Your hardware.
Your data. Your platform.
Everything the hosted service runs on — accounts, sign-in, tiered quotas, billing, custom domains — as one container on your own servers. No database to operate, one volume to back up, one license key to activate.
The community core, plus the business layer
The MIT core stays exactly as documented — Enterprise compiles in the premium extension and activates it with your license key.
Accounts & ownership
Users sign up, own their sites, rotate edit passwords and manage everything from a dashboard. Anonymous drops can stay enabled, disabled, or quota'd — your call at startup.
Google & Microsoft sign-in
OIDC login against your Google Workspace or Microsoft Entra tenant — plus local email/password with SMTP verification and reset.
Tiers & quotas from JSON
Define plans in a tiers.json you control: sites, storage,
files, domains, expiry — per tier. Free tiers, self-select, or paid.
Stripe & Paddle billing
Map paid tiers to your own Stripe or Paddle prices and Sitebin sells them for you — checkout, webhooks, upgrades and downgrades included.
Custom domains, auto-TLS
Users attach their own domains; certificates are issued automatically on first request, with issuance protected against abuse. The cap per account follows the tier — and per license.
Offline license key
Ed25519-signed, verified offline — no phone-home, no license server, works air-gapped. The premium source ships in the public repo for you to audit before you buy.
Bring your own identity
Generic OIDC sign-in against any issuer — Keycloak, Okta, Authentik, Entra — with your own button label. SaaS-Stack native: see below.
SaaS-Stack native
Run the open-source IT-Trail SaaS Stack? Onboard Sitebin like any of your apps: users sign in once across your whole portfolio, and the subscription they bought through the stack governs their Sitebin quotas — Sitebin never touches the payment provider. Included in every Enterprise tier.
Priced by what you host, not who you are
The scaling axis is custom domains — the honest line between a company publishing its own sites and a platform hosting other people's. Every paid tier includes every Enterprise feature.
Community
The full core, self-hosted, no license needed.
- unlimited sites & storage (your disk)
- API, WebDAV, FTP, viewer, editor
- community support
- accounts, tiers, billing
- custom domains
Team
Docs hubs, client previews and internal publishing.
- all Enterprise features
- SSO + SaaS-Stack integration
- 25 custom domains
- 1 production instance
- email support
Business
Company-wide publishing with room for every department.
- all Enterprise features
- SSO + SaaS-Stack integration
- 250 custom domains
- unlimited instances (one org)
- priority email support
Platform
Run Sitebin as your own public or paid hosting service.
- all Enterprise features
- SSO + SaaS-Stack integration
- unlimited custom domains
- commercial hosting rights — the license grant to offer Sitebin to third parties
- resell plans via Stripe/Paddle
- priority support · response SLA
Prices exclude VAT. Licenses are per year and include all updates released during the term; keys verify offline and keep working after expiry for the versions they covered.
Operations your admins will actually like
No database
Sites, accounts and indexes are plain files and symlinks on one volume.
tar that path and you've backed up the entire platform —
restore is just as boring.
One container
Caddy (TLS, routing) and the Go backend ship as a single image. No
sidecar zoo, no orchestration homework — docker run and DNS.
Configured at startup
Every cap and toggle is an environment variable or a mounted file. Your instance's behavior is fully described by its compose file — reviewable, diffable, reproducible.
Licensing FAQ
How is Enterprise licensed?
The premium code lives in the public repo under the Elastic License 2.0 — source-available, perpetual, auditable. It permits self-hosting, modification and your own commercial use; it forbids offering Sitebin to third parties as a hosted service (that's what the Platform tier's grant is for) and circumventing the license key.
So I can read the Enterprise source before buying?
Yes — all of it, in the same repository as the core. We'd rather you audit what you run than trust a black box. The license key activates the features; the license text is what protects them.
Does the license key phone home?
No. Keys are Ed25519-signed and verified offline inside your instance. Air-gapped deployments work fine.
What counts against the custom-domain cap?
Domains attached to sites on your instance (like
docs.customer.com). Your instance's own base domain and the
random per-site subdomains under it are free and unlimited on every tier.
What happens when a license expires?
Your instance keeps running — versions released during your term stay licensed. Renewing entitles you to updates again. We don't brick deployments.
Does buying Enterprise change the open-source core?
No. The core is MIT and stays MIT. Enterprise revenue is what funds its development.
Try Enterprise on your own hardware
Mail us for a 30-day trial key — you'll be publishing on your own domain the same afternoon.