FreeHosting.Live helps beginners understand free hosting limits, WordPress hosting problems, and the point where a project should move to paid hosting.
Free hosting is useful for testing, learning WordPress, building a school project, or publishing a simple experiment. It becomes risky when the website needs uptime, backups, support, email delivery, search traffic, affiliate clicks, or a professional impression. This homepage is a practical map to the most useful guides and tools on the site.
Start with your current problem
Most hosting decisions start with a symptom, not a brand comparison. Choose the path that matches what is happening on your site right now.
- Free website not loading suddenly – use this checklist when a site times out, shows errors, or stops responding.
- What happens when free hosting reaches its limits – understand CPU, bandwidth, storage, inode, and suspension warnings.
- Why free hosting sites stop loading after a few months – a beginner explanation of repeated downtime and account limits.
- Why free hosting websites disappear – what to check when a free site or account is no longer visible.
Use the free hosting tools
The tools are built for quick decisions. They should not replace provider terms or support, but they help you avoid guessing.
- Free Hosting Suitability Checker – decide whether a project is still safe on free hosting.
- Hosting Limits Explainer – learn what common hosting resource warnings mean.
- Tools page – open the full beginner tools section.
Compare free hosting with paid hosting
A beginner site does not need expensive infrastructure, but it does need the right level of reliability. These guides help you choose based on risk instead of marketing.
- Free hosting vs paid hosting – the simplest decision guide for beginners.
- When free hosting is not suitable – signs that a project has become too serious for a free account.
- Best free hosting without ads – what to check before trusting a free provider.
- Best free hosting sites for WordPress – beginner checks before using WordPress on a free plan.
Reviews for beginners moving beyond free hosting
Hosting reviews on this site focus on practical fit: renewal cost, WordPress limits, support, backups, and migration risk. A cheap plan is not useful if you cannot restore or move the site later.
- InterServer hosting review for beginners
- Hostinger review for beginners
- A2 Hosting vs Bluehost for WordPress beginners
- HostPapa hosting review for beginners
Quick rule
Use free hosting for private practice, temporary demos, and projects where downtime is acceptable. Move to paid hosting when the website is public, indexed by Google, connected to a real domain, used for clients, used for affiliate income, or important enough that losing it would hurt.
Before upgrading, optimize the basics: remove unused plugins, compress large images, keep a database and file backup, test contact forms, and check whether the same resource warning returns after cleanup. If the warning returns, the problem is probably not just one bad plugin.
Best next step
If you are new, start with the Free Hosting Suitability Checker. If your site is already broken, start with the 15-minute troubleshooting checklist.