PQ.Hosting is deploying a full—fledged server node here, with physical location in Banjul, the capital of the country, and access to the ACE international highway (Africa Coast to Europe). This opens up new opportunities for those who are looking for a VPS/VDS in a rare location with real connectivity and legal autonomy.
The Gambia is an example of how a compact country can become a digital bridge between continents.
Thanks to the inclusion of the ACE Submarine Cable System, which connects France, Portugal, the Canary Islands and more than 20 African countries, it provides surprisingly stable and fast Internet connection.
Hosting a virtual server in the Gambia provides access to three digital vectors at once:
- West Africa (Senegal, Guinea-Bissau, Mali)
- Europe (direct connection to France and Portugal)
- South America (via transatlantic branches)
- The rarity of the location: there are almost no servers on the market that are actually located in the Gambia. You have IP addresses that are not spammed, blocked, or repeated.
- Physical location: PQ.Hosting servers are actually installed in Banjul, connected to a local operator and have a backup line.
- Legal neutrality: The Gambia is not part of the international digital data exchange blocs.
- No competition: you don't share resources with hundreds of “neighbors”, there are no noisy peaks, and there is no risk of congestion at the node.
- Regional coverage: ideal geolocation for services operating in Senegal, Sierra Leone, Mauritania, Guinea.
The equipment is installed locally. Management is via KVM, with root access and full virtualization isolation.
Any OS is supported: Linux, Windows, custom ISO.
ACE connection, local IX, stable traffic, unlimited in speed and volume. Built-in DDoS protection, IPv4/IPv6 support.
The ability to reboot, reinstall the OS, view logs, and connect images. The interface is user—friendly, without excessive “visual noise".
Customers receive round-the-clock support in Russian and English, both through tickets and messengers.
- To regional operators and integrators operating on the France–West Africa route
- Startups and NGOs that need rare geometry and full transparency of usage
- Financial platforms and cryptoservices focused on the African market
- Services that need a legitimate location, but with a clean legal background
- Infrastructure projects building a distributed network with non-standard logic