Antivirus

Bitdefender Premium VPN

VPN. Sounds great, until you realize there’s no option to choose a location (the app automatically picks the nearest server), and you spot the tiny data transfer limit of 200MB a day.Buying an additional Bitdefender Premium VPN license gets you unlimited traffic and full access to all 27 countries. (Bitdefender VPN is powered by Hotspot…

VPN. Sounds great, until you realize there’s no option to choose a location (the app automatically picks the nearest server), and you spot the tiny data transfer limit of 200MB a day.

Buying an additional Bitdefender Premium VPN license gets you unlimited traffic and full access to all 27 countries. (Bitdefender VPN is powered by Hotspot Shield, a strong indicator that you’re going to get a decent service.)

  • Want to try Bitdefender Premium VPN? Check out the website here

billed monthly, or an equivalent $3.33 a month for year one on the annual plan (so cheaper than the VPN heavyweights of ExpressVPN and NordVPN), $4.17 on renewal. You can pay by card, PayPal or bank transfer.

One potential issue to consider is that you’ll only be able to use the VPN on the number of devices covered by your Bitdefender security software license.  

If you’ve bought Bitdefender Antivirus Plus for a single device, for instance, then you’ll only be able to use the VPN on that device, perhaps a problem.

But if you’ve purchased a Total Security License covering ten devices, then you’ll be able to use the VPN on all of these for the same price, a much better deal.

There’s no trial of the full service, unfortunately, and the 200MB-a-day free product won’t give you much of an idea of how it really works (that’s not even enough bandwidth to run a single web-based speed test.)  

Bitdefender does provide a 30-day money-back guarantee, though, so you should be able to get a refund if the service doesn’t work out for you.

Privacy and logging

Bitdefender Premium VPN appears to be a solely Bitdefender product – you pay them to use the service, it’s powered by their software – but it works by connecting to Hotspot Shield servers and using the Hotspot Shield network. That doesn’t matter at all when you’re using the service, but it’s relevant when you’re trying to figure out the service logging policy, because that isn’t under Bitdefender’s control.

You can see this in Bitdefender’s very basic Privacy Policy, describing the data it uses:  

“We collect for this service only randomly generated or hashed user and device IDs, IP addresses and randomly generated tokens to establish VPN connection for the sole purpose of providing the VPN service. For this service, we use AnchorFree as data processor who processes data on behalf of Bitdefender in accordance with Bitdefender’s instructions and for the sole purpose of providing VPN services to users.”

Not exactly helpful.

What we can say is that Bitdefender knows the devices where you’ve installed the VPN, as this will have its security software (you can’t run the VPN stand-alone.) To manage a 200MB per day limit on the free plan, Bitdefender must be able to maintain at least a running total of the bandwidth used per device. But it can’t see the websites you’re visiting, or the content of your web traffic, as that’s encrypted by the VPN.

Any more detailed service logging is carried out by Hotspot Shield. Its privacy policy explains, reassuringly, that there’s no monitoring of your web traffic or browsing history. But there’s more session logging than you might expect, too, including the recording of device identifiers, browser types, device settings, network information and more. This doesn’t allow the company to see anything of what you’re doing online, but it’s still more than you’ll see with most of the competition. Check out our full Hotspot Shield review if you’re concerned.

Installation

You’ll first have to install one of Bitdefender’s security applications before you can use its VPN (Image credit: Bitdefender)

Apps

To try Bitdefender VPN, you must first install one of Bitdefender’s security applications. If you don’t have one yet, you can usually install a free trial, so for example there’s a 30-day trial version of Bitdefender Total Security available for Windows. But keep in mind that the suite only includes the limited 200MB per day version of the VPN, and you won’t get a real idea of the VPN’s abilities until you’ve handed over some cash.

Windows App

This is the user interface of Bitdefender Premium VPN’s Windows client (Image credit: Bitdefender)

Bitdefender’s client is very, very basic, with the bare minimum of features. A large blue Connect button by default connects you to your nearest server; you’re able to choose another location from a simple list; and there are settings to launch Bitdefender VPN along with Windows, and automatically connect whenever you access an insecure wireless network.

We noticed a few small enhancements since the last review. A desktop notification now tells you when you’re protected, for instance, and you don’t have to manually close the existing connection before you can choose a new server.

Settings

Unfortunately Bitdefender Premium VPN has barely any settings (Image credit: Bitdefender)

There are still very few of the other features we would normally hope to see, though. You can’t choose locations at the city level, only countries; there’s no Favorites or Recently Used list to speed up accessing commonly-used servers; no kill switch to block internet access if the connection drops; and no option to change protocol, or tweak your connection in any way.

There are some plus points. The client is so easy to use that even total beginners probably won’t need any support, and it handles unexpected situations with ease. When we made the VPN connection drop by forcibly closing the openvpn.exe process – a very aggressive step which is most unlikely to happen in real life – the client warned us immediately with a desktop alert, then automatically reconnected within seconds. (The lack of a kill switch meant our traffic was exposed until the connection was re-established, though.)

If you’re looking to buy Bitdefender Premium VPN as a cheaper route to access Hotspot Shield, it’s worth noting that Hotspot Shield’s own Windows client has a few extra features, including a kill switch, extra leak protection, finer control over when the VPN will automatically connect, and the very speedy Catapult Hydra protocol (the Windows client is OpenVPN-only.)

Bitdefender Premium VPN is also considerably cheaper, so might be worth the tradeoff. But if you’d like to compare the two, Hotspot Shield’s free trial gives you 7 days to check out the service.

New Speedtest Image

We use several different speed tests to determine the performance of each VPN we review (Image credit: Ookla)

Performance

Bitdefender sells Premium VPN mostly for its encryption and anonymity benefits, but the website claims it can also ‘unlock media, videos & messaging from all over the world.’

That wasn’t true for BBC iPlayer, unfortunately. When we tried to stream content while connected to the UK server, iPlayer told us ‘this content is not available in your location.’

Premium allowed us to stream US Netflix content, an improvement on our last review. But that was the testing highlight, as the service failed with Amazon Prime Video and Disney+.

Premium had some speed issues during our last review, but not this time, Connecting to Bitdefender Premium VPN’s nearest UK server gave us decent speeds of around 66-68Mbps on a 75Mbps test connection, much the same as we’d expect from any quality VPN.

This wasn’t some fluke, either. Speeds were reliable everywhere, with European cities very similar to UK performance, UK to US speeds a capable 40-45Mbps, even the long-distance destinations Australia and Singapore were consistently above 30Mbps. 

The good news continued right up to the end of the review, too, as multiple test sites found our test client didn’t have any DNS or WebRTC leaks.

Final verdict

Bitdefender Premium VPN works well as a simple way for Bitdefender users to secure their network connections when they’re out and about, but the service doesn’t have the power, the features or the configurability of services like ExpressVPN to attract more demanding types.

  • Also check out our roundup of the best VPN services

Read full review

NordVPN 3 Year
Surfshark 24 Months
IPVanish 1 Year
Pricing
12 months

36 months

24 months

12 months

Best For
Everything – the #1 best VPN
Balance of options and ease of use
Torrenting and P2P traffic
Compatible Devices
AndroidiOSLinuxWindowsXboxPSN
AndroidiOSLinuxWindows
AndroidiOSMacOSLinuxWindowsChromeFirefox
AndroidiOSPSNWindowsXbox
Works With
FacebookTwitterNetflixiPlayerYoutube
FacebookTwitterNetflixYoutube
FacebookTwitterYoutube
FacebookTwitterNetflixiPlayerYoutube
Number Of Locations
160
55
60
60
Simultaneous Connections
5
6
999999
5
Unlimited Bandwidth
1
N/A
1
1
P2p Traffic
1
1
1
1
Trial Period
N/A
src
N/A
1

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Why There’s Simply No Need For Android Antivirus Apps Anymore

Many Android users install an antivirus app on a new device without thinking twice. In 2026, there are good reasons to skip that step entirely…

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‘People use smartphones more but invest less in their security’: New report claims McAfee and Norton remain the most loved antivirus brands as users ditch lesser-known security products for free tools like Microsoft Defender or Apple Xprotect

Copy link Facebook X Whatsapp Reddit Pinterest Flipboard Threads Email Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter Most smartphone users rely on built-in security without additional protection Paid antivirus adoption on mobile devices continues to decline steadily A significant share


  • Most smartphone users rely on built-in security without additional protection
  • Paid antivirus adoption on mobile devices continues to decline steadily
  • A significant share of users remains unprotected or unaware of safeguards

Most Americans now use their smartphones more than their computers, but very few spend money to protect those phones from hackers, new research has claimed.

A Cybernews report surveyed over 1,000 American adults, and found only 18% of mobile phone users pay for third-party antivirus software.

Built-in tools like Microsoft Defender and Apple’s XProtect have become the default choice for most people, while McAfee and Norton lead the paid market for the second year in a row.

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Smartphone owners are skipping extra security protections

Most consumers believe the security features already built into their phones are sufficient for daily use, and see little reason to spend extra money on something they think they already own for free.

Roughly 14% of mobile users say they have no cybersecurity tools installed at all on their devices. Another 16% cannot even name what protections they currently have in place.

On desktop computers, the situation looks very different, with far fewer unprotected machines and much wider adoption of third-party security tools.

Windows Defender and Apple’s native security features now serve as the primary defense for 53% of computer users and 51% of mobile users.

Most people choose these free options because they trust the operating system vendor to provide adequate baseline protection.

Paid antivirus adoption on computers has actually grown by 2% since last year, reaching 41% of users.

On mobile devices, however, third-party antivirus usage has dropped by roughly 10% over the same period, falling from 28% to just 18%.

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Mobile users face growing risks

Ransomware attacks targeting smartphones are still less common than those aimed at computers, but the threat landscape is shifting rapidly.

Users who depend solely on the free security tools that came with their phones may be underestimating what modern cybercriminals can do.

Paid subscriptions have gained ground over free alternatives, yet the majority of mobile owners still avoid spending money on dedicated protection.

Cybercrime exposure does influence some users to change their habits, but personal experience is not the main driver of adoption for most people.

Many users employ layered security approach, combining antivirus with VPNs and password managers.

However, the data shows that a large segment of mobile users remain either unprotected or unsure about what safeguards they have.

Established brands like McAfee and Norton continue to benefit from user trust, while lesser-known products struggle to gain acceptance even when their features are comparable.


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