DreamHost opens Singapore data center as Southeast Asia’s demand for faster hosting keeps growing
Running a website for Southeast Asian visitors from servers sitting in the United States is a bit like answering a phone call through a relay station two continents away. It technically works. Nobody pretends it is ideal. DreamHost stopped pretending this week and opened infrastructure in Singapore instead.
The company brought its hosting platform to its first Southeast Asian location, extending a global expansion that began with Amsterdam in 2025. Singapore was a deliberate choice rather than a convenient one. The city functions as one of the most interconnected internet hubs in the Asia-Pacific region, with established fiber routes that reach directly into Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, and the Philippines. Placing servers there closes a latency gap that has existed for regional users every time they loaded a page hosted thousands of miles away.
The performance difference shows up in numbers worth reading twice. Internal testing using actual production traffic from the Singapore facility found server response times running up to 95 percent faster for Southeast Asian users compared to equivalent requests handled from US servers. First page renders improved by nearly 60 percent, and overall page load speeds came in roughly 39 percent faster. These figures reflect real traffic behavior rather than synthetic test conditions, which gives them more practical weight than benchmark results typically carry.
Patrick Lane, Senior Vice President of Infrastructure at DreamHost, pointed to the region’s growing pool of developers and technically sophisticated users as part of the thinking behind the location. Southeast Asia has seen consistent growth in digital activity across multiple sectors, and that growth creates demand for hosting infrastructure that actually sits within the region rather than approximating it from across an ocean.
Customers in the region now access the full DreamHost platform from Singapore, including Remixer, the company’s conversational AI website builder, through infrastructure that shares a time zone and a network neighborhood with their intended audience.
For businesses and developers in Southeast Asia who have been managing the performance tradeoffs of US-based hosting, the practical implication is direct: pages load faster, latency drops, and the infrastructure serving their visitors now lives in the same part of the world those visitors do.

