A VPN for travelers: your home internet, anywhere
Public hotel and airport Wi-Fi, surprise content blocks, region-locked apps that won't open abroad. A VPN fixes all of it on your iPhone.
What travelers actually run into
Public Wi-Fi is still a mess
Hotel, airport, and cafe networks are perfect targets for traffic interception. HTTPS protects the contents of pages — but the metadata (which sites you visit) is still visible to whoever runs the network.
Your bank locks you out abroad
When your bank, broker or e-commerce site sees a foreign IP, it will sometimes lock the account 'for your protection.' Connecting from your home country fixes this in one tap.
Streaming abroad is broken
Your Netflix, Hulu, BBC iPlayer, Disney+ libraries change the moment you cross a border. A VPN lets you pick the country you want.
Some countries block the apps you use
Many destinations restrict access to WhatsApp, Telegram, Wikipedia, or even Google. A VPN slips you back onto the open internet.
What changes when you turn it on
No magic — just one encrypted hop, picked-country IP, and a strict no-logs policy.
Encrypt every connection on hotel Wi-Fi
Once the VPN is on, the network operator only sees an encrypted blob heading to our server. No more metadata leaks at the airport gate.
Connect from your home country in one tap
Pick the country you live in from the server list and apps will see you as a domestic user again — banking, streaming, government portals.
Avoid roaming-data captive portals
Cellular roaming and airport Wi-Fi captive portals can route your traffic through interception equipment. The VPN sidesteps them once you're past the portal.
