VPN No-Logs Policy: What It Means and Why It Matters

A no-logs VPN does not store records of your activity. Learn what no-logs means and what to look for in a provider.

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A VPN no-logs policy means the provider does not keep records of your online activity, connection timestamps, or IP addresses tied to your account. If they are asked for user data, they have nothing to hand over. Look for a clear, written policy and preferably independent audits.

What “No Logs” Usually Covers

A strict no-logs policy means the provider does not store: connection timestamps, IP addresses assigned to you, sites you visit, or DNS queries. Some providers keep minimal operational data (e.g. aggregate bandwidth) or account/billing info; the policy should state exactly what is retained.

Why It Matters

If a VPN keeps connection or usage logs, a legal request, breach, or misuse could expose your activity. A genuine no-logs policy reduces that risk because there is no data to produce.

What to Look For

Read the provider’s privacy policy and any transparency reports. Prefer providers that have undergone independent audits of their no-logs claims. Be skeptical of vague wording like “we value privacy” without a clear list of what is not logged.

KloxVPN and Logging

KloxVPN maintains a no-logs policy: we do not log your browsing activity, connection times, or IP addresses. Our privacy policy describes what data we do and do not collect.

Frequently Asked Questions

If a provider keeps logs, they can be compelled to hand them over. A true no-logs policy means there are no such logs to hand over. Jurisdiction and audit history matter for trust.

Use a VPN That Doesn’t Log Your Activity

KloxVPN no-logs policy. See our privacy page for details.

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