A subdomain is the part of the web address which is before a domain and you have probably seen a lot of subdomains while surfing around world wide web. As an illustration, many websites such as Wikipedia have versions in various languages using subdomains - en.wikipedia.org, de.wikipedia.org etc. The main advantage of using a subdomain is that it can have an independent website and its own records, so you are able to even host it on a separate server. The practical use is that one could have a supplementary website, like an e-learning portal for students on top of the main school website. If you are using subdomains as an alternative to subfolders, it's going to be much easier to perform maintenance or to upgrade a certain site, not mentioning that it'll be more safe to have the sites separate from one another.

Subdomains in Shared Hosting

Each and every shared hosting package that we supply will enable you to create numerous subdomains with no more than a couple of mouse clicks within your web hosting Control Panel. They'll all be listed in the area where you create them and grouped under the main domain for more convenience, to help you very easily keep tabs on all of them. Furthermore, you can access many functions for any one of the subdomains through right-click context menus - for instance, you can view or modify their DNS records, access the website files, and much more. While creating a new subdomain, you're also going to have lots of options that you can choose from - determine the default access folder, set customized error pages, activate FrontPage Extensions or choose if the subdomain will use a shared or a dedicated IP address. How many subdomains you'll have is totally up to you because we haven't restricted this feature for any one of our plans.

Subdomains in Semi-dedicated Hosting

Using our semi-dedicated server plans, you're going to be able to create an unlimited number of subdomains for any of the domains you add as hosted in the account. It will take a couple of mouse clicks to create a new subdomain and in the process you will be able to add custom-made error pages for it, decide if it will use a shared or a dedicated IP address, change the default folder that it'll access or activate FrontPage Extensions. All subdomains that you have inside the account are going to be grouped under their root domain from a to z and you're going to be able to see and handle them with ease. By using instant access buttons and right-click menus you'll also be able to jump to the website files in the File Manager section or check logs, visitor statistics and other information about any one of your subdomains.