Infrastructure decisions rarely happen in isolation.
For many organizations evaluating growth, modernization, or operational resilience, one of the earliest questions becomes:
Should we move to cloud hosting — or should we colocate our infrastructure?
There’s rarely one universal answer.
Both approaches can support modern operations, but they solve different business problems.
Understanding where each model works best can help organizations make decisions that support long-term performance, flexibility, and operational goals.
What Is Colocation?
Colocation allows organizations to place their own infrastructure inside a third-party data center facility. The organization typically owns and manages its infrastructure while using the provider’s environment for:- power
- cooling
- connectivity
- physical security
- infrastructure support
- enterprise workloads
- compliance-sensitive environments
- hybrid infrastructure
- organizations wanting operational control
What Is Cloud Hosting?
Cloud hosting provides infrastructure through virtualized environments operated by a provider. Instead of managing physical infrastructure directly, organizations consume computing resources as services. Cloud hosting often prioritizes:- flexibility
- faster deployment
- elastic resource usage
- reduced infrastructure ownership
- variable workloads
- application growth
- rapid deployment
- operational simplification
Colocation vs Cloud Hosting: Quick Comparison
| Category | Colocation | Cloud Hosting |
| Infrastructure Ownership | Customer-owned | Provider-managed |
| Physical Control | Higher | Lower |
| Scalability | Planned growth | Faster expansion |
| Deployment Speed | Moderate | Faster |
| Connectivity Flexibility | High | Depends on provider |
| Hardware Control | Greater | Limited |
| Operational Responsibility | Higher | Lower |
| Cost Structure | More predictable long-term | More usage-driven |
When Colocation Often Makes More Sense
Colocation can work well when organizations value:Infrastructure Control
Teams maintain greater control over infrastructure choices.Long-Term Stability
Infrastructure environments often remain predictable over time.Connectivity Flexibility
Carrier-neutral environments may support broader connectivity choices.Operational Visibility
Organizations retain direct oversight of infrastructure. Examples:- healthcare organizations
- enterprise infrastructure teams
- business-critical environments
- organizations with specific operational requirements
When Cloud Hosting Often Makes More Sense
Cloud hosting may fit organizations prioritizing:Speed
Deploy infrastructure quickly.Flexibility
Scale resources dynamically.Reduced Physical Management
Minimize hardware ownership.Variable Workloads
Adjust environments based on changing demand. Examples:- development environments
- rapidly growing applications
- short-term deployment needs
Why Many Organizations End Up Using Both
One of the biggest misconceptions is assuming infrastructure decisions must be one or the other. Many organizations build:Hybrid Infrastructure
Examples: Critical systems → Colocation Flexible workloads → Cloud Operational systems → Colocation Temporary environments → Cloud Sensitive environments → Colocation Rapid testing → Cloud The question often becomes: Which workloads belong where?Questions to Ask Before Choosing
How predictable is our growth? Do we need infrastructure ownership? How sensitive are our workloads? Do we expect rapid scaling? How important is operational control? What support model works best? For a comprehensive evaluation playbook, see our strategic checklist on how to choose a data center provider.Common Mistakes Organizations Make
Mistake 1:
Choosing based only on pricing.Mistake 2:
Assuming cloud removes operational responsibility.Mistake 3:
Overbuilding infrastructure too early.Mistake 4:
Ignoring future scalability.Mistake 5:
Treating infrastructure as a short-term decision.Decision Framework
| If You Prioritize… | Consider… |
| Infrastructure control | Colocation |
| Hardware flexibility | Colocation |
| Faster deployment | Cloud |
| Variable demand | Cloud |
| Operational visibility | Colocation |
| Hybrid growth | Combination |
Final Thoughts
Colocation and cloud hosting are not competing ideas as much as different infrastructure approaches. The right choice depends on:- business goals
- growth expectations
- operational preferences
- workload requirements
- long-term strategy