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NordVPN vs. Surfshark: Which VPN is best for you?

When choosing a VPN, you’ve got a lot of choices. In our best of guide and speed test guide, we’ve narrowed down the list from the 50+ branded commercial options out there to about 10. But once you narrow the list down even more, what do you choose? In this article, we’ve taken two of our top choices — NordVPN and Surfshark — and compared them.

Surfshark wins

VPN providers are always tinkering with their pricing, so these numbers are bound to change. That said, Surfshark is less expensive. Surfshark’s best deal is what they tout as $2.49 a month (you’ll really be paying $59.76 now for two years of service). Nord is asking for $3.71 (or a wallet hit of $89 on signup for two years of service).

Surfshark definitively wins this round by allowing you to run an unlimited number of client devices with its VPN service, while Nord permits a relatively generous six simultaneous connections.

Both offer a 30-day money-back guarantee.

View Now at Surfshark

NordVPN wins

Image: ZDNet/David Gewirtz

In our fastest VPN guide, we took a look at both our own in-house tests and how the Internet overall rated VPNs. We compared VPN rankings in speed tests from 10 sites besides ZDNet. Of potentially more interest, we compared the standard deviation of those rankings, which helps us determine whether a given VPN has a consistent ranking all across the internet, or different reviewers got wildly different numbers.

As the above slide shows, NordVPN not only had a better aggregate average ranking but a considerably lower standard deviation. This means that pretty much wherever you are, your NordVPN performance should be pretty good. By contrast, how Surfshark will perform is likely to be considerably less predictable.

View Now at NordVPN

Tie between NordVPN and Surfshark

Both NordVPN and Surfshark support the big four: iOS, Android, Mac, and Windows. Surfshark also supports Linux, FireTV, Apple TV, and what it calls “other TVs.” It supports Xbox and Playstation as well as browsers Chrome and Firefox.

NordVPN lists Android TV, Linux, and Chrome and Firefox extensions on its download page, but has a support page for installing NordVPN on other platforms, including routers, Raspberry Pi, and NAS boxes including Synology, Western Digital My Cloud, and QNAP.

The fact is, both products support a reasonably wide range of devices. If you’re a NAS user, you probably want NordVPN. If you’re a console gamer, you probably want Surfshark. As we always recommend, do your research before buying.

View Now at NordVPN VIEW NOW AT SURFSHARK

Tie between NordVPN and Surfshark

Let’s get this out of the way upfront: If you’re counting on a VPN for your physical freedom or to protect your life, you must do a lot more research than just reading an article like this. With that said, let’s look at the overall profile for these two vendors.

NordVPN has gotten a lot of mileage out of its Panamanian corporate registration, claiming that Panama puts its records out of the legal reach of governments and lawyers.  s I discussed in great depth in my analysis of NordSec, it’s possible that countries with Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties (MLAT) may well be able to pierce the corporate veil.

Although I didn’t do as deep an in-depth analysis of Surfshark, the company has the same claims and limits as Nord. Surfshark lists its registry in the British Virgin Islands but is a company with developers based in many MLAT countries as well.

Both vendors tout a no-logs policy. Both vendors say they don’t capture connection time stamps, used bandwidth, traffic logs, IP addresses, or browsing data. Both offer warrant canaries. Both capture email addresses and billing information. NordVPN does capture your billing address and country. Both NordVPN and Surfshark accept cryptocurrencies.

View Now at NordVPN VIEW NOW AT SURFSHARK

Tie between NordVPN and Surfshark

Both vendors offer a kill switch, which we consider table stakes in terms of VPN special features. Surfshark offers a multi-hop connection, which is similar to NordVPN’s feature causing your IP address to change twice before reaching the destination server. Both support P2P, allowing you to torrent your favorite Linux distros (and possibly other digital sharing activities of dubious legality, which we categorically do not recommend).

NordVPN has a few interesting features not provided by Surfshark. NordVPN also provides Onion Over VPN, which allows you to use both the Onion anonymizer and Nord’s VPN together. NordVPN also allows you to buy a dedicated IP address, which can help if you’re dealing with anonymous servers or gaming connections. NordVPN also offers business plans.

Both providers offer malware and adware filtering, although Surfshark’s AdBlock VPN feature appears to be somewhat more comprehensive. Surfshark also offers what it calls Camouflage Mode, which the company says can prevent your local ISP from knowing you’re surfing using a VPN. While NordVPN has a blog post on whitelisting, they don’t appear to have whitelisting as an actual client feature. By contrast, Suftshark uses its split-tunneling feature as a whitelister.

Both vendors come to the game with most of the features you’d expect. Nord has a few more business-focused features while Surfshark has some features that may afford a limited degree of additional personal privacy — but this would need in-depth testing to truly validate. As such, we’re calling a tie for special features.

View Now at NordVPN VIEW NOW AT SURFSHARK

Decision tree

So how do you decide? Here are a few options that may make that decision easier.

  • If price is your top concern, Surfshark will save you about $30 over two years.
  • If predictably fast download performance is key, then NordVPN is more consistently fast in overall performance.
  • If you need a VPN for a NAS appliance, then NordVPN is your choice.
  • If you want a VPN for your Xbox or Playstation, choose Surfshark.
  • If you want a dedicated IP address or more business-oriented features, choose NordVPN.

There you go. Surfshark vs. NordVPN. It’s not a super cut-and-dried answer. One isn’t wildly better than the other. But the decision tree above should help you pick the winner given your own needs. How do these choices fit your needs? Have you chosen a VPN provider already? What capabilities and characteristics helped you to make up your mind.


You can follow my day-to-day project updates on social media. Be sure to follow me on Twitter at @DavidGewirtz, on Facebook at Facebook.com/DavidGewirtz, on Instagram at Instagram.com/DavidGewirtz, and on YouTube at YouTube.com/DavidGewirtzTV.

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Source: Information Technologies - zdnet.com

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