Disclosure: Hostinger gave me complimentary access to AI Agents for testing. They did not influence this review.
What it is
Hostinger AI Agents (released April 2026) is a focused AI suite built to help small business owners and solo founders with day-to-day growth tasks. Instead of a single, open-ended chatbot, it divides work across seven specialized advisors: Business Advisor, Creative Writer, SEO Consultant, Marketing Planner, Legal Advisor, Customer Comms, and Sales & Outreach. Each advisor offers dozens of pre-built “skills” (100+ total) to speed common workflows.
Key specs at a glance
– Price: $6.99/mo (24‑month), $7.99/mo (12‑month), $9.99/mo (month-to-month)
– No permanent free plan (occasional promo credits)
– Monthly AI credits: 1,000
– Pre-built skills: 100+
– Integrations: 1,000+ (Gmail, Slack, Notion, WhatsApp, GitHub, Cloudflare, etc.)
– AI image generation and editing included
– Hostinger states it does not train on or share your data
What I liked
– A clean, purpose-driven UI with many categorized prompts that cut down on back-and-forth.
– Persistent memory across conversations so the agent keeps context over time.
– Toggle between standard and advanced thinking modes for different depths of output.
What could improve
– Quick actions (one-click skills) are one-and-done: once clicked the other suggested quick actions disappear and aren’t retrievable.
– The site-scraper can be unreliable on complex or single-page apps, which leads to inaccurate analysis in some cases.
Who should consider it
– Great if you’re strapped for time and not sure what to ask for (novices in SEO, marketing, or product strategy).
– Useful for solopreneurs, side hustlers, and small businesses on a tight budget: it’s inexpensive relative to hiring consultants.
– Helpful when you want ongoing memory so you don’t repeat context repeatedly.
Skip it if
– You’re already a skilled prompter who can build detailed prompts and custom workflows in general-purpose models like ChatGPT or Claude.
– You need a single, highly specialized vertical tool rather than broad coverage across many business areas.
– You’ll accept AI output blindly—verify important facts. The tool can scrape incorrectly and then give misleading recommendations.
Hands-on tests I ran
I ran two experiments to illustrate how the product performs in real scenarios: 1) grow an existing newsletter (my tech newsletter, DevTech News), and 2) help someone starting a new business from scratch.
Test 1 — Growing an existing newsletter
I used the Marketing Planner’s pre-built “newsletter strategy” skill. After answering a short intake form, the agent scraped my site and returned:
– A diagnosis of strengths and weaknesses
– Specific list-growth tactics
– Quick wins for the next month
Useful, implementable suggestions included creating a dedicated signup landing page (with archives and a clear value prop), adding a “forward to a friend” referral loop, and arranging partner swaps for cross-promotion. The tool also produced a 30-day, week-by-week growth plan with daily tasks (social posts, outreach templates, landing page tweaks).
I then ran a competitor analysis via the Business Advisor. It scanned my site and the web, surfaced five competitors I hadn’t considered, and returned six prioritized actions (ranked by impact). There was natural overlap with earlier recommendations, which is expected and often useful for reinforcement.
Next I asked it to design a referral program. It produced a complete program outline plus deliverables: CTA copy, sample welcome email, milestone messages, a four-month promotion plan, tracking metrics, and an implementation checklist. That level of detail would previously have required agency time and cost—here it arrived in minutes.
I finished with a comprehensive SEO analysis from the SEO Consultant: on-page/technical audit, quick wins, a six-month roadmap, and suggested outcomes. Caveat: the site scraper misread a couple of sections as empty because my site is a single-page React app with animations; that led to a couple of irrelevant suggestions. Overall the outputs were practical and many items I plan to implement.
Test 2 — Starting a new business from scratch
I used a blank chat in advanced mode to brainstorm software ideas for underserved markets. The agent produced seven solid concepts (vertical AI assistants for trades, compliance/licensing tracking, newsletter/content ops tools, niche community management, AI grant writing for nonprofits, micro‑SaaS for freelancers, local business intelligence). It also suggested next steps and quick actions.
I chose the compliance/licensing tracking idea and used the validate-idea quick action. The agent asked multiple-choice questions, then produced market analysis and applied common frameworks implicitly: SWOT-style pros/cons, MVP advice (“one profession, one state”), and clear validation steps. That was notable: many frameworks are available as explicit skills, yet the agent applied them without being prompted.
Next it generated landing page copy after a short intake: five name ideas (it recommended one), a hero section, problem statement, five features, a three-step “how it works,” objection handling, and a closing CTA. The objection-handling section was especially thorough—anticipating concerns a skeptical buyer might have and offering rebuttals.
The agent finished by recommending concrete next steps: talk to ten professionals in the target niche, pick a single profession and state to test MVP, and put up a landing page to validate demand.
Overall impression from the tests
– The system accelerates realistic, actionable work: strategies, roadmaps, landing copy, referral programs, and audits.
– Pre-built skills and templates turn long exploratory chats into guided, repeatable workflows.
– It’s not flawless—scraping errors and one-time quick actions break flow at times—so human oversight remains necessary.
Final thoughts
Hostinger AI Agents is best described as a business-focused, task-oriented layer on top of large-language capabilities. For busy small business owners with limited budgets and limited domain expertise, it removes a lot of friction: it suggests what to do, lays out how to do it, and gives ready-to-use text and plans. If you’re comfortable vetting and editing outputs, it’s a strong value at under $10/month. If you’re a power user who prefers building custom prompts and tooling in broader models, you may find less value here.
Practical advice: use AI Agents to generate plans, copy, and checklists, but verify technical details and site analyses before acting. Absorb what’s useful, discard what isn’t, and adapt the rest to your business.