small ecommerce operation in one place: Overview, Orders, Products, Appointments, Discounts, Customers, Analytics, Emails, Settings, and Integrations. Two of those are worth a closer look:


Outside Store Manager, back in the main editor sidebar, two more tools stood out during testing:


What I think: the store setup checklist sitting at the top of Store Manager still read “0 of 4” complete throughout all of this, even after Kodee had generated a full catalog and I’d connected a payment method. That suggests the setup tracker doesn’t recognize AI-generated content or manual configuration as fulfilling its own onboarding steps, which is a small disconnect, but one more example of the AI build path and the rest of the dashboard not quite talking to each other.
The SEO panel not carrying over the business name Kodee already had is the same pattern showing up a second time. I didn’t test the Growth plan’s three-business or three-channel-per-business limit directly, since that requires standing up a second live storefront, but the ceiling is clearly stated on the pricing page and worth checking against your own plans before committing to a tier.
Getting a functional storefront live on Hostinger Ecommerce is fast, and Kodee’s AI onboarding does a better job holding onto brand details than most AI website builders manage.
Where the experience loses points is in the seams between its own AI-generated pieces: the build-method picker that appears after choosing “AI does it all,” and a product catalog that told two different stories depending on whether I was looking at the storefront or the admin panel.
For a platform selling itself on AI doing the heavy lifting, those are the exact details that need to line up, and right now they don’t always.
Building the store is only half the picture. The other half is what happens when something goes wrong and you actually need help, so that’s where I turned next.

Hostinger lists four self-service resources for Ecommerce customers:
For paid customers, though, the channel Hostinger actually pushes you toward is Kodee, the AI assistant embedded directly in hPanel, with a human live chat handoff available behind it. I tested both sides of that with two real technical questions rather than relying on documentation alone.
My first question asked how inventory stays in sync if the same product sells through two different channels at once, and whether the platform actually prevents overselling the last unit or just syncs on a delay.
Kodee’s answer was honest rather than confident. It stated plainly that the available help material doesn’t specify a guaranteed real-time stock lock or exact oversell protection, and that it couldn’t confirm two simultaneous last-item checkouts are blocked every time. It suggested a small test order or a stock buffer as a practical workaround.

What I think: I’d rather get an answer that admits the limits of what it knows than a confident-sounding guess that turns out to be wrong once you’re actually relying on it. That said, this is a real gap for anyone selling limited-run or low-stock items across multiple channels, and it’s the kind of question a seller needs a firm answer to before launch, not a “test it yourself and see.”
Getting a straight answer out of Kodee was one thing. Getting an actual person on the line, once I decided I wanted that instead, turned out to be a different test entirely.
Reaching a person took more persistence than I expected:


Once it did, the handoff itself was transparent. A “Specialist assigned” card appeared with a small group of staff avatars, a status line reading “They’re reviewing your chat and will reply shortly,” and a countdown-style timestamp that ticked down while I waited, alongside a note that Kodee would connect me directly if no one responded in time.

What I think: needing three separate asks before Kodee actually escalates is a real friction point, especially for a paid customer with a genuine technical question. The transparency once escalation happens, the visible queue status and the fallback promise, is a good design choice, but it doesn’t offset having to insist multiple times just to get there.
With a human finally in the loop, I used the second technical question to see whether the extra wait actually bought a better answer.
My second question asked what SPF and DKIM records are needed to send transactional emails from a custom domain instead of Hostinger’s default address, and whether Hostinger configures those automatically.
Kodee’s own answer, given without any escalation this time, was specific and correct:

A reply tagged “Co-authored by Natalia” then arrived, described as coming from a specialist who had personally reviewed the case. It expanded meaningfully on Kodee’s answer, adding:

What I think: the added answer was genuinely more complete than Kodee’s first pass, and getting MX and SPF records volunteered alongside DKIM is exactly the kind of full picture a seller needs before switching to a custom domain. The one thing I can’t confirm is how much of that gap was a human specialist adding real expertise versus Kodee simply returning a more complete pre-written answer on a second pass.
The full record set arrived within seconds of the “specialist assigned” notice, fast enough that I couldn’t tell for certain which was happening. I’d flag this as a transparency question worth being aware of rather than a claim either way.
Kodee handles direct technical questions well when it answers them itself, correctly declining to overstate what it doesn’t know on the inventory question rather than inventing a confident answer, and giving specific, usable DNS records on the second.
Where the experience falls short is escalation: reaching an actual person took three separate requests, and even after escalating, it was hard to tell how much genuine human review sat behind the more complete follow-up answer.
For routine setup questions, Kodee’s own answers are detailed enough to act on directly. For anything time-sensitive where you specifically need a person, be ready to ask more than once.
Between the setup process and the support experience, a clear picture emerges of who this platform actually works for, and where it still needs to catch up with its own marketing.

Yes, with a few things to check first. Hostinger Ecommerce delivers on its core promise: a working, branded storefront built from a short AI conversation, backed by a wide payment stack covering Stripe, PayPal, regional Latin American methods through dLocal Go, and manual offline payment for sellers who want it.
What holds it back from an easy, unqualified yes is consistency. The AI onboarding sends you through an extra build-method step despite promising to handle everything, the product catalog I tested didn’t match cleanly between the AI-generated storefront and the Store Manager admin view, and reaching a human support agent took more persistence than it should for a paid plan.
This is a strong fit for a first-time seller who wants a branded store live in an afternoon without touching code, and for anyone who specifically needs Latin American payment coverage through dLocal Go. It’s a weaker fit for sellers who need exact control over their catalog from day one, or who expect to reach a human support agent on the first ask.
| Nome do Plano | Espaço | Largura de banda | SO | Painel | Número de sites | Preço | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free Trial | Ilimitado | Ilimitado | Ilimitado | R$ 0 | Detalhes | ||
| Premium | 20 GB | Ilimitado | 3 | R$ 13 | Detalhes | ||
| Business | 50 GB | Ilimitado | 50 | R$ 17 | Detalhes | ||
| Cloud Startup | 100 GB | Ilimitado | 100 | R$ 33 | Detalhes |
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Sim, Hostinger suporta plataformas de e-commerce como WooCommerce, Magento e PrestaShop, com instalação com um clique disponível para uma configuração perfeita.
Hostinger fornece certificados SSL gratuitos, proteção contra DDoS e backups regulares para garantir a segurança do seu site de comércio eletrônico.
Absolutamente! Os planos de hospedagem da Hostinger são escaláveis, permitindo que você atualize recursos como RAM, armazenamento e largura de banda conforme suas necessidades de ecommerce crescem.
Sim, a maioria dos planos Hostinger Ecommerce Hosting inclui um domínio gratuito no primeiro ano, ajudando você a iniciar sua loja online facilmente.
O hPanel fácil de usar da Hostinger e o suporte por chat ao vivo 24/7 fazem dela uma excelente escolha para iniciantes que estão lançando sua primeira loja online.

Responda a algumas perguntas simples e encontre a solução perfeita para você!
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