Check the Windows client
Look for reliable system startup, kill switch behavior, split tunneling controls, and clear DNS settings.
Choose a Windows VPN by testing app stability, DNS leaks, WebRTC behavior, browser traffic, split tunneling, speed, and refund or trial terms.
Updated: 2026-05-11
The best Windows VPN is not just the fastest one. It should survive sleep and network changes, route browser and app traffic correctly, and pass DNS/WebRTC checks.
Look for reliable system startup, kill switch behavior, split tunneling controls, and clear DNS settings.
Browsers, desktop apps, launchers, and CLI tools may route differently. Test the apps you actually use.
Windows sleep, Wi-Fi changes, and captive networks can break tunnels or DNS behavior.
Check split tunneling, system proxy, and firewall behavior.
Reconnect the VPN and retest provider DNS settings.
Review local network access or split tunneling options.
Use a VPN app for simplicity. Use Clash or V2Ray clients when you need custom subscriptions and routing rules.
Test DNS, browser WebRTC, and whether non-browser apps use the tunnel.
No. Reliability after sleep, routing behavior, and leak checks matter as much as raw speed.