Company snapshot

CategoryBelugaCDNNgenix
Statusactiveactive
Founded
Headquarters
Website
Docs

Overview

BelugaCDN is a content delivery network (CDN) provider founded in 2014, designed to accelerate website content delivery globally at a low cost. It operates a dual-stack IPv4 and IPv6 network, focusing on delivering static content like images and videos to users across various devices. The service is utilized by small to medium-sized businesses, e-commerce platforms, and media sites seeking affordable CDN solutions. BelugaCDN emphasizes straightforward caching, real-time analytics, and easy integration with existing web infrastructure. The company is headquartered in Miami, Florida, and operates as a subsidiary of Xcitium following its acquisition in 2018.
Ngenix is a Russian provider of CDN and cloud infrastructure services, focusing on web resource acceleration, DDoS protection, and video content delivery. Founded in 2007, it serves businesses primarily in Russia and CIS countries, offering solutions for e-commerce, media, and gaming industries. Its platform emphasizes high availability and security for web and streaming services. Customers include regional enterprises seeking localized CDN solutions with robust video streaming capabilities. Ngenix operates a public status page for real-time service monitoring.

Network & Architecture

BelugaCDN maintains 28 points of presence (POPs) across five continents, with 9 high-capacity “SuperPOPs” in key locations such as New York, Miami, Dallas, San Jose, Seattle, Chicago, London, Amsterdam, and Frankfurt. Its network is optimized for North America and Europe, with smaller-capacity POPs in Asia, Latin America, and Oceania, including São Paulo, Bangalore, Singapore, and Sydney. The provider uses proxy-based authorization and a private high-speed global network to ensure low-latency content delivery. Plans to upgrade Bangalore and Singapore POPs to SuperPOPs were noted in 2017, but no recent updates confirm completion. Limitations include limited presence in China and the Middle East, which may impact performance for users in those regions.
Ngenix operates points of presence (PoPs) across Russia, including Moscow, Saint Petersburg, Krasnoyarsk, and Vladivostok, as well as select locations in Europe (Germany, Belarus, Armenia) and Asia (Kazakhstan). Its network is optimized for the Russian market, with strong regional coverage in the Central, Siberian, and Far East Federal Districts. The architecture supports content caching, load balancing, and DDoS mitigation. Limited global reach may restrict performance for users outside Russia and CIS regions.

Feature comparison

FeatureBelugaCDNNgenix
waf
bot_mitigation
ddos
rate_limit
http3_quic
tls13
tiered_cache
origin_shield
instant_purge
stale_while_revalidate
stale_if_error
image_optimization
video_vod
video_live
drm
hls_dash_packaging
websockets
signed_urls
edge_compute
functions
kv_storage
api_first
realtime_logs
log_push
terraform

Legend: ✓ = Supported, ✗ = Not supported, — = Not listed

Pricing

BelugaCDN operates on a pay-as-you-go (PAYG) model with no long-term contracts, starting at $5 per month for 500 GB of traffic at $0.01 per GB for North America and Europe. Higher-volume plans reduce costs to $0.005 per GB, with special pricing for enterprise users exceeding 10 TB monthly. A free trial of the Pro Plan is available. Request overages cost $0.0035 per 10,000 requests, and ingress costs are not charged. Full pricing details are available at https://www.belugacdn.com/pricing/.
Ngenix uses an enterprise-only pricing model with custom contracts based on traffic and service needs. No public per-GB pricing is available, and there is no free tier or pay-as-you-go option. Pricing details require contacting their sales team. For more information, visit https://ngenix.net/pricing/.

Integrations & DevEx

BelugaCDN offers a RESTful API for managing properties, purging content, and accessing analytics, making it developer-friendly. Real-time logs can be exported to Elastic Search or Redis, with 10 million requests per month included free. The Grafana App provides usage metrics visualization. No public documentation confirms Terraform or CI/CD integrations, nor specific migration tools from other CDNs. The intuitive UI simplifies setup and management for non-technical users.
Ngenix provides APIs for content routing, reporting, and partner integration (NGENIX Platform API, NGENIX Reports API). Real-time logs support monitoring, but there is no public support for Terraform or other IaC tools. SDKs and CI/CD integrations are not documented. The NGENIX Multidesk portal aids developers with service management, and a public status page (https://status.ngenix.net/) offers outage alerts.

When it fits

  • Small to medium-sized businesses needing an affordable CDN with PAYG pricing and no long-term commitments.
  • Websites with traffic primarily in North America and Europe, leveraging BelugaCDN’s SuperPOPs for low-latency delivery.
  • Developers seeking API-first access and real-time analytics for straightforward content delivery.
  • Businesses targeting Russia and CIS markets needing localized CDN and video streaming.
  • Enterprises requiring robust DDoS protection and web application firewall for regional traffic.
  • Media companies seeking video-on-demand and live streaming with HLS/DASH and RTMP support.

When it doesn’t

  • Organizations requiring extensive presence in China or the Middle East, where BelugaCDN lacks POPs.
  • Users needing advanced video features like HLS/DASH packaging or DRM, which are not supported.
  • Enterprises needing robust edge compute or managed WAF solutions, as BelugaCDN focuses on basic caching and delivery.
  • Companies needing global CDN coverage beyond Russia and CIS regions.
  • Small businesses or startups looking for pay-as-you-go or free-tier pricing models.
  • Developers requiring extensive IaC support like Terraform or broad SDK ecosystems.

History & Notes