Running a food or coffee subscription business is hard enough without hosting problems dragging you down.
Failed renewals you don’t catch in time. A customer’s card expires, the renewal fails silently, and they churn before you even know there’s a problem. Your hosting provider has no idea how WooCommerce Subscriptions works, so they can’t help you optimize retry logic or notification workflows.
Monthly drops that crash your site. You spend weeks sourcing the perfect single-origin beans, build anticipation with your email list, then watch your site crawl when everyone hits checkout at once. Generic hosting can’t handle the traffic spikes that subscription businesses generate.
Shipping integrations that break after updates. Your fulfillment depends on ShipStation or Shippo working correctly. But every WooCommerce update risks breaking those connections, and your host just tells you to “contact the plugin developer.”
Support teams that don’t understand subscriptions. You submit a ticket about recurring payment failures and get a response about clearing your cache. Your hosting provider doesn’t know the difference between a subscription and a simple product order.
These problems aren’t minor inconveniences — they directly impact your monthly recurring revenue. You need hosting built for subscription ecommerce, not generic WordPress hosting with subscriptions bolted on.