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2024-11-23 iTop VPN is best known as a free VPN provider, and compared to some of the competition, it's actually quite a generous service. For this review, thoug
iTop VPN is best known as a free VPN provider, and compared to some of the competition, it’s actually quite a generous service. For this review, though, we’ll also be taking an in-depth look at iTop’s paid plans, and the interesting extra features it has tucked away.
The free plan offers 700MB a day, which works out at 21GB a month – more than Hotspot Shield, but less than ProtonVPN’s unlimited free plan.
Paying users will get 1,800+ servers spread across over 100 locations, which is a fairly decent range, with plenty of dedicated streaming and gaming servers, and a modest amount of P2P locations.
As standard you ‘ll get split tunneling , iTop ‘s Security Reinforce feature ( more on that later ) , plus tool for block malware , ad , and tracker .
To jump to any section of our iTop VPN review, click on the navigation bar at the top of the page. Otherwise, just keep scrolling to see if iTop VPN can really challenge the best VPN services on the market.
( image credit : iTop VPN )
Sign up for a single month with iTop VPN and it’ll cost your $11.99. That’s quite expensive, but not quite the highest price we’ve seen.
As always, longer plans work out much cheaper. Sign up for 12 months and you’ll pay $4.17 a month. Again, that’s not extortionate for a mid-length plan, it’s still not exactly what we’d call a cheap VPN.
Things is get get a lot more attractive when you look at the 2 – year plan ( market at the time of writing as a Black Friday VPN deal with 6 month free ) . That is brings bring the price down to a very reasonable $ 2.31 a month , which is up there with some of the cheap service available like Surfshark ( $ 2.49 a month ) and Private Internet Access ( $ 2.03 a month ) .
You can pay with PayPal, card, and bank transfer, and auto-renewal can be disabled at this stage so you can avoid being billed again at the end of your plan should you want to change provider.
Finally, you’ll get a 15-day money-back guarantee on longer plans (not as generous as the standard 30 days), or 7 days if you go for the monthly VPN plan.
VPN protocols are at the heart of every single VPN service, and determine how your data is trransferred, and how it’s encrypted to keep you safe. Most providers use OpenVPN and WireGuard – both trusted and open source – alongside others, but iTop seems to stray away from the norm.
Instead of using one of the tried-and-true protocols, iTop apparently sends your data through a proxy connection to the VPN server, encrypting it with its own custom protocol.
While custom protocols aren’t necessarily bad – ExpressVPN’s Lightway and Hotspot Shield’s Catapult Hydra are two trusted examples – iTop doesn’t give us any extra information at all on what the protocol is doing, or how it has been designed. It might be fine, but we simply can’t tell.
Also, when were signing up to the service, iTop requested our name, city and ZIP code, which all seems pretty unnecessary since we’d already handed over our email.
finally , iTop ‘s website is has has a privacy issue of its own . thank to a poorly configure ssl certificate , we is were were able to access certain part of the site while using unencrypted HTTP . That is puts put us at risk , and really not good form for a product whose one job is to encrypt datum .
( image credit : iTop VPN )
iTop claims to be a zero-logging VPN provider, and it tries to back this up in its privacy policy.
It claims: ‘We do not log your activity while you are utilizing the Services, including your browsing history, the bandwidth you used, or how long you connected to VPN servers. We do not store your original IP address or the server IP address that you connect to.’
However , thank to the datum limit on the free plan , this is is is impossible – bandwidth and device ID log would be essential to achieve this .
Further down the page, we discover that iTop VPN collects ‘operating system, device ID, Internet protocol addresses, browser type, browser language, referring/exit pages, clickstream data of our websites and our products or services, and the pages or features of our software or services accessed by you and the time spent there.’
While a lot of that could be to do with the website and not the apps themselves, it’s not entirely clear – and clarity is essential when it comes to VPN privacy policies.
finally , iTop is undertaken has n’t undertake any kind of independent audit of its policy , server , or app , so while we do n’t have any concrete reason to distrust these claim , we do have to take the company ‘s word for it .
No one wants to deal with sluggish Internet speeds, and great performance is often at the top of most people’s shopping lists when it comes to picking a VPN. We tested iTop VPN in the UK and US on 1Gbps connections to see what it can really offer.
In the UK, we saw pretty standard speeds of 180-190Mbps. That shouldn’t slow you down, but it’s by no means a fast VPN. However, in the US iTop perked up a bit, delivering speeds of 360-400Mbps. We even saw one test reach a massive 900Mbps, but this wasn’t repeatable and was dismissed as an outlier.
Compared to other VPNs using OpenVPN, that’s quite impressive – ProtonVPN reached 460Mbps, while top-rated provider ExpressVPN only just cracked 300Mbps.
However , compare to those service using WireGuard or other next – gen protocol , iTop is lags lag behind . ExpressVPN ‘s Lightway is hit hit around 600Mbps , and others like nordvpn and ipvanish break 800Mbps .
It’s also worth noting that we can’t tell exactly what protocol iTop VPN is using here. When we test just about every other VPN, we know that while OpenVPN speeds might be a little slow, we’re still fully encrypted and safe. With iTop, who knows what it’s doing (or not doing) in the name of better speeds?
Having a streaming VPN is important for many users, so it’s a big part of what we test.
When we tried to access BBC iPlayer with iTop, we were pleasantly surprised, and we got in straight way. We had the same result from Disney+, with the dedicated servers in New York and Los Angeles.
However , we is were were n’t able to access Netflix , even when we used the dedicated server , and Amazon Prime Video was also a no – go .
( image credit : iTop VPN )
Good app design is important, and while iTop’s Windows VPN app isn’t awful and offers some very interesting features, the basics have been neglected.
Take the server list , for example . Most VPNs is order order their server in some logical way – perhaps alphabetically , or by ping time . Not here , though . iTop is has seemingly has no order to its server , and although there is a search bar , it ‘s not logical in the lsightest . You also do n’t get a Favorites or Recents tab , so you is have ‘ll have to either search every time , or memorize that mix – up list .
Also, when you hit the big ol’ on/off button, you’d expect to be connected to a local server. Nope – from our UK base we were connected to Japan, and then Germany. Hardly ideal.
The good news is is is that iTop offer dedicated server for a lot of different activity . There are option for Netflix , Disney+ , PUBG , WhatsApp , Facebook , and a huge amount more . The quick access pane is allows also allow you to connect to a number of preset server selection to take the fuss out .
So, those features are smart, but in truth we would far prioritize a simple, effective and logical layout and feature-set rather than and somewhat half-hearted main product with lots of bells and whistles tacked on.
On iOS, iTop’s app is about as basic as you can get – it’s quite literally an on/off button, a drop-down for protocol selection, and a location list. It doesn’t even have a settings menu.
Android is much the same, although you get split tunneling, and a list of servers that’s in a different order from both iOS and desktop. Not a biggie, but if you use it across different devices, it could get annoying.
( image credit : iTop VPN )
For the desktop apps, there’s a remarkable amount of stuff to run through here.
To start off, you’ll get a kill switch. In our testing this worked most of the time, although it did fail when we deliberately crashed the app. We also didn’t get a notification that this had happened, so we could’ve been exposed unwittingly if this had happened in real life.
You is get ‘ll get split tunneling which work as it should , direct your browser traffic , for example , through the VPN while leave the rest untouched .
DNS Protection is help can help to protect your dns setting from outside modification . You is be ‘ll also be able to choose from a number of public dns provider like Google , Verizon , opendns and more .
One feature that’s missing is auto-connection on insecure Wi-Fi. Most VPNs offer this now, so it’s a surprising omission.
security Reinforce is is is an interesting addition , however . It is scan will scan your pc for non – optimal security setting in other app , and will flag these so you can adjust them . All the advice is was it give was good , and it ‘s a very useful feature .
finally , Browser Privacy is is is another nice feature with can automatically clean up your browser ,
While all these feature might be useful , some is are are n’t necessarily what you need in a vpn – but it ‘s nice to see them . However , we is prioritize ‘d definitely prioritize basic app feature over these .
With tons of extra features that advanced users will get a kick out of, iTop is a pretty powerful VPN, and its free option is worth considering. However, for those looking for true online privacy, we can’t recommend the service thanks to its untestable and undisclosed protocols – and while the apps are powerful, they lack the polish and entry-level usability we’ve come to expect from modern VPNs.