This is a great feather in IPVanish’s hat, given each server has a different IP address, which can be handy for sidestepping some geoblocks. More interesting is there’s a server tab that not only lists the number of servers per country/city, it also opens a drop-down menu for manually selecting individual servers. In my tests, the IPVanish latency values were optimistic, though they do give an indication of which city to choose over others. One of the neater features is how it offers a breakdown of the number of servers in each country, both on the IPVanish website and in the location screen.Ĭountry and city information is listed with a breakdown of ping ( latency) and server load. Popular VPN destinations like the US, UK and Australia have multiple city choices. There’s a world map to give an idea of the country you’re connected to, but it doesn’t show which part of the country you’re connected to, so it’s less of a useful visual guide overall.Īt the time of writing, IPVanish offered 2,200+ servers these days in 55 nations and 83 locations. Just click the big green ‘Connect’ button to route internet traffic through the last VPN server you used. Connection times range from a handful of seconds up to around 15 seconds, which isn’t particularly fast despite IPVanish defaulting to the typically speedy WireGuard VPN protocol. When it is working, though, IPVanish is easy to use. But if you’re in the habit of bouncing between VPNs and not uninstalling the older ones, you may encounter the same issue. Admittedly, it’s perhaps a somewhat unique problem for VPN reviewers. While I suspect it’s a VPN conflict on my main desktop PC, removing multiple VPNs didn’t fix the connection issues. It worked without any issues on a backup test desktop, but I had to uninstall other VPNs on my Microsoft Surface Laptop 4 to get it working there. I say “PCs” plural because IPVanish got stuck in a connection loop on my main desktop PC and never ended up working. The majority of my IPVanish testing was done on Windows 11 PCs. When I hit up IPVanish’s 24/7 chat support to stop the automatic renewal-while stressing that I wanted to keep the subscription-my account was cancelled, and I had to resubscribe all over again. If you, like me, aren’t a fan of automatic renewals, the supposedly recently updated IPVanish support article has out-of-date steps that won’t help. It’s worth flagging that although IPVanish offers an industry-standard 30-day money-back guarantee for its annual and biennial plans, my experience with customer support was painful for a straightforward cancellation request. Look at VPN Unlimited, Atlas VPN and Private Internet Access for the best multi-year pricing. There’s also a two-year price for IPVanish, but it’s expensive (US$179.99) unless you get it on special. Check in with PureVPN, Private Internet Access VPN and Atlas VPN for the cheapest annual pricing. IPVanish’s annual pricing blows out past the top 10, although the typical US$89.99 asking price is a lot more reasonable if you can get it during a sale. For cheap monthly pricing, start with Mullvad VPN, Windscribe VPN and VPN Unlimited. While it used to have comparatively solid monthly pricing, the US$11.99 asking price puts IPVanish outside the top five of the 17 VPNs I’ve reviewed. IPVanish isn’t really a VPN to look at if you’re interested in competitive pricing.
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