Service Level Agreement



HostSite24.com offers a 99.9% Uptime Guarantee. That means your web server is guaranteed
operational 99.9% of the time in any calendar month. [COMPANY NAME] guarantee 99.9% service uptime
allows for 45 minutes of unscheduled (HTTP) service outage per month as defined here. For each
additional 45 minutes of downtime, you will receive a 10% credit or refund. Regardless of the number of
outages, all refunds are limited to one month's hosting service fees and do not include excess usage fees
or other nonstandard recurring charges. The amount of the credits are determined by the following table,
based on the amount of server uptime for the month in which credits are requested.

 



 

99.9 - 100% 0% credit
99.7 - 99.8% 10% credit = 3 days
99.5 - 99.6% 25% credit = 8 days
99.3 - 99.4% 50% credit = 15 days
99.0 - 99.2% 75% credit = 23 days
98.9% and below 100% credit = 1 month




HostSite24.com will not be held responsible for Service Outages resulting from non-HostSite24.com
operated equipment including, but not limited to, Internet NAP failures, upstream network outages or
congestion and backbone failures. Additionally, HostSite24.com will not be held responsible for delays
in the registration or transfer of a domain due to InterNIC-related issues, unscheduled outages, website
specific outrages and outages resulting from malfunctioning customer scripts or applications that are
installed by the customer, or for unusual traffic spikes or "denial of service" attacks on customer websites.
Hybrid services, colocation services or renting out rack space, cloud servers, services under bare metal
environment such as dedicated servers and virtual private services does not qualify for any credit under this
server uptime guarantee.
Refunds will be issued upon request by the customer and upon a determination that a service outage, as
defined by this guarantee, has occurred. To be eligible for a refund, the refund request must be made to the
Billing Department at the end of the month for the current month (last day of the current month) or within the
1st week of the month for the previous month.

Was this answer helpful? 9 Users Found This Useful (21 Votes)