This was a dedicated topic for requesting or proposing additions and changes to the list at
This list has been discontinued as of December 2023, so no new requests for addition should be submitted here.
Thanks to all hosting providers for your support of Let's Encrypt and HTTPS.
Please note that posts or listings in either thread probably do not affect your search results very much, because all links everywhere on this forum are always marked with rel="nofollow", which discourages search engines from using these links for ranking purposes. (You might still find individual forum topics themselves as search results.)
If you are a web hosting provider or customer with new information to share about the status of Let's Encrypt support in a web hosting product, please provide your information below. A community volunteer can verify it and update the main post.
Links to both public announcements (that a web host supports Let's Encrypt) and documentation (of how customers can make use of it) are appreciated.
Discussion posts on the original topic from 2015 to 2019 have also been moved to this topic.
added! thanks Im still going through shared hosting post and pulling from it if you know anymore let me know and I will gladly add it. Should be helpful to everyone who is looking for providers.
We supported letsencrypt from the first hour of public beta: https://www.schokokeks.org/
(Fully automated, customers just switch on “Let’s Encrypt” for their host and all magic is done behind the scenes.)
But apart from that: I don’t like such lists. They are incomplete. And they don’t represent details such as if it’s working stable or easy to use. If your desired hoster cares about security does not simply mean if letsencrypt is supported or not. There’s more about that topic.
At Pressjitsu we rolled out full support for Let’s Encrypt at launch day, we actually had a party. We don’t use the LE client though, we have custom Python scripts that handle everything, including updating nginx configs for user nodes using our configuration templating and scheduling a certificate renewal job.
For our customers’ domains we never hit the current (or private beta) rate limiting since the requests originate from the customer node and each has a unique IP address.
That's true, but you have to do something smart when 11 users request a certificate within 3 hours. Also afaik renewals count towards rate limiting as well, so that could potentially be a problem, but hey, you can always tunnel it through a different IP...
That’s why people should contact support before signing up to a hosting provider to confirm everything they are looking for. This is common sense. I’ve always talked to customer care before signing up because then I will actually know what I am getting. Maybe this isn’t common?
This list will never be perfect, but it’s better than having people asking who is supported over and over and over. Should we give a star based system for ease of setup?
novatrend.ch launched free SSL certificates based on Let’s Encrypt for all hosting customers. It’s well integrated in cpanel and customers can request and install the certificate with just one click. The certificate is automatically renewed in the background.
@hobarrera: Did you read my message in the right context? I replied to post #9.
One Server has one (or few) IP address, registers one LE account, requesting many LE certificates with this account.