
Which One is Best: A Guide to Choosing the Right Linux Distro for Web Hosting
You’ve seen the list. Many names, different versions. But only a few are worth your time when it comes to hosting : clean, fast, minimal, stable. This isnt a popularity contest, it\s a decision about performance, control, and how much time you want to spend maintaining the system.
Full List of Available Options
AlmaLinux-8 AlmaLinux OS 8
AlmaLinux-9 AlmaLinux OS 9
AlmaLinux-Kitten-10 AlmaLinux OS Kitten 10
AlmaLinux-10 AlmaLinux OS 10
Debian Debian GNU/Linux
FedoraLinux-42 Fedora Linux 42
SUSE-Linux-Enterprise-15-SP6 SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 SP6
SUSE-Linux-Enterprise-15-SP7 SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 SP7
Ubuntu Ubuntu
Ubuntu-24.04 Ubuntu 24.04 LTS
archlinux Arch Linux
kali-linux Kali Linux Rolling
openSUSE-Tumbleweed openSUSE Tumbleweed
openSUSE-Leap-15.6 openSUSE Leap 15.6
Ubuntu-18.04 Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
Ubuntu-20.04 Ubuntu 20.04 LTS
Ubuntu-22.04 Ubuntu 22.04 LTS
OracleLinux\_7\_9 Oracle Linux 7.9
OracleLinux\_8\_10 Oracle Linux 8.10
OracleLinux\_9\_5 Oracle Linux 9.5
Ubuntu-22.04 – best for compatibility
LTS release, five years of updates, supported by every major cloud and panel. Comes with snap, has more daemons than necessary, but still balanced enough for production. Works with Ansible, Terraform, Docker, Plesk, anything.
Use this if: you want broad support, fast setup, and fewer surprises in deployment.
Debian – best for low-overhead stability
Minimal, clean, no hidden processes. Install only what’s needed, leave out the rest. Works best when you want predictable uptime and low memory usage. Easy to secure and automate.
Use this if: you care about resource usage, stability, and don’t need the newest package versions.
Arch Linux – best for control and minimalism
You decide everything — packages, services, kernel options. Extremely light, up-to-date, but also fragile. Requires time and awareness. No update buffer, no rollback unless configured. Still, very fast, also very time consuming to get it right once.
Use this if: you want full control and are ready to handle maintenance manually.
AlmaLinux, OracleLinux, SUSE – best left to enterprise
These follow the Red Hat model. Heavy, long support, slower update cycles. Good for companies locked into those ecosystems. Overhead is high, tuning requires effort. Not ideal for speed or minimal hosting.
: your infrastructure is tied to commercial compliance or vendor support.
Fedora, Tumbleweed – best for testing
Fast updates, new features early. Kernel, libraries, and system components change often. You get newer tech, but also more chances of something breaking. Not recommended for production unless you need specific new functionality.
Use this if: you're testing experimental setups or want access to the newest stacks.
Kali Linux – not for hosting
Purpose-built for security testing. Ships with pen-test tools, not designed for performance or stability in server roles. Adds complexity without value for web hosting, its a user os, and not a server OS, doesnt mean it cant run there.
Older Ubuntu Versions
Ubuntu-18.04 and Ubuntu-20.04 are past or near the end of standard support. Don’t start anything new on them. Ubuntu-24.04 is still too fresh, wait for 24.04.1 before using in production.
Conclusion
Choose based on what stays out of your way. A good server OS disappears once configured. The best one is the one you forget is even there. -- Mohammad