Bare Metal Servers in California
297 configurations found
Santa Clara
10 providers133 configurations
$36lowest price- H41 configurationsHorizonIQfrom $36
- C11 configurationsColoCrossingfrom $60
- L17 configurationsLatitude.shfrom $91
- H2 configurationsHivelocityfrom $97
- V8 configurationsVULTRfrom $120
- C15 configurationsCatofrom $241
- L3 configurationsLumenfrom $360
- E26 configurationsEquinixfrom $493
- E7 configurationsEvocativefrom $495
- Z3 configurationsZenlayer
Los Angeles
11 providers114 configurations
$60lowest price- C11 configurationsColoCrossingfrom $60
- L17 configurationsLatitude.shfrom $91
- E3 configurationsEnzufrom $95
- V7 configurationsVULTRfrom $120
- LN12 configurationsLimestone Networks, Inc.from $168
- C15 configurationsCatofrom $241
- F2 configurationsFDCServers.Netfrom $299
- L3 configurationsLumenfrom $360
- E15 configurationsEvocativefrom $435
- E26 configurationsEquinixfrom $493
- Z3 configurationsZenlayer
Irvine
2 providers41 configurations
$65lowest priceFresno
1 provider3 configurations
$360lowest priceSacramento
1 provider3 configurations
$360lowest priceSan Diego
1 provider3 configurations
$360lowest price
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Explore Bare Metal Servers in California
- Los Angeles114
Explore Bare Metal Providers in California
California Bare Metal Server Hosting
California serves as the primary landing point for trans-Pacific subsea traffic and acts as the most concentrated technology ecosystem in the United States. As of September 2025, the state offers over 110 carriers and more than 19 direct cloud on-ramps to 21 cloud regions, including AWS, GCP, and Azure. For enterprises, bare metal servers in California provide essential proximity to a consumer market of nearly 40 million residents and direct connectivity to the Pacific Rim. The presence of major internet exchange points such as Any2, SFMIX, and SVIX facilitates high-volume local peering, which reduces transit costs and bypasses the public internet for latency-sensitive applications.
Bare Metal California: At a glance
| Signal | Value | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Available providers | 14 | Diverse competitive landscape for single-tenant hardware. |
| CPU range | 4 - 96 cores | Supports everything from simple backends to heavy compute. |
| RAM range | 16 GB - 1.5 TB | Accommodates massive in-memory databases and analytics. |
| Storage range | 0.2 TB - 443 TB | High-capacity options for object storage and media archives. |
| Network range | Up to 100 Gbps | Essential for high-throughput data transfer and peering. |
| Cloud on-ramps | 19+ | Private, low-latency access to major public cloud regions. |
Why choose California for bare metal server hosting?
California is the gateway to the Pacific Rim and provides the most effective service coverage for the Western United States. The density of carrier-neutral facilities ensures competition that keeps cross-connect costs efficient and path redundancy high. Physical proximity to major business districts, including Silicon Valley, the San Francisco Financial District, and the Los Angeles media corridor, is vital for businesses requiring low-latency connections to industry leaders.
Available bare metal providers in California
Observed inventory across California and its descendant markets—including Los Angeles, Silicon Valley, Orange County, San Francisco, and San Diego—includes providers such as Hivelocity, Latitude.sh (part of Megaport), HorizonIQ, Cato, and VULTR. Other providers with confirmed local footprints include ColoCrossing, Evocative, Lumen, and Limestone Networks. Additionally, Equinix Metal (Legacy - End of Life June 2026) maintains an observed footprint in the Los Angeles and Silicon Valley markets, though this service is scheduled to sunset in 2026.
Typical use cases in California
For buyers running blockchain validators, such as Ethereum, Avalanche, or Solana, the observed server profiles in this market match high-performance requirements with configurations reaching 96 cores and 1.5 TB of RAM. Dedicated servers in California support game server hosting and multiplayer backends because the inventory reaches network speeds of up to 100 Gbps and features high-clock frequency CPUs. Teams building object storage or MinIO nodes choose this market when they need massive storage scaling, with inventory reaching up to 443 TB per node and high IOPS NVMe options for performance-sensitive data.
When migration from VMs or VPS makes sense
Migration to bare metal makes sense when workloads experience noisy-neighbor contention or require the predictable performance of single-tenant physical infrastructure. Buyers move to dedicated hardware in California to gain full control over the operating system and software stack without a shared hypervisor. This transition is a primary trigger for teams that have outgrown the RAM or storage limitations of standard VMs or those requiring high-throughput, dedicated network interfaces for real-time media and large-scale analytics.
Frequently asked questions
Q: Is California a good fit for low-latency dedicated hosting in the Western US?
A: Yes. California features exceptional density of trans-Pacific subsea cables and long-haul fiber. With over 110 carriers and major IXPs like Any2 and SVIX, it provides the lowest latency to both the California consumer market and the broader Pacific Rim.
Q: When should I move from a VM or VPS to bare metal in California?
A: Move to bare metal when your application requires more predictable performance than shared virtual environments can provide. Bare metal avoids noisy-neighbor contention and offers dedicated hardware resources, making it better for high-traffic sites, large databases, and storage nodes.
Q: What are the migration options for Equinix Metal users in this market?
A: Since Equinix Metal (Legacy - End of Life June 2026) is sunsetting, buyers should evaluate other providers with observed local inventory. Hivelocity, Latitude.sh (part of Megaport), and HorizonIQ offer comparable high-performance configurations in the California market to replace legacy deployments.