Where does a Turkish business turn when it wants its hosting and its support staff in the same time zone, speaking the same language, with servers physically close to its customers? PlusLayer answers that question directly. It is an Izmir company that has been running since 2001, with its own data centers in Izmir and a second presence in London, and the whole catalog is built around businesses operating in the Turkish market, up to and including enterprise accounts.

Hosting plans for every business size

The PlusLayer product range is wide without feeling padded. Shared hosting comes in Linux and Windows flavors, each split into a standard tier and an unlimited tier, so a small site and a busier one can both find a fit. On top of that sit reseller plans (bayi hosting for people who want to sell hosting under their own name), e-commerce hosting tuned for online shops, a corporate tier, offshore hosting for those who want it, and dedicated email hosting that includes a Yandex 360 option. That last detail tells you something: PlusLayer is willing to fold in a third-party mail platform when it serves the customer better than rolling its own.

Servers, storage and processor choices

The heavier side of the catalog is where PlusLayer puts most of its weight. Virtual servers come as VPS and VDS, alongside cloud servers, fully dedicated and rental machines, and colocation for anyone who owns hardware and just needs rack space, power and connectivity. The underlying kit is named openly: NVMe SSD storage, Intel Xeon Gold and AMD EPYC processors. That is the modern, sensible spec sheet you would hope to see, and PlusLayer naming the silicon instead of hiding behind vague phrasing is a small mark of confidence. A company quoting its processor families on a public page tends to be one that expects technical buyers to read it.

Uptime guarantee and backup promises

Two operational promises sit next to the hardware: a 99.99 percent uptime guarantee and free daily backups. Those are the two figures anyone whose income depends on a site staying up will read first, and PlusLayer including backups by default, rather than selling them back as an upsell after something breaks, is worth noting. Free site migration is part of the deal too, which lowers the friction of moving in from another host, often the single biggest reason people put off switching. These are the practical inclusions that separate a host you can settle into from one that nickel-and-dimes you after signup.

Domain management, SSL and DNS services

Domains get full treatment: registration across a spread of extensions, transfers, a management panel, Whois lookup, and privacy protection to keep personal registrant data off public records. SSL certificates come free with hosting plans, server licenses are available for those who need them, and DNS is handled through an in-house service branded PlusFlare.

Pricing quoted in Turkish lira

Bundling DNS, certificates and domains under one roof means a buyer can keep the whole stack with a single provider instead of stitching together three vendors and three invoices, which is the kind of consolidation small teams tend to value once they have managed a few renewals. Pricing is quoted in Turkish lira: Linux and Windows hosting from 400 TL a year, reseller from 750 TL a month, VPS from 550 TL a month, and cloud servers from 850 TL a month. Quoting in lira rather than dollars is consistent with who this is for, and it spares local buyers the currency-conversion guesswork that trips up so many hosting purchases.

Built for the Turkish market

One thing I appreciate is that PlusLayer does not pretend to be everything to everyone. It reads as a company that knows its audience is Turkish businesses and builds for them, from the language of the site to the choice of payment currency to the data center in Izmir that keeps latency low for domestic visitors. The London location gives a second option for anyone who wants European placement, which broadens the use cases without diluting the core focus.

Reaching support through multiple channels

Reaching PlusLayer is straightforward. Two phone lines sit at the top of the site, +90 850 and +90 532 numbers, and PlusLayer adds WhatsApp and Telegram alongside the usual contact form. For a hosting provider, where a server problem at the wrong hour can cost real money, live chat channels people already keep open on their phones carry obvious practical value, and the 24/7 technical support claim is backed by routes that are genuinely visible. The openness here counts in the company's favor.

What customer reviews reveal

Outside opinion is present but uneven, which is worth being honest about. PlusLayer carries reviews on Trustpilot, and on HostAdvice it has four user reviews and sits ranked 1347th out of 6,889 hosting companies tracked there. It also turns up on Hostings.info, BuyersProve and HostSearch with individual user feedback, while WHTop lists it with no customer reviews at all. So the picture is a company with a real footprint across the hosting-review sites but a low volume of ratings on any single one. Four reviews is not enough to draw a strong conclusion from, and a prospective customer should read what is there with that small sample size in mind. A long operating history since 2001 has its own value, but it is not a substitute for a deep bench of recent customer feedback.

A possible explanation for few reviews

The contrast between a mature, well-equipped catalog and a modest review count is the most interesting tension in this listing. It usually points to a provider that does steady business with a settled client base that simply does not post much, common enough with B2B and enterprise hosting where the buyers are companies, not chatty individuals. It could equally mean PlusLayer is less visible to the wider review-writing public than its size would imply. Either reading is plausible, and a careful buyer would treat the few public reviews as a starting point and lean harder on a direct conversation.

What works in PlusLayer's favor is specificity. The hardware is named, the uptime figure is stated, backups and SSL and migration are spelled out as included, and the prices are printed in plain lira. Vague hosting sites tend to hide all of that behind a "get a quote" wall. Here the numbers are on the page, which makes it far easier for a buyer to compare PlusLayer against a competitor without first sitting through a sales call. That transparency is the strongest argument PlusLayer makes for itself.

A few cautions are fair. The PlusLayer site is primarily in Turkish, so a non-Turkish buyer will need translation help or a bilingual contact. The offshore hosting line is a feature some businesses want and others will want to ask pointed questions about depending on what they plan to run. The uptime and backup guarantees are claims until tested, as they are with every host, and the low review count means you are partly trusting PlusLayer's own framing. None of that sinks the offering. It simply means the homework is on the buyer, and the numbers and channel details PlusLayer publishes at least give you something concrete to verify.


Business address
PlusLayer
Akdeniz Mah. 1347 Sokak Anba Is Merkezi No:8 Ofis:506-507-508,
Konak,
Izmir
35210
Turkey

Contact details
Phone: +908503023366
Fax: +902324871888