Pricing
Free VPN vs Paid VPN: What Is the Real Cost?
Free VPN sounds attractive, but VPN service has real costs: servers, bandwidth, route maintenance, payment systems, support, and abuse control. If a VPN is truly free forever, the business model needs a serious look.
Bandwidth is not free
Every VPN connection uses server capacity and network traffic. Heavy users can consume much more bandwidth than normal users. That is why responsible VPN services often use fair-use rules, traffic limits, or paid plans.
Unlimited Links uses a 200MB trial per device so you can test whether the service works for your network before paying. The trial is not meant to pretend that bandwidth has no cost.
What paid plans should buy
A paid VPN should give you better route availability, more regions, more predictable support, and fewer overloaded free nodes. You are not only paying for software; you are paying for capacity and maintenance.
Privacy claims should be specific
Do not trust vague promises like “100% anonymous” or “unlimited forever.” A better privacy statement explains what is not collected and what operational data is still needed. Unlimited Links does not store browsing history, DNS queries, or traffic content, but it does keep necessary account, subscription, usage, diagnostic, and support records.
When free is enough
If you only need to test whether the app connects on your current network, a trial is enough. If you need stable daily access, more routes, and longer usage, a Pro plan is the practical path. Current plans are listed on the Pricing page.
