Why VPN speed drops and how to measure it correctly
A VPN adds encryption and changes the route. Some speed loss is normal, but large drops usually come from distance, congestion, weak Wi-Fi, MTU, or a misleading test.
Réponse rapide
Measure before and after VPN with the same device, same network, same test server, and nearby VPN location. If latency jumps or upload collapses, look at routing, Wi-Fi quality, and MTU before reinstalling.
Common reasons
Speed tests mix many layers: local Wi-Fi, ISP path, VPN server, destination server, CPU, and browser behavior.
A useful test isolates one layer and records enough context to repeat it.
- Longer routes add latency and can lower throughput.
- Weak Wi-Fi can be mistaken for VPN slowdown.
- Some networks shape UDP, TLS, or datacenter traffic.
- MTU problems can cause stalls even when a speed test starts.
Measurement checklist
Run a baseline, connect VPN, then repeat immediately. Avoid comparing a morning direct test with an evening VPN test.
If mobile data is involved, record signal level and whether the phone changed between LTE and 5G.
Checklist
- ✓Use the same test endpoint
- ✓Use a nearby VPN server first
- ✓Test Wi-Fi quality without VPN
- ✓Compare latency, download, upload, and packet loss
FAQ
Can a VPN be faster than direct internet?
Sometimes, if the VPN route avoids a congested ISP path. It is not guaranteed and should be measured per network.