
IONOS doesn’t use cPanel. Instead, it offers a custom-built dashboard called My IONOS that handles everything from domain management to WordPress installation to VPS server administration, all from a single, tile-based interface.
It’s clean, beginner-friendly, and keeps costs low by avoiding cPanel licensing fees. But it lacks the depth, customization, and web-based file manager that experienced users expect.
If you mostly manage WordPress sites and email, it does the job well. If you need power-user features, you’ll feel the gaps.
- Simple, beginner-friendly tile layout
- Everything is managed under one login
- No cPanel licensing fees
- One-click WordPress installation
- Free dedicated personal consultant
- Built-in security and DDoS tools
- Full DNS record management
- AI-powered webmail assistant
- Automatic daily backups included
- Free wildcard SSL certificate
- No web-based file manager
- Limited backup customization
- Fewer one-click app installs
- Promotional upsell clutter on dashboard
- No cPanel or Plesk option
- Settings spread across multiple pages
What Is the IONOS Control Panel?
If you’ve used web hosting before, you’re probably familiar with cPanel, the industry-standard interface that most hosts offer for managing websites, domains, databases, and email. IONOS takes a different approach.
Instead of licensing cPanel or Plesk, IONOS built its own proprietary control panel from the ground up.
This custom dashboard, commonly referred to as “My IONOS,” is the central hub where you manage everything tied to your IONOS hosting account. It handles domain configuration, email setup, database management, file transfers, SSL certificates, WordPress installations, PHP version management, and more.
Why did IONOS go this route? The practical answer is cost.
cPanel licensing fees have risen significantly in recent years, and by building its own panel, IONOS avoids passing those costs to customers. That’s a big part of how they keep shared hosting plans starting at $1/month.
The trade-off is that the interface is different from what many experienced users expect, which creates a short learning curve.
Good to know: IONOS doesn’t offer cPanel or Plesk with any of its shared or WordPress hosting plans. If you specifically need cPanel, you’ll need to look elsewhere. However, Plesk is available on some VPS and dedicated server plans as an optional add-on.
How the Dashboard Is Organized
One thing IONOS gets right is keeping everything under a single roof. Unlike some hosts that split website management and server management into completely separate interfaces, the My IONOS dashboard gives you access to all your products from one login and one tile-based home screen.
When you log in at login.ionos.com, you’re greeted with a welcome message and a grid of eight clearly labeled tiles.

Each tile is a gateway to a different product or management area. On the right side of the screen, you’ll typically see a promotional sidebar advertising additional IONOS services (like Google Workspace or their website design service).
At the top, there’s a search bar for finding features, domains, and help, plus icons for support, notifications, and account settings.
Here’s what each tile does:
1. Websites & Stores
This is your starting point for anything related to your actual website. From here, you can launch the IONOS website builder, access your WordPress installations, or manage online store settings.

If you’ve purchased managed WordPress hosting, this is where you’ll find the “Open WordPress” link that logs you directly into your WP admin dashboard, a convenient shortcut that saves you from manually navigating to yourdomain.com/wp-admin.
2. Hosting
The Hosting section is where the more technical management happens.
It contains panels for web space management and storage usage, database creation and management (via phpMyAdmin), SFTP and SSH access configuration, PHP version management for your domains, CDN settings (if you have a CDN package), and performance level adjustments.

This is the section you’ll visit most often if you’re doing anything beyond basic content updates. The database panel lets you create MySQL or MariaDB databases and choose between standard and high-performance options.
The PHP section is important for WordPress users. Keeping your PHP version current improves both security and site speed.
3. Domains & SSL
All domain-related management lives here. You can register new domains, transfer existing ones, configure DNS records (A, CNAME, MX, TXT, SRV), manage subdomains, set up domain forwarding and redirects, and manage SSL certificates.

DNS management is comprehensive. You get full control over all record types, which is essential if you need to connect your domain to external services like Mailchimp, Google Workspace, or Squarespace.
By default, IONOS provides a free wildcard SSL certificate that’s automatically activated on your web space. You can manage certificate settings from this section, though it’s worth noting that IONOS generally requires you to use their provided SSL rather than bringing your own.
4. Email
The Email section handles everything related to your IONOS email accounts. You can create and manage mailboxes, set up forwarding rules, configure aliases, and access IONOS’s webmail client.
The webmail interface now includes an AI-powered assistant that can help with writing, translating, and summarizing emails, though this feature may require a paid add-on depending on your plan.

Email setup is straightforward: create an account, set a password, and you’re ready to go. You can sync your IONOS email with Outlook, Apple Mail, Gmail, or any standard email client using IMAP/SMTP settings provided in the panel.
5. Servers & Cloud
If you have VPS, cloud server, or dedicated server products, this is where you manage them.
Clicking this tile opens a server management view where you can see your server status, IP addresses, resource allocation (CPU, RAM, disk), and operating system details.
From here, you can also manage firewall policies, create server images and snapshots, configure load balancers, set up private networking, and monitor performance.

This section is more advanced than the rest of the dashboard and is geared toward users with infrastructure-level hosting products. If you’re on shared or WordPress hosting only, this tile won’t have anything in it, but it’s good to know it exists if you ever scale up to a VPS or dedicated server.
6. Security Solutions
This tile gives you access to IONOS’s security tools, including SiteScan malware protection, DDoS defense settings, and domain security features like DNSSEC and Domain Guard (anti-hijacking protection).
Depending on your plan, some of these features are included, and others are available as paid add-ons. It’s a useful centralized view of your site’s security posture, though the upsell opportunities here are more aggressive than in other sections.
7. My Account
The My account tile handles invoices, contracts, payment methods, and account settings. This is also where you’ll find IONOS’s unique personal consultant feature, a dedicated support contact you can activate for free, reachable by phone, email, or chat during business hours.
The “Add another product” tile next to it is purely a sales gateway for ordering additional IONOS services.
Key Tasks: How to Get Things Done
The panel’s organization is logical once you know where things live. Here’s how to handle the tasks IONOS users most commonly need:
Installing WordPress
IONOS uses a built-in tool called Click & Build to handle WordPress installations. No manual database setup, no FTP uploads, no code.
Here’s how the process works:
- From the main dashboard, go to Websites & Stores and click Create new website or store in the top-right corner.

- On the project creation page, select Popular open source solutions to open the Click & Build application list.

- Find WordPress in the list and click Install.

- Choose between Manage WordPress yourself (full control over updates, plugins, and configuration) or the managed WordPress option (IONOS handles maintenance for you).

- Walk through the setup steps: name your project, create an admin username and password, and select which domain to connect. If you haven’t registered a domain yet, IONOS offers a temporary system domain so you can get started immediately.

- Click Install WordPress and let the system do the rest.
The Click & Build tool automatically uploads WordPress files to your web space, creates and configures the database, and links everything to your chosen domain.
You’ll receive a confirmation email within seconds of the installation completing.
Once installed, a new tile appears in your Websites & Stores section for managing the project. Clicking Edit website from there redirects you straight to the WordPress login page, where you sign in with the admin credentials you set during installation.

The entire process takes under five minutes and requires zero technical knowledge. A genuine advantage for beginners who don’t want to deal with manual database configuration or file uploads.
Managing DNS Records
Click the Domains & SSL tile from the main dashboard. You’ll see a list of your active domains.

To access DNS settings for a specific domain, click the gear icon next to it under the Actions column, then select DNS.

From the DNS management page, you can view all existing records and make changes. The options available include configuring domain redirects, modifying A, CNAME, MX, TXT, and SRV records, creating subdomains, and updating nameservers.
This is where you’ll go if you need to point your domain to an external service, verify domain ownership for tools like Google Search Console, or set up MX records for a third-party email provider like Google Workspace.

You can also reach domain management from within the Hosting section. The web space tile includes a “Manage domains” shortcut that redirects you to the Domains & SSL page. DNS changes can take up to 24 hours to propagate, though they’re typically much faster.
Setting Up Email
Click the Email tile from the main dashboard to open your Email Portfolio. Select the relevant contract, then click Create a new email address.

IONOS will show you the available options, depending on your hosting plan, you may have one or more free mailboxes included (typically with 2 GB of storage). If your plan doesn’t include a free inbox, you’ll see an order button for paid options.
Enter your desired email address (e.g., yourname@yourdomain.com) and set a password. Save, and IONOS will configure the mailbox for you automatically.
To access your email from anywhere without installing additional software, head to mail.ionos.com and log in with your email address and password. The IONOS webmail client includes useful features like an AI-powered writing assistant for composing and summarizing emails, folder management, anti-spam configuration, a send-cancellation option, and built-in access to your calendar and address book.
If you prefer using a desktop or mobile client, the panel provides the correct IMAP, POP3, and SMTP server settings so you can sync with Outlook, Apple Mail, Gmail, or any standard email app.
Configuring SFTP/SSH Access
In the Hosting section, locate the SFTP & SSH panel and click Configure. You’ll set a password for your web space, and IONOS will display the connection details (host, port, username) you need for an FTP client like FileZilla.
You can also download a pre-configured FileZilla profile that auto-fills all the connection settings. A nice time-saver that eliminates manual configuration errors.
Changing PHP Versions
Under Hosting, find the PHP section. You can select which PHP version runs on each of your domains individually.

IONOS supports versions going back to PHP 4.0, which is useful if you’re running legacy applications.
However, for security and performance, you should always run the most recent stable version your site supports. If you’re on managed WordPress hosting, IONOS handles this automatically.
IONOS Control Panel vs. cPanel: Honest Comparison
This is the question everyone coming from another host wants answered. Here’s a straightforward breakdown:
| Aspect | IONOS Control Panel | cPanel |
| Cost to user | Included free | Often adds $5–15/month to hosting |
| Interface style | Tile-based, minimal | Dense, icon-grid layout |
| Learning curve | Easy for beginners | Familiar for experienced users |
| WordPress management | One-click install, managed options | One-click via Softaculous |
| File manager | SFTP/SSH (no web-based file manager) | Built-in web file manager |
| Database management | phpMyAdmin access | phpMyAdmin access |
| DNS management | Full control (A, CNAME, MX, TXT, SRV) | Full control |
| Email management | Basic but functional | More advanced (filters, forwarders, lists) |
| Backup management | Limited (up to 6 days, auto) | Granular (full/partial, manual triggers) |
| Third-party app installs | Limited one-click options | Hundreds via Softaculous |
| Customization | Minimal | Extensive (themes, shortcuts, plugins) |
| API access | Limited | Full API available |
Where IONOS wins: Simplicity, cost savings passed to the customer, clean design that doesn’t overwhelm beginners, and integrated features like the personal consultant and AI email assistant.
Where cPanel wins: Depth of features, a built-in web file manager, far more third-party app installation options via Softaculous, granular backup controls, and the familiarity factor. If you’ve used hosting before, you likely already know cPanel.

The bottom line: If you’re a beginner or someone who primarily manages a WordPress site and email, the IONOS panel does everything you need without unnecessary complexity. If you’re a developer or power user who relies on advanced cPanel features like cron job management, detailed error logs, or Softaculous for installing dozens of different CMS platforms, you’ll feel the limitations.
Tips for Getting More Out of the IONOS Panel
Use the built-in search. The dashboard has a search function that doesn’t just find help articles. It also surfaces direct links to control panel actions. Type “WordPress” and you’ll see shortcuts like “Install WordPress” that take you straight to the relevant page. It’s faster than clicking through menus.

Activate your personal consultant. This is one of IONOS’s best-kept features. In the “Help & Contact” section, you can activate a free personal advisor who handles all your queries via phone, email, or chat. Unlike generic support queues, this is a dedicated contact assigned to your account. It’s available Monday through Friday and genuinely useful for non-technical users.
Bookmark your most-used pages. Since the IONOS panel doesn’t offer customizable dashboards or pinned shortcuts, browser bookmarks are your friend. Save direct URLs to your DNS settings, phpMyAdmin, and WordPress admin for quick access without navigating through the tile menu each time.
Check the rankingCoach integration. IONOS includes an SEO tool called rankingCoach that’s accessible from the dashboard. It provides basic SEO insights, keyword tracking, and optimization suggestions for your website. It’s not a replacement for professional SEO tools, but for small business owners doing their own optimization, it’s a useful free addition.
Watch out for upsell tiles. One common complaint about the IONOS dashboard is the promotional tiles that advertise additional services. These are mixed in with your actual management panels and can be confusing at first. Learn to identify which tiles are functional (they’ll have “Manage” or “Open” buttons) and which are promotional (they’ll have “Order” or “Learn more” buttons).
Common Pain Points (and How to Work Around Them)
“Where do I log into WordPress?” This is the number-one frustration for new users. Unlike cPanel hosts, where you simply go to yourdomain.com/wp-admin, IONOS buries the WordPress login link inside the Websites & Stores section.

Click on your WordPress project, then look for the “Open WordPress” link. Alternatively, just type yourdomain.com/wp-admin directly in your browser. It works the same way.
No web-based file manager. If you’re used to cPanel’s built-in file manager for quick edits, you’ll miss it here. IONOS only offers SFTP/SSH access for file management, which means you need a separate FTP client like FileZilla. For simple tasks like editing a single file, this adds unnecessary friction. The workaround is to install a WordPress file manager plugin if you need occasional browser-based file access.
Upsell clutter on the dashboard. The promotional tiles mixed into the main dashboard are a frequent complaint in user reviews. There’s no way to hide them, which makes the interface feel less clean than it could be. The best approach is to simply learn which tiles are yours and ignore the rest.
Limited backup control. IONOS provides automatic daily backups retained for up to 6 days on shared hosting, but you can’t trigger manual backups, choose what to back up, or store backups longer. If you need more control, consider a WordPress backup plugin like UpdraftPlus or BlogVault to supplement IONOS’s built-in backups.
SSL certificate restrictions. IONOS provides free wildcard SSL certificates, which is generous. However, you generally can’t install your own third-party SSL certificate on shared hosting. This is fine for most users, but it can be a limitation if you need a specific certificate type (like an EV certificate) for compliance reasons.
Final Verdict: Is the IONOS Control Panel Good Enough?
The IONOS control panel is a competent, beginner-friendly interface that handles all the essential hosting management tasks without overwhelming you. For users who primarily need to manage a WordPress site, configure domains and DNS, set up email, and handle basic hosting settings, it does the job well and the fact that it’s included free (rather than adding cPanel licensing fees to your bill) is a tangible benefit reflected in IONOS’s lower prices.
That said, it’s not cPanel, and it doesn’t try to be. Power users will notice the missing web file manager, limited backup controls, restricted app installation options, and lack of deep customization. If you’re coming from a cPanel host, expect a short adjustment period as you learn where everything lives in the IONOS layout.
For a more complete picture of IONOS as a hosting provider, including performance benchmarks, support quality, and pricing breakdowns, check out our detailed IONOS review.
The panel isn’t the reason to choose or avoid IONOS. It’s functional, it’s clean, and it gets the job done. The real decision should come down to whether IONOS’s overall hosting performance, pricing, and support meet your needs. The control panel is simply the tool you’ll use to manage it.

