Bare Metal Servers in South America
154 configurations found
Mexico
2 markets21 configurations
$91lowest priceChile
1 market17 configurations
$91lowest priceArgentina
2 markets16 configurations
$91lowest priceColombia
1 market15 configurations
$91lowest priceEcuador
1 market3 configurations
Peru
1 market3 configurations
Costa Rica
1 market1 configuration
Guatemala
1 market1 configuration
Puerto Rico
1 market1 configuration
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Latin America Bare Metal Server Hosting
Latin America (LATAM) is the fastest-growing data center region outside APAC, with over 1 GW of capacity live or under construction across major hubs like São Paulo, Mexico City, and Santiago. Buyers choose bare metal servers in Latin America to access improving submarine cable connectivity to North America (60–80ms) and Europe (120–180ms). This infrastructure serves as a strategic choice for regional workloads, content delivery, and financial services. As an aggregate market, Latin America provides distributed inventory across Mexico, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, and Argentina, offering single-tenant physical infrastructure that avoids the contention of shared hypervisors.
Bare Metal Latin America: At a glance
| Signal | Value | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Available providers | 6+ | Broad regional choice across major hubs |
| CPU range | 4 - 80 Cores | Supports diverse compute needs from edge to core |
| RAM range | 16 GB - 1,536 GB | Accommodates large database and memory-heavy nodes |
| Storage range | Up to 32.96 TB | High-capacity options for object storage and archives |
| Network range | Up to 100 Gbps | Low-latency peering and high-bandwidth regional transit |
| Regional Hubs | Brazil, Mexico, Chile, Argentina, Colombia | Distributed reach across the continent's business centers |
Why choose Latin America for bare metal server hosting?
The region offers maturing connectivity via new subsea cables like EllaLink and BRUSA, which support low-latency peering to major cloud providers and local telcos. Strategic locations such as Querétaro and Santiago provide stability and growing hyperscale on-ramps, while São Paulo remains the largest market with over 400 MW of live capacity. Dedicated infrastructure here allows buyers to target specific user concentrations, such as the Mercosur region from Brazil or North American adjacency from Mexico, while maintaining the predictable performance and control of physical hardware.
Available bare metal providers in Latin America
Observed inventory across the geography includes Latitude.sh (part of Megaport), which holds a significant footprint in São Paulo, Santiago, Mexico City, and San Jose. Other providers with confirmed presence across descendant markets include EdgeUno, Zenlayer, VULTR, and FDCServers.Net. Additionally, Equinix Metal (Legacy - End of Life June 2026) maintains configurations in São Paulo. This provider mix ensures availability across primary and secondary markets, though exact profiles and hardware specifications vary by specific metro.
Typical use cases in Latin America
Dedicated servers in Latin America are well aligned with blockchain operators running validators for Solana, Ethereum, and Avalanche, as the observed inventory reaches 80 cores and 1.5 TB of RAM to handle high-throughput transactions. For buyers building object storage nodes or MinIO clusters, the storage range of up to 32.96 TB matches these requirements. The presence of high-clock CPUs and network speeds up to 100 Gbps supports multiplayer game backends and real-time financial services that require predictable disk and network I/O without the noisy-neighbor contention found in virtualized environments.
When migration from VMs or VPS makes sense
Migration to bare metal is appropriate when workloads outgrow the constraints of shared virtual machines, particularly when noisy-neighbor issues impact performance consistency. Triggers for moving include the need for single-tenant control over the operating system, higher RAM and storage requirements that standard VMs cannot meet, and security-sensitive applications requiring physical isolation. In LATAM, buyers move to dedicated hardware to ensure the predictable performance needed for regional databases and high-traffic content delivery across multiple countries.
Frequently asked questions
Q: Is Latin America a good fit for low-latency dedicated hosting?
A: Yes, especially for targeting regional users. São Paulo and Mexico City offer 60–80ms latency to North America, while subsea cables from Brazil and Chile provide 120–180ms connectivity to Europe, enabling viable hybrid architectures for regional workloads.
Q: Which providers show bare metal inventory in Latin America?
A: Observed providers include Latitude.sh (part of Megaport), EdgeUno, Zenlayer, VULTR, and FDCServers.Net. Equinix Metal (Legacy - End of Life June 2026) is also present in specific hubs like São Paulo but is transitioning out of service.
Q: What are the options for Equinix Metal users in this region?
A: Since Equinix Metal reaches its end of life in June 2026, buyers should consider migrating to other observed providers in the region, such as Latitude.sh (part of Megaport) or EdgeUno, which offer similar physical, single-tenant infrastructure in major LATAM metros.