The company Hostinger is now officially in Nigeria and is offering a bundle of services which includes different types of hosting, payments in the local currency, and AI-powered tools for small businesses that want to grow online but are not quite sure how to do it. The move comes at a time when the country’s digital activity is growing quickly, yet many entrepreneurs continue to hit familiar roadblocks involving technical skills, unreliable connections, and the cost of building a proper website.
The company, which is based in Lithuania, says it wants to make it easier for new and growing businesses to get online without needing deep technical knowledge. According to its team, many users in emerging markets often spend more time trying to fix the basic parts of their websites than actually growing the projects those websites were meant to support. Hostinger believes its automated tools can take on some of those tasks and give people a more stable starting point.
Eiviltas Parasčiakas, who leads communications for the company, described Nigeria as an important step in Hostinger’s expansion. He noted that users in the region tend to deal with a mix of budget limitations and inconsistent technical support. Parasčiakas said the company wants to give people tools that actually lighten the load rather than add more steps, especially for owners running small operations on their own.
Nigerian customers will have access to the company’s website builder, WordPress hosting, VPS plans, and a series of AI features. Among those is an email automation tool and an AI driven builder that can help users create websites without relying heavily on outside developers.
Hostinger has also pushed its AI agent, Kodee, into everyday support tasks. The company reports that the agent handled a large number of customer conversations in recent months and resolved many without human involvement. The aim, they say, is not to replace support staff but to ease pressure during busy periods.
Hostinger enters a market that already includes several regional and global hosting providers. Many of them offer similar services, though demand from freelancers and small businesses keeps shifting. It looks like the focus is gradually changing from mainly providing hosting space to local companies that have to go online to tools that make their management easier.
