Every week, someone posts on r/openclaw: "Why would I pay for managed hosting when I can self-host for $5/month?"
It's a reasonable question. And the honest answer is: for some people, self-hosting is the right choice. If you're a Linux sysadmin who enjoys tinkering, self-hosting gives you full control and saves money.
But for everyone else — and that's most people — the $5/month number is a fiction. Here's what self-hosting actually costs.
The visible costs
Let's start with the line items everyone thinks about.
Server (VPS)
OpenClaw needs a server to run on. The minimum viable setup:
| Provider | Plan | Specs | Monthly Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hetzner CPX11 | Shared | 2 vCPU, 2GB RAM, 40GB | $4.85 |
| DigitalOcean Basic | Shared | 1 vCPU, 2GB RAM, 50GB | $12.00 |
| Linode Nanode | Shared | 1 vCPU, 2GB RAM, 50GB | $5.00 |
| AWS Lightsail | Shared | 2 vCPU, 2GB RAM, 60GB | $12.00 |
Looks reasonable. But the cheapest options come with a catch: 2GB of RAM is tight. OpenClaw itself, plus Node.js, plus any skills that run background processes — you'll hit swap regularly. The experience is sluggish.
A more realistic server for daily-driver use:
| Provider | Plan | Specs | Monthly Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hetzner CPX21 | Shared | 3 vCPU, 4GB RAM, 80GB | $8.49 |
| Hetzner CPX32 | Dedicated | 4 vCPU, 8GB RAM, 160GB | $14.99 |
| DigitalOcean | Regular | 2 vCPU, 4GB RAM, 80GB | $24.00 |
Realistic server cost: $8-25/month
Domain (optional but recommended)
You'll want a domain name if you're setting up webhooks, SSL, or a public-facing endpoint. Basic .com runs about $10-15/year ($1/month).
AI model API costs
OpenClaw doesn't include AI model access. You're bringing your own API keys. Here's what typical usage looks like:
| Usage Level | Model | Monthly API Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Light (20 msgs/day) | Claude 3.5 Sonnet | $3-8 |
| Medium (50 msgs/day) | Claude 3.5 Sonnet | $10-25 |
| Heavy (100+ msgs/day) | Claude 3.5 Sonnet | $25-60 |
| Heavy with tools | Claude 3.5 Sonnet + vision | $40-80 |
If you use GPT-4o instead, costs are similar. Cheaper models (Claude Haiku, GPT-4o-mini) cut costs by 60-80% but the experience noticeably degrades for complex tasks.
Realistic API cost: $10-40/month
Total visible cost
| Item | Low | Mid | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| VPS | $5 | $15 | $25 |
| Domain | $0 | $1 | $1 |
| AI API | $5 | $20 | $50 |
| Total | $10 | $36 | $76 |
Even just the visible costs put self-hosting at $10-75/month. That "$5/month VPS" is already a myth.
The invisible costs
This is where self-hosting gets expensive.
Your time: initial setup
Setting up OpenClaw from scratch takes 2-8 hours depending on your experience. That includes:
- Provisioning and securing the VPS (SSH keys, firewall, fail2ban)
- Installing Node.js, npm, and dependencies
- Configuring OpenClaw itself
- Setting up Google OAuth (creating a project in Google Cloud Console, configuring consent screens, generating credentials)
- Setting up a Telegram bot
- Configuring SSL certificates (Let's Encrypt + renewal)
- Setting up a reverse proxy (nginx/Caddy)
- Testing everything works end-to-end
- Setting up backups
- Configuring monitoring
If you value your time at $50/hour (conservative for a professional), that's $100-400 of setup time.
Your time: ongoing maintenance
Self-hosting isn't a "set it and forget it" situation. Here's what regular maintenance looks like:
Weekly (30-60 min/week):
- Check for OpenClaw updates and apply them
- Review logs for errors or anomalies
- Verify backups are working
- Check disk space and resource usage
Monthly (1-2 hours/month):
- OS security patches
- SSL certificate renewal verification
- Review and rotate API keys
- Update Node.js to latest LTS
As-needed (unpredictable):
- Debug why it suddenly stopped working at 2 AM
- Fix broken OAuth tokens when Google expires them
- Handle VPS provider maintenance windows
- Deal with the aftermath of a security vulnerability
Conservative estimate: 3-6 hours/month of maintenance time.
At $50/hour, that's $150-300/month in time. This is the number self-hosting advocates never mention.
The security tax
This one deserves its own section.
In the last week of February 2026 alone, OpenClaw had 6 new CVE disclosures:
- CVE-2026-26812 (High) — Memory leak DoS via voice processing
- CVE-2026-26329 (High) — Skill privilege escalation
- CVE-2026-27001 (Critical) — Remote code execution via webhooks
- CVE-2026-25253 (Critical) — Skill sandbox escape
- CVE-2026-27340 (Medium) — Information disclosure in logs
- CVE-2026-27501 (High) — SSRF in web fetch
Six patches in seven days. Each one requires reading the advisory, understanding if you're affected, downloading the patch, applying it, testing, and restarting. If you're at work or on vacation, they wait. Your exposed instance doesn't.
The ClawHavoc attack compromised an estimated 8,000+ self-hosted instances through malicious third-party skills. Most of those users didn't know they were vulnerable until it was too late.
The security cost isn't measurable in dollars. It's measured in risk: the chance that your personal email, calendar, contacts, and files are exposed because you missed a patch or installed a bad skill.
What managed hosting actually costs
Let's compare with KillerBot's pricing:
| Plan | Monthly | What's Included |
|---|---|---|
| Starter | $0 | Basic chat, email (limited), community support |
| Personal | $19 | Full email, calendar, research, voice, 5 skills |
| Pro | $39 | Everything + priority model access, advanced skills, priority support |
That price includes:
- Server infrastructure (no VPS to manage)
- AI model API costs (built into the price)
- Same-day security patches
- Automatic updates
- SSL, domain handling, monitoring
- Curated skill library (no ClawHub risk)
- Customer support when something breaks
- Backups and disaster recovery
No setup time. No maintenance time. No security patch treadmill.
The honest comparison
| Factor | Self-Hosted | KillerBot Managed |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly server cost | $8-25 | $0 (included) |
| AI API cost | $10-50 | $0 (included) |
| Setup time | 2-8 hours (one-time) | 10 minutes |
| Monthly maintenance | 3-6 hours | 0 hours |
| Security patching | Manual, your responsibility | Automatic, same-day |
| Third-party skill risk | High (ClawHub) | None (curated only) |
| Uptime guarantee | You're the SRE | 99.9% SLA |
| Support | Reddit, Discord | Direct support team |
| Total monetary cost | $18-75/month | $19-39/month |
| Total including time | $168-375/month | $19-39/month |
Read that last row again. When you include the value of your time, managed hosting isn't more expensive — it's dramatically cheaper.
When self-hosting makes sense
We're not going to pretend self-hosting is always wrong. It's the right choice when:
You're a developer or sysadmin who maintains servers professionally. The maintenance overhead is negligible because it's what you already do.
You need total control. Custom skills, modified core behavior, specific compliance requirements — self-hosting lets you do whatever you want.
You enjoy it. Some people tinker with servers the way others tinker with cars. If configuring nginx and debugging OAuth flows is your idea of a good Saturday, go for it.
You have extreme privacy requirements. If you can't trust any third party with your data — not Google, not KillerBot, nobody — then self-hosting on hardware you physically control is the only option.
You're learning. Self-hosting OpenClaw is a genuinely good way to learn Linux, networking, security, and DevOps. Just don't connect your real email while you're learning.
When managed hosting makes sense
For everyone else. Specifically:
- Professionals who value their time over $20/hour
- Non-technical users who want an AI assistant, not a server administration hobby
- Small business owners who need reliability without an IT department
- Anyone who connects sensitive accounts (email, calendar) and wants them protected by professionals
The bottom line
Self-hosting OpenClaw for $5/month is like saying you can build a house for the cost of lumber. Technically, the materials are cheap. But the cost of a house is mostly labor, expertise, and time.
If you want an AI assistant and you're not a server person, managed hosting saves you money, time, and risk. The math isn't even close.
KillerBot starts at $19/month — less than most people spend on streaming services, and infinitely less than the time cost of self-hosting. Every plan includes AI model access, security patches, monitoring, and zero maintenance on your end.