InMotion Hosting’s Eco-Friendly Servers: What Refurbished Enterprise Hardware Actually Delivers Updated on April 13, 2026 by Sam Page 3 Minutes, 39 Seconds to Read The term ‘eco-friendly hosting’ gets applied to a range of initiatives: renewable energy data centers, carbon offset programs, and, in InMotion Hosting’s case, refurbished enterprise server hardware. This article focuses on the practical reality of InMotion Hosting’s Eco-Friendly Servers: what the refurbishment process actually involves, what performance you can expect, and where these servers fit in the hosting infrastructure landscape. Table of Contents What Eco-Friendly Servers Actually Are The Refurbishment Process Performance Expectations vs. New Hardware The Environmental Case Where Eco-Friendly Servers Fit in InMotion’s Lineup What Eco-Friendly Servers Actually Are InMotion Hosting’s Eco-Friendly Servers are enterprise-grade server hardware that has been taken out of primary service, securely wiped, fully inspected, updated to current firmware, tested to production standards, and then put back into service. The hardware profile is typically enterprise-class equipment, not consumer or entry-level hardware. InMotion Hosting formalized the Eco-Friendly Server product line in 2025, shifting the description from ‘refurbished’ to ‘eco-friendly’ to emphasize the environmental value rather than the age of the hardware. The naming change reflects a real shift in how the product is positioned: not as a budget option, but as an infrastructure choice that reduces e-waste and lowers deployment costs while maintaining the same performance, security, and reliability standards as new hardware. The Refurbishment Process The distinction between a responsibly refurbished enterprise server and a repurposed consumer machine is significant. InMotion Hosting’s Eco-Friendly Server process covers: Secure data wiping: All storage media is wiped to DoD standards, eliminating any recoverable data from previous deployments. This is the same process used for decommissioning servers in regulated industries. Hardware inspection: Components are inspected for physical wear, thermal damage, and performance degradation. Drives, memory modules, and cooling systems that do not meet the established threshold are replaced. Firmware updates: BIOS, IPMI firmware, and drive firmware are updated to current versions. Outdated firmware is a security risk; updated firmware maintains the server’s security posture at deployment. Performance testing: Servers are load-tested before being placed into production. This catch-and-replace process means that hardware defects are identified before a customer’s workload encounters them. Performance Expectations vs. New Hardware The performance gap between a well-maintained enterprise server from two or three years ago and current-generation hardware depends on the specific workload. For most web hosting use cases, the gap is smaller than marketing for new hardware suggests. CPU-intensive workloads, particularly those that benefit from newer instruction set extensions or architecture improvements like AMD Zen 4, will see a more meaningful difference. A CPU-bound application doing heavy image processing or data transformation may benefit more from current-generation silicon. For typical web hosting workloads, the primary performance drivers are RAM capacity, storage I/O, and network bandwidth, not CPU generation. An enterprise server with 64GB of ECC RAM and NVMe storage running from two years ago handles WordPress, WooCommerce, and most SaaS application workloads effectively. InMotion Hosting’s Eco-Friendly Servers provide dedicated resources, root access, isolation, and control equivalent to new dedicated hardware. They offer the same root access, support for clean OS installs, and custom images as InMotion’s standard dedicated server lineup. The Environmental Case Manufacturing a new server requires significant energy and raw materials: rare earth minerals, semiconductor fabrication, and packaging. Extending the productive life of enterprise hardware through responsible refurbishment delays this manufacturing demand and keeps functional equipment out of the waste stream. Data center hardware generates approximately 49 million metric tons of e-waste annually worldwide according to the UN Global E-waste Monitor. For businesses building or expanding hosting infrastructure, choosing refurbished enterprise hardware over new hardware represents a measurable reduction in environmental impact per server deployed. This is not a marginal consideration for businesses with ESG commitments or sustainability reporting requirements. Choosing an Eco-Friendly Server is a documented infrastructure decision that reduces your organization’s scope 3 carbon footprint in a verifiable way. Where Eco-Friendly Servers Fit in InMotion’s Lineup InMotion’s Eco-Friendly Servers sit alongside the standard managed dedicated server lineup, not below it in capability terms. They are available in addition to the Dedicated and High Capacity Managed server lines. The primary distinction is age of hardware, not performance class. For businesses evaluating dedicated infrastructure who have specific requirements for the latest-generation processors — AMD EPYC Zen 4, DDR5 ECC RAM, PCIe 4.0 NVMe — the standard dedicated server lineup including the Extreme plan is the appropriate choice. For businesses prioritizing dedicated infrastructure at favorable economics with a sustainability consideration, Eco-Friendly Servers warrant serious evaluation. Both lines support InMotion’s full management offering: Launch Assist, 24/7 human support, and Premier Care as an optional add-on. The choice between new and eco-friendly hardware is a workload and values decision, not a support tier decision. Related: 2025 Year in Review at InMotion Hosting covers the formal launch of Eco-Friendly Server Hosting.How to Choose a Dedicated Server Plan Share this Article Related Articles InMotion Hosting’s Eco-Friendly Servers: What Refurbished Enterprise Hardware Actually Delivers AMD EPYC vs Intel Xeon: What Hosting Buyers Really Need to Know Moodle Dedicated Server Hosting: Why Shared Resources Kill LMS Performance Decision Guide for Agencies Evaluating Hosting Infrastructure Bare Metal Dedicated Servers: What They Are and How to Evaluate Providers How to Choose a Dedicated Server Plan: A Workload-Based Framework What Is IPMI and Why It Matters for Dedicated Server Management High-Frequency Data Processing on Dedicated Servers TCO Analysis: 3-Year vs 5-Year Dedicated Server Ownership CDN Origin Server Optimization for Dedicated Infrastructure