West Coast VPS comparison: Las Vegas vs Silicon Valley
By ColossusCloud's Team
February 24, 2026
Picking a West Coast VPS location usually comes down to two choices: Las Vegas or Silicon Valley. ColossusCloud operates in both. Both cover the US West Coast with excellent connectivity. But they’re not interchangeable. Depending on your users and workload, one is a noticeably better fit.
This is a practical comparison across the factors that actually matter: latency, cost, disaster risk, and connectivity.
West Coast VPS latency comparison
This is usually the deciding factor. Here’s how both locations stack up to major cities:
| Destination | From Las Vegas | From Silicon Valley |
|---|---|---|
| Los Angeles | ~5ms | ~8ms |
| San Francisco | ~12ms | ~1ms |
| Phoenix | ~6ms | ~15ms |
| Salt Lake City | ~8ms | ~20ms |
| Seattle | ~30ms | ~20ms |
| Denver | ~20ms | ~30ms |
| Dallas | ~25ms | ~35ms |
Silicon Valley wins if your users concentrate in the Bay Area or Pacific Northwest.
Las Vegas wins if your users spread across the broader West Coast and Mountain states, especially Southern California, Arizona, Utah, and Colorado.
Cost
Nevada runs cheaper than California on almost every line item. Nevada’s commercial electricity is ~35% below the national average. California’s is among the highest.
Our VPS pricing accounts for these differences reasonably, so you won’t see dramatic per-plan differences, but the underlying economics of Nevada infrastructure are more favorable.
Natural disaster risk
This one isn’t close.
Silicon Valley sits near several active fault lines, including the San Andreas. Significant earthquakes happen historically and will again. Bay Area data centers are built for seismic activity, but the risk is real and non-zero.
Las Vegas has almost no natural disaster exposure. No significant seismic activity, no hurricanes (landlocked), minimal flooding (desert), no tornado corridor. Geologically boring, which is exactly what you want for a data center.
Connectivity
Silicon Valley has a slight edge in raw connectivity density. It’s been a major internet hub for decades, and the concentration of tech companies means enormous amounts of fiber and peering.
Las Vegas has invested heavily in connectivity over the past decade. Dense fiber routes connect directly to LA and the Bay Area, plus local peering exchanges. For most workloads, routing quality between the two feels equivalent.
When to pick Silicon Valley for your West Coast VPS
- Primary users in the San Francisco Bay Area
- Need lowest possible latency to other Silicon Valley infrastructure
- Peering with companies physically in San Jose, Santa Clara, or San Francisco
- Marginal latency difference to the Bay Area justifies trade-offs
When to pick Las Vegas for your West Coast VPS
- Users in Southern California, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, or Colorado
- Want the best overall West Coast coverage without bias toward one metro
- Natural disaster risk matters for compliance or business continuity
- Looking for the best value on a West Coast VPS
- Running workloads where even small earthquake risk is worth avoiding
Why not both?
Some customers deploy in both locations. Primary server in one, backup or secondary in the other. Both sit on our network, so moving between them is just deploying a new VPS and migrating data. The ~400-mile geographic separation gives genuine disaster recovery coverage while both still serve the West Coast with low latency.
Deploy a West Coast VPS in Las Vegas or Silicon Valley and test the performance from your location. Compare all six data centers.