Cogent & Lumen connected — America's gateway to Latin America and the Caribbean. Tier III facility in downtown Miami. AMD EPYC, Intel Xeon & entry Xeon configs. From €129/mo.
Miami is the undisputed internet gateway between North America and Latin America. The NAP of the Americas — housed in a hardened hurricane-rated facility — connects directly to Cogent and Lumen, enabling sub-30ms latency to Bogotá, Caracas, Lima, and São Paulo. For any workload serving the Latin American market, Miami is the optimal entry point into the Americas.
CityLatencyRoute
🇺🇸 New York~28 ms
🇨🇴 Bogotá~38 ms
🇧🇷 São Paulo~55 ms
🇲🇽 Mexico City~62 ms
🇬🇧 London~105 ms
🇸🇬 Singapore~245 ms
Connected Exchanges & Transit
Cogent Communications
Tier-1 · Primary Transit
Lumen (CenturyLink)
Tier-1 · LATAM backbone
NAP of the Americas
Hurricane-rated facility · Multi-homed
Miami Dedicated Servers
5 Configurations. From €129/mo.
Every Miami server includes 1 Gbps unmetered bandwidth via Cogent & Lumen, full root + IPMI, SOC 2 data residency, and 24/7 engineer support. No setup fees.
CPU
5 servers
Regulatory & Compliance
SOC 2 & HIPAA Ready. Americas Jurisdiction.
Our Miami facility is built for US and Latin American compliance requirements. US data residency, SOC 2 certification, and HIPAA-eligible infrastructure — audit-ready from day one.
SOC 2 Type II
Facility certified to SOC 2 Type II. Annual third-party audits cover security, availability, and confidentiality. Satisfies US enterprise procurement and vendor security questionnaires for Latin American operations.
AICPA SOC 2
HIPAA Eligible
Infrastructure supports HIPAA-eligible workloads for healthcare applications processing ePHI across the Americas. BAAs available on request. Suitable for telemedicine and health-tech platforms serving North and South America.
HIPAA · BAA Available
ISO 27001
Datacenter certified to ISO/IEC 27001:2022 information security management standard. Covers physical access controls, environmental monitoring, and incident response — required by enterprise contracts in both US and LATAM markets.
ISO/IEC 27001:2022
Hurricane Rated Facility
The NAP of the Americas is built to withstand Category 5 hurricane conditions — reinforced concrete, hurricane-grade windows, and a 10MW generator plant. Florida-based businesses and LATAM operations benefit from the highest physical resilience standards in the region.
Category 5 Rated
Best Suited For
Why Businesses Choose Miami
The combination of LATAM gateway position, Cogent & Lumen connectivity, and US data residency makes Miami the infrastructure default for Americas-facing workloads.
Latin American & Caribbean SaaS
~38ms to Bogotá~55ms to São PauloCogent backbone
Miami is the single best location for serving Latin American users with a US-based server. With Lumen's direct backbone into South America and Cogent's pan-Americas coverage, you get consistent latency to Colombia, Brazil, Venezuela, Peru, and the Caribbean — without routing through overloaded US East Coast hubs. US data residency is maintained while serving the entire western hemisphere.
Game studios targeting both US East and Latin American audiences run their servers in Miami to hit both markets simultaneously. The E-2286G at €149/mo delivers strong single-thread clock speeds at entry price — right for Minecraft, FiveM, ARK, and CS2 game servers. Miami gives ~28ms to New York and ~38ms to Bogotá from a single server.
The EPYC 9554P XL at €1,299/mo offers 768 GB DDR5 ECC and 4× 1.92 TB NVMe — one of the highest memory-per-dollar configurations in our Americas network. Ideal for large-scale data pipelines, in-memory analytics, vector databases, and AI inference for Latin American fintech and logistics companies that need US data residency.
Miami is the geographic and network hub between North and South America. Submarine cable systems like Americas-II, SAm-1, and Maya-1 terminate in or near Miami, making it the lowest-latency US location for Colombia, Brazil, Venezuela, Peru, Ecuador, and the Caribbean. By comparison, routing LATAM traffic through New York adds 15–40ms. If your user base is in Latin America but you need US data residency, Miami is the right choice every time.
The Intel Xeon E-2146G at €129/mo is our entry config — 6 cores at 3.5 GHz, 32 GB DDR4 ECC, and 2×4 TB HDD. It's designed for bulk storage, backup destinations, media hosting, or low-traffic web servers targeting the Latin American market. HDD storage is cost-efficient for data that's accessed occasionally rather than continuously. For higher-traffic or latency-sensitive use cases, the E-2286G at €149/mo with NVMe SSD is the better fit.
Miami is the most affordable US location in our network — entry configs start at €129/mo compared to €499/mo in New York. European locations (Frankfurt €209/mo, Strasbourg €119/mo) are slightly cheaper for equivalent hardware due to lower datacenter costs, but serve EU users better. Miami is the right choice when your audience is in the Americas and you need US data residency at a reasonable price. The EPYC 9554P at €999/mo is also one of the better value high-core-count configs in our Americas network.
Our Miami servers are housed in the NAP of the Americas, a hardened 750,000 sq ft facility built to withstand Category 5 hurricanes. The building features reinforced concrete construction, impact-resistant windows, a 10MW onsite generator plant with multi-day fuel reserves, and N+1 UPS systems. During Hurricane Irma and Ian, the facility remained fully operational. Physical resilience is among the highest of any datacenter in the continental US.
Yes. Windows Server 2019 and 2022 are available on all Miami configurations. Licensing can be included in your monthly invoice (license included) or you can bring your own (BYOL). All Miami servers include IPMI access, 1 Gbps unmetered bandwidth, and 24/7 engineer support regardless of OS.
The XL suffix means this is the maximum-memory variant of our EPYC 9554P configuration — 768 GB DDR5 ECC across 12 DIMMs, with 4× 1.92 TB NVMe (7.68 TB raw). At €1,299/mo it's designed for large in-memory databases, vector search, ML model serving, and analytics workloads where the standard 384 GB isn't enough but a full NY-class server is overkill. If you're running Elasticsearch, ClickHouse, or Redis clusters with large datasets in the Americas, this is your config.