cPanel Alternative

A cPanel Alternative Without the Extra Tools

cPanel manages web hosting accounts — files, email, databases, SSL. It doesn't handle billing, domain registration, or DNS hosting; those come from whatever else you've paired with it. AUHMS puts all of it — hosting, billing, domains, and DNS — behind one login and one bill.

A factual comparison — cPanel does its job well; this is about what else you'd need alongside it.

The typical setup

cPanel is a control panel. It was never meant to be the whole stack.

cPanel — usually paired with WHM for server administration — is built to manage web hosting accounts on a server. That's a real, well-defined job, and it does it. Most cPanel-based setups still need separate tools for everything around it.

Billing, bolted on

cPanel doesn't invoice clients or take payments. That's a separate billing platform, licensed and run on its own.

A registrar, elsewhere

Domain registration isn't part of cPanel. Names typically live in a different account, on their own renewal calendar.

DNS, split across tools

DNS can run through cPanel's own zone editor or a separate provider depending on setup — either way, it's another place records can drift out of sync.

No fleet-wide view

cPanel is scoped to the server it's installed on. Running VPS or dedicated hardware alongside it means a separate view for those.

Per-server licensing

cPanel is licensed per server, so the cost of the tool you manage hosting with grows as you add machines.

Multiple logins, multiple bills

Hosting panel, billing tool, registrar, and DNS provider each come with their own login — and their own invoice.

Side by side

A typical cPanel-based setup vs. AUHMS

"Typical setup" reflects the common pattern of pairing cPanel/WHM with separate billing, registrar, and DNS tools — exact plugins and configurations vary by provider.

Capability
Typical cPanel-based setup
AUHMS
Web hosting account management
Yes — cPanel's core job
VPS & dedicated server management
Usually a separate tool
Client billing & invoicing
Usually a separate platform
Domain registration
Usually a separate registrar
DNS hosting
Built-in zone editor, or a separate provider
Game server hosting
Not part of cPanel
Automated cross-service provisioning
Depends on plugins/integrations
One login for everything above
One bill for everything above
Why switch

One platform instead of a panel plus a few subscriptions

Moving off cPanel doesn't have to mean losing anything you rely on today — it means the parts you've had to assemble yourself come built in instead.

Consolidate without losing control

Web hosting, VPS, dedicated servers, billing, domains, and DNS all live in the same panel and the same data model — so nothing you provision is invisible to anything else.

Migration help, not a migration script

We're a founder-led, two-person company — when you're weighing a move off cPanel, you talk to the people who actually run the platform about what moving your accounts over would involve.

Pairing cPanel with a separate billing/automation layer like WHMCS? See how AUHMS compares to that combination, or to a fully scattered stack.

FAQ

Questions, answered honestly

Not literally — AUHMS is a different platform with its own hosting panel, not a cPanel skin. Moving over means migrating accounts rather than flipping a switch, but you gain billing, domains, and DNS on the same login instead of separate tools.
No. Billing and invoicing are built into AUHMS, so there's no separate billing platform to license, configure, or keep in sync with what's actually provisioned.
Yes. Start with web hosting and add VPS, dedicated servers, domains, or game hosting whenever you're ready — it's all the same platform, so adding a service is just another line on the same invoice.
It depends on what you're running today, so the honest answer is: get in touch and we'll walk through what's involved — including timing — before you commit to anything.

One login instead of one panel plus three subscriptions.

Consolidate hosting, billing, domains, and DNS onto a single platform — or talk to us first about what moving off cPanel would actually look like for your setup.