There's a saying you've probably heard: "If you're not paying for it, you're the product." It's catchy. It's also wrong as often as it's right.
Where the cost of a "free" VPN comes from
Running a VPN isn't cheap. Servers, bandwidth, abuse handling, App Store fees — it all costs real money. Every free VPN has to answer the question: how do we pay for this? The honest answers are limited:
- Ads in the app. Annoying, but transparent.
- A free tier that pushes you toward Premium. A loss leader. Common.
- Charity / VC subsidy. Real but rare and usually time-limited.
- Logging and selling your activity. The toxic option.
- Embedding your device into a residential proxy network. Worse — your bandwidth is sold to whoever pays, including for things you don't want associated with your IP.
If a free VPN doesn't fit one of the first three categories, assume it's one of the last two until you can prove otherwise.
How to tell the difference
A few quick signals:
- Look at the privacy policy. Search for the word "log". If they keep connection logs tied to your account, that's a problem. If they sell or share "anonymized" usage data with "partners", run.
- Look at the parent company. Many free VPNs are owned by companies whose other business is selling marketing data. That conflict of interest is rarely disclosed in the app.
- Look for a paid tier. Counterintuitive, but a credible Premium plan is a strong signal that the free tier exists to acquire customers, not to harvest them.
- Check independent audits. Bigger services publish third-party audits of their no-logs claims. Not perfect, but a good baseline.
What FREE VPN FAST does
We sell Premium subscriptions through the App Store. We do not log your browsing. We do not embed your device in a proxy network. We do not have advertising partners. That's it.
The free tier exists because we think privacy shouldn't be paywalled. It's slower, the server is auto-selected, and the device limit is one — that's the tradeoff. If that's enough for you, great. If you want manual server selection and fast lanes, Premium funds the rest of the business.
When paid is worth it
A few cases where Premium pays for itself:
- You stream a lot. Manual country selection and fast lanes make a noticeable difference.
- You travel often. Reliable connections in restrictive networks matter more.
- You have a household. 10 simultaneous devices vs 1 covers the whole family.
- You game competitively. A consistently low-latency route beats the auto-selected one.
If none of that applies to you, the free tier is genuinely fine. That's the point.
