Bunny.net (formerly BunnyCDN) is a content delivery network and edge platform founded in 2015 by Dejan Grofelnik Pelzel in Ljubljana, Slovenia. It serves over 85,000 businesses across 82 countries including Hyundai, InnoGames, and NexusMods. The platform has expanded from its CDN origins into a complete edge infrastructure suite covering CDN delivery, object storage, video streaming (Bunny Stream), image optimization (Bunny Optimizer), edge computing (Magic Containers), and DNS — all with transparent pay-as-you-go pricing and no contracts.
CDN pricing uses two tiers. Standard Network uses region-based pricing ranging from $0.01/GB in North America and Europe down to $0.035/GB in South America and $0.06/GB in Asia Pacific, with 119 global points of presence (PoPs). Volume Network offers a flat global rate starting at $0.005/GB for the first 500TB — the most cost-effective CDN pricing in the market for high-bandwidth projects. All plans include all features — image optimization, edge rules, DDoS protection, custom headers, cache purging, URL signing, and access controls — with no gating behind higher tiers. Account minimum is $1/month. No credit card is required to sign up.
Bunny Storage (object storage) starts at $0.01/GB/month for the HDD tier and $0.02/GB for SSD, with internal traffic between Bunny Storage and Bunny CDN zones being free — a meaningful cost advantage over AWS S3 + CloudFront where cross-service data transfer is billed. Bunny Stream (video hosting and delivery) includes the video player, transcoding, and all security features free; you pay only for storage and delivery bandwidth at CDN rates. Magic Containers (edge computing) allows any Docker application to run globally without code changes.
In independent performance tests by CDNPerf, Bunny.net consistently ranks among the fastest CDNs globally despite being significantly cheaper than Cloudflare, Fastly, and AWS CloudFront. The platform accepts PayPal, major credit cards, and cryptocurrency for payment. Support is available via email with a 24/7 enterprise support tier. The main weaknesses compared to Cloudflare are a smaller PoP network (119 vs Cloudflare’s 300+), less extensive DDoS protection at the enterprise tier, and a smaller developer tooling ecosystem for serverless functions.
