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Why Free VPNs
Limit Data.

Most free VPNs cap you at 500 MB to 10 GB a month. The reasons are mostly economic, partly technical, and entirely about funnel conversion — not about your security.

The data caps you'll actually find

Quick reference of major free VPN data caps in 2026:

ProviderFree data capOther constraints
ClownVPNUnlimitedUS servers only, Android only currently
ProtonVPN FreeUnlimited (bytes)3 countries, throttled speeds
Windscribe Free10 GB / month (15 GB w/ tweet)10 countries
Hide.me Free10 GB / month5 countries
Atlas VPN Free5 GB / month3 cities
TunnelBear Free500 MB / monthAll countries
Hotspot Shield Free500 MB / day (~15 GB/mo)1 server, 2 Mbps throttle

Notice the pattern: the ones with the biggest server networks have the smallest free tiers. The ones with smaller scope tend to be more generous. There's an economic reason for this.

Why caps exist (the economics)

Reason 1: Server bandwidth costs real money

A VPN provider pays for every byte that leaves their servers. At commercial datacenter pricing, bandwidth costs roughly $0.01-0.05 per GB transferred (depending on volume and provider). For a user who runs 100 GB through the VPN per month, that's $1-5 in pure bandwidth cost, before counting server CPU, support, engineering, etc.

If the user isn't paying anything, the provider loses money on each GB. A data cap puts a ceiling on the per-user loss.

Reason 2: Freemium funnels need pain points

Freemium business models work like this: a free tier that demonstrates value, plus a paid tier that removes a specific limitation. The "specific limitation" has to be painful enough to drive conversion, but not so painful that users give up entirely and switch to a competitor.

For VPNs, the most-natural pain point is data. Users notice when they hit the cap. They consider upgrading. The provider gets a conversion opportunity each month.

Less common limits: country count (forces upgrade for users who need a specific country), speed (forces upgrade for streamers/gamers), simultaneous devices (forces upgrade for users with multiple devices). Data caps are popular because they're the most universally understood limit.

Reason 3: Abuse prevention

Without caps, free tiers can be abused by users running continuous high-bandwidth traffic — torrenting, mining-pool coordination, web-scraping operations. These users cost the provider more in bandwidth than legitimate consumers, with no chance of conversion.

A monthly cap puts a ceiling on the worst-case cost per free account. ProtonVPN's "unlimited but throttled" model handles this differently — they cap effective throughput, so even a 24/7 connection can only transfer so much per day.

Why ClownVPN doesn't cap

Two reasons:

1. Different business model

Our revenue is ads displayed inside the app. A user who runs 100 GB through us isn't more expensive than one who runs 1 GB — they're roughly the same in our economics, because the ad impressions are per-session, not per-byte. We don't lose money proportionally to data transferred.

This isn't a magical trick. We pay bandwidth costs same as anyone else. But the per-user math works at our scale because ad CPMs in the privacy/security app category are reasonable (~$2-8 per thousand impressions on typical Android users), and our average user generates enough impressions to cover their bandwidth.

2. No funnel to push them into

We don't have a paid tier. There's no "premium" we're trying to convert users to. So there's no economic reason to make the free tier painful — it IS the product.

This is the key structural difference between our model and freemium VPNs. Freemium needs the cap to drive conversions. Ad-supported with no upgrade path doesn't.

Will this stay sustainable?

At our current growth, yes. The unit economics work. The risk scenarios:

  • Ad CPM crashes. If the mobile ad market collapses (it's not), we'd need to add additional revenue streams. We've thought about this but it's not happening at current trajectories.
  • Bandwidth costs spike. If our datacenter costs jump unexpectedly, we'd need to optimize. WireGuard is already very efficient; there's room.
  • Massive growth. If we 100× our user base, our infrastructure needs to scale linearly while ad CPMs stay similar. We've modeled this and it works at higher scales too — but the economics get tighter.

The honest version: free VPNs aren't a guaranteed-forever model, but our specific model has more headroom than freemium VPNs that depend on conversion rates to fund their infrastructure.

What the freemium VPNs aren't telling you

Freemium VPN marketing often frames data caps as a "fair use" measure or a security policy. Usually it's neither. It's a conversion driver. ProtonVPN is the most honest about this — their pricing page acknowledges the free tier is rate-limited specifically to push users toward paid.

When you see a free VPN with a 2 GB cap, the question worth asking is: would the same provider survive financially if they offered 100 GB? If not, the cap exists for them, not for you. If yes, why are they capping?

Related reading

🎪 FAQ

Why does ClownVPN not have a data cap?
Because our funding model (ads) scales with active users, not with the data they transfer. Capping users would reduce engagement without reducing our costs proportionally. Other free VPNs cap because their model is 'get them hooked on the free tier, then convert to paid for unlimited' — which requires the cap to feel painful.
Is unlimited free actually sustainable?
For us at our scale, yes — the ad CPM (cost per thousand impressions) is enough to cover server bandwidth at our user growth rate. If we grew 100× we'd need to revisit. For freemium-funded VPNs like Windscribe or ProtonVPN, unlimited free would not be sustainable because they don't have an ad revenue stream — they fund infrastructure from paid subscribers.
Are data caps ever enforced retroactively?
On most freemium VPNs, no — once you hit your cap, the VPN simply stops working until the calendar rolls over to next month. They don't bill you retroactively. The pain point is the interruption, not a charge.
What's the largest free VPN data cap available?
Among well-known providers: ProtonVPN free claims 'unlimited' bandwidth (but throttles speed). Windscribe gives 10 GB/month base, up to 15 GB with email confirmation + a tweet. Hide.me free gives 10 GB. TunnelBear is much smaller at 500 MB. ClownVPN has no cap. Outside the freemium tier, paid plans on these services all give unlimited.
Why don't more VPNs just adopt the ad-supported model?
Honestly, it's harder. Ad CPMs vary wildly by user demographic. Banking on ad revenue means accepting some uncertainty. Most VPN companies prefer the predictable revenue of subscriptions. We took the bet because the ad-supported model doesn't create incentives to compromise user data, and 'free forever' has its own audience.

🎪 No Cap

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