Before You Buy a VPN: The 4 Features That Matter (and the 7 You Can Skip)
Shopping for a VPN feels like being handed a menu in a language you don't speak. Split tunneling. Obfuscated servers. IPv6 leak protection. Eleven features, each one apparently essential, each one wrapped in jargon that seems built to wear you down until you give up and pick whatever has the biggest discount.
The comparison pages leave out the part that would actually help you: if you're a regular person protecting a home and a handful of devices, most of that list doesn't apply to you. Four features decide whether a VPN keeps you safer. The other seven are real, but they solve problems you probably don't have.
Four features to insist on, seven you can wave past, and one decision that ends up mattering more than any single checkbox.
The 4 features that decide whether you're protected
1. Real encryption, with a kill switch behind it
Encryption is the whole job. It scrambles what you do online so that your internet provider, the café Wi-Fi, or anyone snooping on the network sees gibberish instead of your bank login. The standard you want is AES-256 — the same grade of encryption banks and governments rely on. If a VPN can't tell you plainly what it uses, that's your answer.
The piece people miss is the kill switch. A VPN connection can drop for a second or two without you noticing, and in that gap your real location and activity are exposed. A kill switch cuts your internet the instant the VPN fails, so nothing slips out while you're not looking. Think of encryption as the lock and the kill switch as the deadbolt that catches when the lock jiggles loose. You want both.
2. Leak protection
A VPN can be switched on and still quietly leak. The usual culprit is something called a DNS request — the lookup your device does every time you visit a site. If those lookups travel outside the encrypted tunnel, your browsing can be visible even though the app says you're protected. Good VPNs route that traffic through their own system and block the leak. You'll see it listed as DNS and IP leak protection. It runs in the background; you don't manage it. You just need it to be there.
3. A logging policy you can actually read
The point of a VPN is that the company isn't keeping a record of everything you do. Plenty promise exactly that and do the opposite. A free service called SuperVPN advertised that it kept no logs, then left a database of more than 360 million user records exposed online — complete with the sites people had visited. The lesson isn't "all VPNs lie." It's that the promise is only as good as the company keeping it, and free services often pay their bills by selling the very data you're trying to protect.
You don't need to trust a slogan. Open the privacy policy before you buy and look for two things: a clear statement that they don't log your browsing, and a company that makes money from subscriptions rather than from your data. If the policy is unreadable or evasive, walk away. A reputable paid provider has no reason to hide it.
4. It covers all your devices, and it's simple enough that you'll use it
The most advanced VPN in the world protects nothing if it's too fiddly to switch on. For a normal household, "good" means an app that installs in a couple of clicks, runs on your phone and your laptop, and covers more than one device at a time. A browser add-on alone isn't enough — it only shields what happens inside that one browser, not the rest of your traffic. Look for proper apps on Windows, Mac, Android, and iOS, and a plan that connects several devices on one account. Easy beats clever, because easy is the version you'll actually keep running.
Get the four that matter in one app — try Total VPN →
The 7 features you can almost certainly skip
All seven are real features, built for specific situations most home users will never be in. What each one does, and who it's actually for:
| Feature | What it does | Who actually needs it |
|---|---|---|
| Split tunneling | Lets you route some apps through the VPN and others around it | Power users running a specific app that misbehaves on a VPN |
| Dedicated IP | Gives you a private address no one else uses | People who get blocked by banking or work systems on shared addresses |
| Warrant canary | A signal a provider posts to hint it's been served a secret legal order | Journalists, activists, anyone facing a real legal threat |
| Router setup | Puts the VPN on your router to cover devices that can't run an app | Households trying to protect a smart TV or game console |
| IPv6 leak protection | Plugs a leak tied to a newer addressing system most homes don't use yet | A small slice of users on IPv6 networks |
| Huge server counts | Thousands of locations to choose from | Frequent travelers and people chasing region-locked streaming |
| Obfuscation / "stealth" modes | Hides the fact you're using a VPN at all | People in countries that actively block VPNs |
If one of those describes you, by all means weigh it. If none of them do, a longer feature list is just a longer feature list. It doesn't make you safer.
The decision that matters more than any feature
A VPN only guards the connection. It encrypts the pipe your data travels through, and it does nothing about the threats that don't come through that pipe. That's the part nobody selling you a single subscription wants to dwell on.
It won't stop malware from a bad download, block the ads and trackers that follow you from site to site, or help when one of your passwords turns up in a leak. The FTC even fined the antivirus maker Avast $16.5 million for quietly selling customers' browsing data — a reminder that "security" branding alone guarantees nothing.
So most people end up doing one of two things. They either piece it together — a VPN here, an antivirus there, an ad blocker somewhere else, three subscriptions and three apps to remember and renew. Or they get the pieces in one place. For someone who wants to be safer without turning it into a hobby, one app that bundles the protection together is the difference between a system you maintain and one you actually use.
Where Total VPN fits
Total VPN is built for exactly this kind of person: someone who wants the four features that matter, without the homework. It uses AES-256 encryption, includes a kill switch and DNS and IP leak protection, and runs as one-click apps across Windows, Mac, Android, and iOS so every device is covered on a single account.
It also doesn't stop at the VPN, and that's where it saves the most hassle. It's part of an all-in-one setup that folds in ad and tracker blocking and antivirus, so the gaps a VPN leaves open are handled in the same place. You get the connection locked down and the device protected, without assembling it yourself from three different bills.
Cover every device with one simple app →
Backed by a 30-day money-back guarantee on annual plans, so you can try it on your own devices and decide for yourself.