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Leaseweb
Leaseweb
from Wikipedia

Leaseweb is a Dutch cloud computing and web services company with offices in the continents of Europe, Asia, and North America.

Key Information

Leaseweb is a subsidiary of OCOM, an internet services company headquartered in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

History

[edit]

Leaseweb was founded in 1997 by Dutch pilots Con Zwinkels and Laurens Rosenthal.

In 1998, Leaseweb acquired its first servers and set up their first office in Utrecht. By 2005 the company owned 5,000 servers, a number that had doubled to 10,000 two years later.

In 2007, Leaseweb relocated the company headquarters to the Amsterdam area.[citation needed] In 2010, Leaseweb acquired German hosting provider Netdirekt.[1] In 2016, Leaseweb acquired the Illinois based Nobis Technology Group, and its Ubiquity Hosting operations.[2] In 2018, Leaseweb USA acquired ServInt, a Northern Virginia-based web hosting and managed hosting services for cloud IT operations.[3] In 2021, Leaseweb acquired iWeb, and their Canadian data centres, from INAP for an undisclosed amount.[4] In February 2023, Leaseweb rebranded their Canadian operations under the name Leaseweb Canada.[5]

Leaseweb Network

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The company operates eighteen data centers in Europe, Asia and the United States. Leaseweb peers with Internet exchanges in Amsterdam, Stockholm, Warsaw, Budapest, Vienna, Frankfurt, Dusseldorf, Zurich, Brussels, Paris, Luxembourg, London, Madrid, Washington DC, New York, Miami, Chicago, Atlanta, Dallas, Phoenix, Los Angeles, Palo Alto, Seattle, San Jose, Hong Kong and Singapore.

Network and datacenters

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The company operates 26 datacenters in Europe, North America, Asia and the Oceania.[6] Leaseweb peers with Internet exchanges in Amsterdam, Frankfurt, London, New York City, Brussels, Stockholm, Madrid, Zurich, Düsseldorf, Paris, Warsaw, Budapest, Milan, Vienna, Prague, Luxembourg, Bucharest, Bratislava, Copenhagen, Oslo, Ashburn, Miami, Chicago, Dallas, Palo Alto and Los Angeles.[7] Leaseweb's network consists of 55 Points-of-Presence and 33 Internet Exchanges across the globe. The network has a bandwidth capacity of 5.9 Tbit/s with peak traffic about 2.5 Tbit/s and reports uptime of 99.9999%[8]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Leaseweb is a global Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) provider specializing in hosting, dedicated servers, content delivery networks (CDN), colocation, and related digital infrastructure solutions, headquartered in , . Founded in 1997 by Con Zwinkels and Laurens Rosenthal, former professional pilots, the company originated from a vision to deliver reliable connectivity and hosting services, drawing on principles of precision and global reach akin to . Over nearly three decades, Leaseweb has expanded from a Dutch startup to a multinational enterprise serving over 20,000 customers worldwide, ranging from small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) to large corporations, with 501–1,000 employees as of 2025. The company's infrastructure includes more than 80,000 servers managed across over 28 data centers spanning , , , and , supported by a high-capacity network offering 10+ terabits per second (Tbps) of bandwidth and 99.999% uptime guarantees. Leaseweb's services emphasize , — including DDoS protection and compliance with standards like GDPR and ISO certification—and cost-efficiency, powering mission-critical applications such as websites, servers, storage, and platforms for clients in diverse industries. In recent years, Leaseweb has pursued strategic growth through acquisitions, such as in 2021 to bolster its North American presence, and innovations like public cloud offerings launched in 2024 and expansions into in . As of 2025, leadership transitioned with Zwinkels moving to Chairman while new co-CEOs focus on further global expansion and technological advancements.

History

Founding and Early Growth

Leaseweb was founded in 1997 in the Netherlands by Con Zwinkels and Laurens Rosenthal, two professional airline pilots who envisioned the transformative potential of the internet while traveling the world. Operating initially from a modest dorm room in Utrecht, the company started as a small startup offering web design services alongside basic hosting solutions, capitalizing on the burgeoning demand for online presence during the dot-com era. In its formative years, Leaseweb began operations with a single rented server but rapidly scaled by purchasing four dedicated servers in 1998, which were installed in a half rack at Amsterdam's . This acquisition established the foundation for reliable infrastructure services, with bandwidth costs at that time reaching €500 per Mbps, underscoring the high stakes of early connectivity. The company's early emphasis on building robust hosting capabilities aligned with the explosive growth of the web, as it shifted from custom to providing dedicated server solutions for businesses navigating the volatile dot-com landscape. By 2005, Leaseweb had grown to manage over 5,000 servers, a figure that doubled to more than 10,000 within two years, signaling a pivotal transition toward large-scale dedicated hosting and away from initial roots. This expansion included hiring the first full-time employees and opening a dedicated within a , fostering operational stability amid the post-dot-com stabilization. Throughout this period up to around 2010, Leaseweb prioritized development in , laying the groundwork for broader operations while maintaining a focus on reliability inspired by its founders' heritage.

International Expansion and Acquisitions

Leaseweb initiated its international expansion beyond its Dutch origins in the early 2010s, establishing a foothold in key global markets to support growing demand for its hosting and cloud services. In December 2010, the company acquired netdirekt, a Frankfurt-based hosting provider, marking its entry into Germany and providing local support for German-speaking customers while expanding access to its infrastructure in Central Europe. This was followed by the launch of Leaseweb USA in January 2011, complete with a new headquarters and data center in Virginia, aimed at capturing the North American market and enabling geographic diversification for international clients. By 2013, Leaseweb entered the Asia-Pacific region through the establishment of operations in Singapore, which has since grown to include three data centers and experienced a 300% revenue increase in the region over the previous 24 months (as of 2023). A series of strategic acquisitions further accelerated Leaseweb's global growth and strengthened its Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) offerings by integrating established customer bases, additional data center capacity, and specialized hosting expertise. In September 2013, Leaseweb USA acquired Shore.net, a Massachusetts-based web hosting provider, adding over 500 customers and enhancing its U.S. East Coast presence through seamless migration to its facilities. This was expanded in March 2016 with the purchase of Nobis Technology Group, including the Ubiquity Hosting brand and seven U.S. data centers, which bolstered Leaseweb's dedicated and cloud hosting capabilities across multiple strategic points of presence in North America. The trend continued in May 2018 when Leaseweb acquired ServInt, a Virginia-based managed hosting pioneer, further solidifying its reputation in high-performance IaaS and integrating advanced virtualization technologies. Culminating in August 2021, the acquisition of iWeb, a Montreal-based cloud provider, established a significant Canadian market share, making North America Leaseweb's third-largest region and enhancing its hybrid cloud and colocation services. These four major acquisitions—Shore.net, Nobis Technology Group, ServInt, and —have collectively expanded Leaseweb's IaaS portfolio by incorporating diverse assets, regional expertise, and a broader , enabling scalable solutions without the need for organic builds in competitive markets. Building on this foundation, Leaseweb entered the public cloud market in June 2024, launching a flexible, cost-effective service that offers transparent pricing and global availability as an alternative to hyperscale providers, thereby diversifying its offerings to include on-demand compute and storage resources. In January 2025, the company introduced a new VPS platform, featuring high-performance local storage and deployment starting at €3.99 per month, designed to deliver efficient for businesses seeking affordable in its international network. Throughout 2025, Leaseweb continued its expansion with the launch of public cloud and VPS solutions in in February, a major contribution to the European IPCEI-CIS project for cloud sovereignty in March, object storage services in in August, and GPU acceleration capabilities using L4 in its public cloud in October.

Services and Products

Core Infrastructure Offerings

Leaseweb's dedicated server offerings provide physical, single-tenant servers designed for needs, featuring customizable hardware configurations such as RAM, storage disks, and bandwidth to meet enterprise requirements. These servers support specialized applications, including GPU-accelerated workloads for gaming and data-intensive tasks, with options for instant deployment or extended customization periods. Available across multiple global locations, including the with nine data centers, the , and , they ensure low-latency access and scalability for businesses. Security features include compliance with ISO 27001, PCI DSS, and standards, along with Tier III redundant data centers and standard DDoS IP protection. Colocation services from Leaseweb enable customers to house their own servers, network equipment, and storage in secure, state-of-the-art s, offering flexible options like full racks, partial rack units, or private cages for enhanced isolation. These services support hybrid architectures by allowing interconnections with providers and the Leaseweb Network, facilitating seamless data transfer and integration. Customers can manage IP addresses, request data center access badges, and monitor bandwidth usage through dedicated portals, with global availability across Leaseweb's facilities. Private networking options further enhance connectivity within the colocation environment, supporting Layer 2 setups for metro-wide links. Leaseweb's hosting and domain services include managed shared web hosting packages for and Windows platforms, providing reliable infrastructure with ample data traffic, multiple databases, and an intuitive control panel for easy management. These offerings support email hosting and allow users to link domains directly to their hosting packs, ensuring fast and secure online presence. and transfer services cover a wide variety of extensions, enabling straightforward setup without additional complexity. Network services form the backbone of Leaseweb's infrastructure, offering basic connectivity through options like floating IPs for flexible addressing, private networking for isolated Layer 2 connections, and dedicated network equipment for custom setups. IP management allows efficient allocation and utilization, while bandwidth provisioning scales from 100 Mbps to multiple 100 Gbps ports to handle varying loads. The overall network delivers low-latency performance with 99.999% uptime, over 10 Tbps of total capacity across 28 data centers, and built-in DDoS protection for reliability. Point-to-point connectivity options further ensure secure, cost-effective links between data centers.

Cloud and Hosting Solutions

Leaseweb provides a range of cloud platforms designed for scalability and flexibility, including public, private, and hybrid options to meet diverse business requirements. The public cloud offerings enable multi-tenant elastic compute environments, allowing users to provision resources on-demand without dedicated hardware commitments, with GPU acceleration via NVIDIA L4 launched in October 2025 for AI and high-compute workloads. Private cloud solutions, powered by VMware technologies such as vCloud Director and vSphere, deliver single-tenant isolation with customizable configurations for enterprises needing enhanced control and security. Hybrid cloud setups integrate these private environments with public resources, facilitating seamless data migration and workload bursting while optimizing costs and performance. Leaseweb's managed service simplifies container orchestration by handling cluster management, scaling, and updates, enabling developers to focus on application deployment across public or hybrid clouds. This platform supports automated provisioning and integrates with VMware-based infrastructures for consistent operations. Complementing these are solutions offering object, file, and block storage options, all built on fully redundant, fault-tolerant architectures to ensure data durability and , with expansions including in launched in August 2025. In January 2025, Leaseweb launched a high-efficiency VPS infrastructure featuring NVMe-based fast local storage, 10 Gbps uplinks, and starting prices from €3.99 per month, emphasizing price-performance for scalable virtual environments. These VPS solutions, expanded to regions like in February 2025 and in November 2025, provide flexible compute, RAM, and traffic allowances suitable for development, testing, and production workloads. The company's (CDN) accelerates global content distribution by caching static and dynamic assets across a worldwide edge network, reducing latency for end-users. Leaseweb's Multi-CDN solution aggregates multiple providers, including a March 2025 partnership with CDNetworks, to enhance coverage, reliability, and performance through intelligent routing based on geolocation and load balancing. This integrates seamlessly with for efficient content storage and retrieval, supporting high-traffic applications like and media streaming. Underlying dedicated servers provide foundational support for these virtualized services when higher customization is required. Security features tailored to cloud environments include comprehensive DDoS protection, with standard coverage up to 5 Gbps included free on services to mitigate volumetric, protocol, and application-layer attacks through traffic scrubbing and . Advanced cybersecurity tools encompass firewalls, intrusion detection, and endpoint protection, all integrated into the cloud platforms for proactive threat management. Compliance is ensured via GDPR adherence and registration with the Cloud Infrastructure Service Providers in (CISPE), alongside certifications like ISO 27001, enabling secure handling of sensitive data in public, private, and hybrid deployments.

Infrastructure and Network

Global Data Centers

Leaseweb operates a global network of 28 data centers strategically located across Europe, North America, Asia, and Australia, providing a robust physical infrastructure for its hosting and cloud services. These facilities include key sites such as the Amsterdam AMS-01 and AMS-02 data centers in the Netherlands, which serve as the company's headquarters hubs, along with European locations like Frankfurt FRA-01 in Germany. In North America, examples include the Montreal MTL-01 and MTL-02 facilities in Canada, Chicago CHI-11 in Illinois, and Dallas DAL-13 in Texas, while Asian and Australian sites encompass Hong Kong HKG-01, Singapore, Tokyo, and Sydney. This distributed footprint ensures low-latency access and redundancy across continents. The company's data center expansion began with its founding in 1997 near Utrecht, Netherlands, where initial operations were based in a modest office before relocating and scaling to dedicated facilities in Amsterdam. Significant growth in North America occurred through the 2016 acquisition of Nobis Technology Group, which added seven U.S. data centers under the Ubiquity Hosting brand, enhancing coverage in regions like Phoenix and Virginia. Further U.S. expansion followed in 2018 with the acquisition of ServInt, bolstering presence in Northern Virginia. The 2021 merger with iWeb integrated three high-performance data centers in Montreal, leveraging Quebec's hydroelectric power grid for efficient operations. By 2024, Leaseweb announced additional capacity increases on the U.S. East Coast, including an 83% expansion in New York City and new racks in Washington D.C. and Miami, bringing the total to 28 facilities serving over 20,000 customers worldwide. Leaseweb's data centers emphasize and compliance, with all facilities certified to ISO standards for and . In 2023, the company achieved Climate Neutral Data Centre Pact (CNDCP) certification, meeting rigorous benchmarks for energy efficiency, , and reduced carbon emissions across its operations. Dutch sites utilize sources, while Canadian facilities benefit from Quebec's renewable hydroelectric system, minimizing environmental impact. Additional practices include IT equipment reuse and , aligning with the EU Energy Efficiency Directive to support scalable, eco-friendly infrastructure growth.

Network Architecture and Redundancy

Leaseweb's global network backbone is engineered for low-latency connectivity, featuring direct peering with over 2,000 ISPs and access to 43 points of presence (PoPs) worldwide, enabling efficient data routing across continents. This architecture includes a rack-to-web redundant design that spans its international facilities, supporting seamless integration between data centers and end-user networks. The backbone utilizes partnerships, such as with RETN for multiple 100G DWDM wavelengths, to enhance global reach and optimize traffic flow. Redundancy is embedded at multiple levels across Leaseweb's to ensure , with all data centers equipped with or 2N configurations for power and cooling systems, including uninterruptible power supplies (UPS) and on-site backup generators capable of sustaining operations during outages. Multiple active paths for power distribution and cooling prevent single points of , while redundant network components, such as dual-vendor core and routers, maintain connectivity even under hardware stress. This fully redundant setup achieves 99.999% uptime for core networks and server-to-internet links, minimizing disruptions for mission-critical services. The architecture integrates proactive measures for mitigation, including dedicated firewalls to filter unwanted and firewalls (WAF) for real-time protection against exploits. management is handled through a 24/7 that provides intelligence and , ensuring rapid response to anomalies. handling protocols are enforced via an automated Abuse Prevention Tool that monitors notifications around the clock, coupled with strict policies on spam and compliance, allowing swift resolution of violations to uphold network integrity. Leaseweb's network supports high-bandwidth applications through a capacity exceeding 10 Tbps, facilitating efficient content delivery networks (CDN) and cloud bursting scenarios where traffic can surge up to twice the committed 95th percentile bandwidth without penalties. Multi-CDN solutions distribute content across global edges for enhanced speed and uptime, while Cloud Connect enables redundant, on-demand scaling between public clouds and Leaseweb infrastructure. These features prioritize low latency and reliability, making the network suitable for bandwidth-intensive workloads like video streaming and dynamic .

Corporate Structure

Leadership and Management

Leaseweb's leadership is structured around an executive board focused on operational execution and a providing strategic oversight, enabling the company to pursue aggressive global expansion in the cloud and hosting sectors. This dual-board model supports agile while leveraging the expertise of long-term stakeholders. As of 2025, the executive board is led by co-CEOs, complemented by key operational and support executives, following a series of transitions that positioned founders in advisory capacities to foster and . In March 2025, Svenja de Vos and Lex Boost were appointed as co-CEOs and executive board members, tasked with driving Leaseweb's global expansion strategy through enhanced and . De Vos, with her background in technology and operations, oversees technical strategy and partnerships, while Boost focuses on commercial growth and customer acquisition, ensuring a balanced approach to scaling the company's offerings worldwide. Their has been instrumental in aligning resources for international growth, building on Leaseweb's established network to capture emerging opportunities in and the . Alex Wessel joined as (COO) in June 2025, responsible for centralizing operations across Leaseweb's global entities to improve service consistency, standardization, and . Wessel's role emphasizes operational efficiency, including the management of performance and , which are critical for maintaining high uptime and reliability in the company's IaaS portfolio. Under his purview, Leaseweb has streamlined regional operations to support scalable growth without compromising quality. Con Zwinkels, the company's founder, serves as Chairman of the , providing guidance on long-term vision and following his transition from daily management in March 2025. In this strategic role, Zwinkels advises on key initiatives like sustainable infrastructure development, drawing from his decades of experience in building Leaseweb from inception. Complementing this, Walter van de Waterbeemd acts as (CHRO), leading global HR policies to attract top talent and foster a collaborative culture amid rapid expansion. Van de Waterbeemd's efforts focus on aligning HR operations across international offices to support workforce scalability and . Recent board transitions, including the shift of founders like Zwinkels and former Pieter Dijkhuis to supervisory positions, have refreshed the executive team while retaining institutional knowledge for strategic continuity. This structure has facilitated quicker responses to market dynamics, such as recent product launches in and .

Key Milestones and Developments

In 2022, Leaseweb marked its 25th anniversary since its founding in 1997, celebrating the milestone with events that highlighted its evolution from a dedicated server provider to a global leader, including a staff party featuring live music and interactive activities. At that time, the company had expanded to operate 25 data centers across , , , and , underscoring its growth in scale and geographic reach. This anniversary reflection emphasized Leaseweb's commitment to in hosting and services over the decades. Leaseweb entered the public cloud market in June 2024 with the launch of its Public Cloud service, designed as a cost-effective alternative to hyperscalers, offering up to 30% lower pricing through transparent models without hidden fees. This initiative aimed to provide flexible, scalable infrastructure for businesses seeking to avoid large upfront investments, building on Leaseweb's existing IaaS expertise. In March 2025, the company underwent a to enhance regional operations and global growth, appointing Svenja de Vos and Lex Boost as co-CEOs while transitioning founders Con Zwinkels and Pieter Dijkhuis to strategic advisory roles. In July 2025, Leaseweb secured a high-profile sponsorship deal as the official shirt sponsor for the Dutch football club , committing to a four-season partnership starting that season to blend cloud innovation with sports visibility. This agreement positions the Leaseweb logo on AZ's jerseys, aiming to promote the company's technology solutions to a broader audience in the and beyond. In August 2025, Leaseweb launched its Solution in , an S3-compatible platform designed to support scalable, cost-effective and meet growing demand in the APAC . By 2025, Leaseweb had cultivated a customer base exceeding 20,000 worldwide, spanning small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) to large enterprises, with a strategic emphasis on expanding its portfolio to support diverse IT needs from hosting to advanced deployments. This growth reflects the company's focus on reliable, infrastructure tailored for sectors requiring and .

References

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