See the monthly cost fast
Build the quote around the exact space, power, IP block, and bandwidth profile you need, then see the total immediately.
Price a single server, a growing rack footprint, or a full cabinet without waiting on a back-and-forth quote. Choose the right region, set the real power draw, and see the monthly cost fast.
Single 1U production node
Whether you are moving one server or planning a larger rollout, the goal is the same: make pricing clear, keep deployment simple, and leave room to expand.
Build the quote around the exact space, power, IP block, and bandwidth profile you need, then see the total immediately.
Bring in one 1U server, a quarter rack, or a full cabinet and keep the same buying path as the deployment grows.
Deploy in NYC, Dallas, or Los Angeles based on latency, customer geography, and resilience goals.
Choose the region and footprint you need, then our sales team sends an order link so you can complete the purchase.
We give you the right shipping address for the destination datacenter. If you prefer, you can also drop the server off.
We rack the server or servers for free, provide all power and network cables, and get the deployment connected cleanly.
See how monthly pricing changes from an entry-level single server to a larger rack footprint.
These are the most common starting points, from a single production server to a full cabinet.
The most direct path for one production box, a firewall, or a compact storage or virtualization node.
Ideal when one server quickly becomes two or when you need room for switching, rails, and cleaner cable layout.
A practical midpoint when you need more structure than loose U space, while full cabinets remain available for larger deployments.
A strong fit for denser multi-server deployments that need more cabinet space, cleaner organization, and room to scale.
Available for larger environments that need an entire cabinet for compute, storage, networking, or higher-density mixed workloads.
Useful for AI inference, rendering, and other power-hungry systems that need more planning around wattage and uplinks.
Most teams are not starting with a cage or a custom suite. They are moving servers out of the office, pulling steady workloads out of the cloud, or building a more stable home for critical infrastructure. The goal here is to make that decision easier.
Move from the overview into the exact setup or region that matches your hardware, traffic, and growth plan.
Best for 1U to 4U deployments, first-time colo buyers, and teams moving one server into a datacenter.
Learn moreA strong fit when one server turns into a small rack and the deployment needs more room to breathe.
Learn moreBuilt for AI, rendering, and other higher-density workloads that need more power and bandwidth planning.
Learn moreA strong match for Secaucus and managed colocation searches where location, support, and facility access matter most.
Learn moreUse this when New York City and NYC metro proximity are the main reasons for choosing the region.
Learn moreThe quote handles the monthly math. These are the operational details most teams care about before they deploy.
Useful for power cycles, cable checks, drive swaps, and quick eyes-on help when you are not physically in the datacenter.
A good fit for customers who need routing flexibility, larger IP space, or cleaner migration paths from existing infrastructure.
Keep remote console access, provisioning workflows, and out-of-band management front and center for single-server deployments.
Start with 1 Gbps unmetered and scale into 10 Gbps, 40 Gbps, or 100 Gbps unmetered profiles when traffic actually justifies it.
Adjust space, watts, IP space, and bandwidth to get a live monthly estimate before you talk with sales.
Compare NYC, Dallas, and Los Angeles to see which location gives you the best mix of latency, facility access, and operational fit.
InterServer's densest colocation footprint with multiple NYC metro facility options just outside Manhattan.
A central U.S. footprint designed for wide domestic reach, strong carrier choice, and efficient South/Central coverage.
West Coast colocation for lower Pacific-region latency, media delivery, and edge-heavy application footprints.
These are the questions that usually come up before a team places hardware in colo.