cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Introducing Firefox’s Built-in VPN: IP protection, now in the browser

MShahabuddin
Employee
Employee

Distilled_FeatureLaunch_VPN_02.jpgHello everyone,

Today, we’re excited to announce the launch of Firefox’s free built-in VPN Beta, a new privacy feature that hides your IP address while browsing in Firefox.

When you browse the web, your IP address is typically visible to the websites you visit and to your internet service provider. IP addresses can be used to approximate your location or link activity over time - for example, when browsing on public Wi-Fi or visiting sites you’d prefer not to be linked together. Built-in VPN reduces that exposure by masking your IP address while you browse in Firefox.

Our goal is straightforward: make IP protection accessible directly in Firefox.

The built-in VPN is available for up to 50 GB of browsing per month. It is currently rolling out to users in the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, and France, and we are planning expansion to more regions soon.

We’ve also heard concerns about so-called “free VPNs,” which often rely on advertising or selling user data to generate revenue. Built-in VPN is designed differently. It does not sell your browsing data and does not inject advertising into your traffic.

Instead, we offer a limited amount of browser-level protection for free, alongside Mozilla VPN, our paid, full-device VPN service. This allows us to make IP protection more accessible while continuing to invest in more comprehensive privacy tools.

How it works

Instead of connecting directly to a website, Firefox routes your browsing traffic through servers run by our service partner Fastly.

In practice:

  • Firefox creates an encrypted TLS connection to the proxy.
  • DNS lookups are sent through that encrypted connection.
  • The proxy connects to the website on your behalf.
  • Website content remains end-to-end encrypted using standard HTTPS encryption.

What each party can see:

  • Your ISP or local network sees that you connected to the proxy, but not which websites you visited.
  • The proxy provider can see the destination hostname, connection timing, and data volume, because it must know where to connect. It cannot read passwords, form entries, messages, or page content.
  • The website sees the proxy’s IP address, not your real one.

Mozilla receives aggregate data usage from the proxy provider so Firefox can display your monthly usage. This information is separate from your browsing activity and does not include the websites you visit.

For more details about how Built-in VPN works, including data limits, account requirements, and privacy protections, see our support article.

How to use it

To get started:

  1. Update to Firefox 149 or later
  2. When the feature is available, click the VPN button in the toolbar
  3. Sign in to or create a Mozilla account (used to track your usage against the 50 GB limit)
  4. Turn on protection in the panel

The VPN indicator will turn green when it is active.

You can manage the feature anytime in Settings > Privacy & Security > VPN. If you prefer not to use it, you can remove the toolbar button. If you experience issues with a specific site, you can exclude it from the proxy directly in the panel.

We’d like your feedback

Built-in VPN is launching in Beta, and your feedback will directly inform how it evolves. We’ll continue expanding availability and refining the feature as we learn how people use it.

If you try it, we’d like to know:

  • Does it work as you expect?
  • Have you noticed any sites behaving differently?
  • Have you encountered any performance or connection issues?
  • What use cases are important to you, and what would you like to see this feature do?

Share your thoughts in the comments below. Your input helps us improve reliability, clarity, and overall experience.

- The Firefox Team

81 REPLIES 81

eNTiKeY
Making moves

on me with version 149 i cant see the button, and in the settings > privacy & Security i cant no see the VPN. Why is it so? 

"This feature is progressively rolling out in the US, UK, Germany and France...". Meaning not everyone will get the feature at the same time. Just keep an eye out for the VPN setup prompt in the top-right corner of your Firefox toolbar. 

For more info: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/built-in-vpn#w_turn-on-vpn-in-firefox

I have never seen the VPN button in v149, therefore I must assume not getting it in v150 (as of today) either.

Same for me! On the older w10 Notebook (Firefox 149.0) the VPN button is visible, on the newer w10 (149.0) it is not. Very strange!

 

It's not strange, that just how progressive rollouts work. 

I have a Windows 11 laptop and a Windows 11 tablet. The tablet has a preview build of Windows 11, so newer than the laptop's standard build. The laptop had the new start menu layout before the tablet did. That's how rollouts roll!

Did you forget to enable VPN in 'about:config' settings on your newer machine?

b9
Making moves

Any timeline for when the VPN will be available in Canada?

chedim
Making moves

it is available now. Go buy it from a proper VPN provider or rent a VPS and configure it yourself.

wutongtaiwan
Contributor

Can Mozilla tell me whether the VPN feature can be used in China? In the past, Firefox had a dedicated version for China, and because there was business in China, it had to comply with Chinese law. But now there is no Chinese version, and you no longer need to comply with Chinese law. However, I still hope you can respond now regarding whether you have decided to provide VPN service to China. If there are no related plans, you can also tell me directly to avoid me waiting indefinitely for the VPN.

No! If Firefox do this, Firefox website will totally blocked in China, and most of user couldn't download Firefox anymore. 

Synchro
Familiar face

I heard this feature is a proxy-server not a VPN but I don't know how they are different. Can someone explain?

b9
Making moves

Maybe this will help clarify the difference a bit. 

The difference between a VPN and a web proxy - Mozilla VPN 

Synchro
Familiar face

Thnaks!

"A secure web proxy works for tasks that you might do only in your browser."

"a proxy only protects what you do in your browser, whereas a VPN protects all your traffic"

So it's a proxy?

A VPN _is_ a proxy server, just on a different OSI layer.
The problem is -- are you ok with giving ALL your traffic to a for-profit company like Mozilla Corporation and their "partner" Fastly who provides this service for "free" to you (meaning the data they capture from your use of the service _is being sold_)? 

I guess we have to read a license agreement. If it's written there that they can sell our data, it's one point. If they claim they don't do it but we suspect they might, then we should also suspect that any paid VPN services can do the same.

They communicated about all of this, but people prefer to rush to the comments negatively rather than read what they publish and open the discussion if needed.

I think you have well resumed it @Synchro (as well as Mozilla in their communication).

Even though this is a "for-profit" organization, they build their reputation on a very clear charter and code of conduct, so if I should have doubts about them I certainly should have even more doubts about other solutions, paid or not.

Of course they can disable the feature by default for companies, but I find their charter to be very clear, a free secure and privacy based internet for everyone.

So if you, as an IT/company (@chedim and others), don't trust in them you have the ability to justify your job and disable the feature or make a request (and ask for a raise if you should^^) rather than blaming them (@Pseudoryx😘

Pseudoryx
Making moves

There is a growing concern that companies with their own security IT team will ban Firefox for giving employee access to a VPN. Is there any truth to that and how do you plan to tackle it?

They did note a policy to disable this but seriously, Mozilla, this is an instant way to lose customers especially on the business side of things. And now, instead of just pushing out an update, its needs a CorpSec review. It was nice knowing ya Firefox. I smell a corporate ban hammer coming your way. 

And literally, overnight, the decision to remove Firefox from the domain was approved. You did it to yourself Mozilla. 

And what about YOU doing it to yourself?

Married, dont have those issues. As to removing from the domain, yes I will be doing that myself. 

They communicated about all of this, just read their communications.

Not at the time when this comment was posted. The first clarification for enterprise user came 6 hours later and was updated to the 149 release note.

I do not appreciate being tagged into your childish bickerings with other users. Please kindly do not interact with me ever again.

Raziel
Making moves

Hi. Thanks for this (other) big step up from Mozilla.

Sadly the VPN did not work if FF:

  • DoH setting is set to "Max Protection"
  • AND
  • Proxy settings is NOT set to "Auto-detect proxy settings for this network" (which considerably slows down the launch time and also didn't work every times 😢)

"big step up" 😄 

that's not big step up, that is scope creep and product en**bleep**tification

Update: of course you would also engage in censorship, **bleep**zilla.


@chedim wrote:

of course you would also engage in censorship


What the hell are you talking about?

try typing word "s-h-i-t", it'll replace it with **bleep**

This is not what I was asking for. I've edited my comment to make it more clear.

Still doesn't work due to the above mentioned issue.

riczie
Making moves

can it be used with multi-account container like the paid VPN?

I didn't use multi-account container anymore but yes it should be.

it does not. However, I found proxy settings in containers, which is maybe even better for me, so no need for this new limited vpn.

FredVT
Making moves

Please instead of the current "black list" to exclude websites, add a button to switch this as a "white list". I just need VPN on some websites.

I think this to be a good idea.

I also don't need all of my traffic to be routed and thus slowed down.

It would be helpful to know how much the b-i VPN slows each connection.  

Cathexis
Making moves

Can you please stop adding bloat to the only Google chrome alternative, if I want a vpn running I'll install one. Just try and make the best browser you can.

Hello

A similar question https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/1576925

Another way, you can use the Windows registry.
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\Policies\Mozilla\Firefox
Or
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Policies\Mozilla\Firefox

IPProtectionAvailable 1

IPProtectionAvailable 0

jehad_husein
Making moves

I am using Android version 149 but I haven't got this feature yet.