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What FireVPN actually does.

FireVPN is a VPN app for Android and iOS. When you turn it on, all the internet traffic leaving your phone gets routed through an encrypted tunnel to one of our servers before it reaches the wider internet. This means your ISP can't see what sites you're visiting, and the sites you visit can't see your real IP address. That's the core of what any VPN does, and FireVPN handles it with no setup beyond tapping one button.

The app doesn't ask you to create an account or enter an email. You download it, open it, and tap connect. If you want to pick a specific country, you can. If you don't care, the app picks the fastest server near you. Either way, the connection happens in a couple of seconds.

It's free to use. There's a VIP server system that gives you access to less crowded servers, but you earn VIP minutes just by using the app normally — there's no paywall. Below is a breakdown of every feature and how each one works.

One-tap connection

The main screen has a single power button. Tap it once and FireVPN connects you. That's it. There's no setup wizard, no configuration screen, no dropdown menus to fight through. Behind the scenes, the app opens an encrypted tunnel to a VPN server and routes all your traffic through it. If you haven't picked a specific server, auto-select kicks in and picks the one with the lowest latency based on your current location. Disconnecting is the same button in the off position — one more tap and you're back to your regular connection.

Server selection

FireVPN has servers in over 20 countries. You can browse the full list and tap any country to connect through it. Each server shows its current load so you can avoid overcrowded ones. If you'd rather not choose, the auto-select option tests latency to nearby servers and connects you to the fastest one. This is useful when you just want protection and don't care which country your traffic exits from. Switching servers mid-session is instant — tap a new country and the app reconnects without dropping you back to an unencrypted state.

Live connection status

While you're connected, the main screen shows three things in real time: which server you're on, how long you've been connected, and your current download and upload speeds. This matters because it lets you verify the VPN is actually working, not just turned on. If speeds drop unexpectedly, you can see it immediately and switch to a different server. The session timer is useful if you're conscious about how long you've been routing through a particular location.

No registration

There is zero sign-up. No email field, no password screen, no Google or Facebook login button, no "verify your phone number" step. You install the app and you're in. FireVPN doesn't ask for or store your name, email, or any personal identifier. The only data involved in running the service is temporary connection information (which server you're on and how long the session lasts) that gets cleaned up automatically within a few days. Your browsing activity is never logged.

VIP rewards

As you use FireVPN, you accumulate VIP minutes. These minutes unlock access to VIP servers, which have fewer users on them and therefore tend to be faster and more stable. You earn VIP time just by staying connected — there's no payment involved and no ads to watch. The regular servers work fine for daily use. VIP servers are there when you want an extra speed boost, like when you're streaming or downloading large files. It's not a paywall; it's a reward for actually using the app.

Encryption

FireVPN uses OpenVPN, which is an open-source VPN protocol that's been audited and battle-tested over many years. When you connect, all traffic between your phone and our servers is encrypted — this includes DNS requests, HTTP, and any other data your apps send out. On public Wi-Fi (coffee shops, airports, hotels), this prevents anyone else on the same network from intercepting your traffic. On your home connection, it prevents your ISP from seeing which websites you're visiting. The encryption is always on for every connection; there's no separate setting to enable.

Try it yourself.

Free, no sign-up, and takes two seconds to set up.