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VPNs for ad-blocking While not perfect, ExpressVPN is a great place to start or continue your VPN journey. While not perfect, ExpressVPN is a great place to start or continue your VPN journey. While certain VPN providers offer a two-year or even three-year pricing bundle, which means cheaper monthly pricing overall (albeit charged in one hit), ExpressVPN splits the difference between monthly and annual payments with a six-month option. The value still isn’t flash for the six-month option, though. As is the VPN pricing trend, there’s more money to be saved by buying the longest purchasable period of time. As you’ll see in the table below, sticking with the ExpressVPN annual option offers the best overall value. While certain VPN providers offer a two-year or even three-year pricing bundle, which means cheaper monthly pricing overall (albeit charged in one hit), ExpressVPN splits the difference between monthly and annual payments with a six-month option. The value isn’t flash for the six-month option, though – particularly given it’s 95 cents more expensive than a NordVPN annual subscription – so, as is the VPN pricing trend, there’s more money to be saved by buying for the longest purchasable period of time. As you’ll see in the table below, sticking with the annual option offers the best overall value. It connects fast enough to not interfere with uptime-dependent online activities like music streaming, which isn’t always the case with Hotspot Shield. Unlike previous years, there were no issues connecting to servers this time for ExpressVPN. Old rival NordVPN comes out second best when it comes to disconnecting, too, with ExpressVPN offering a one-tap connect/disconnect button that’s impossible to miss. Meanwhile, NordVPN still has you reaching for a smaller connection button and dealing with a drop-down menu when you just want to disconnect. At the time of writing, ExpressVPN offered a healthy number of servers (3,000+) in a wide range of countries (94, third behind PureVPN and Hotspot Shield), which offers great versatility. The only disclaimer there is, of our top five VPNs, ExpressVPN has the second lowest server count, so while the country count is second, more servers in popular countries tend to mean faster overall speeds and reliable uptime. Admittedly, the 160 locations offered by ExpressVPN is a positive. ExpressVPN continues to embrace the ease-of-use lessons of NordVPN and has simplified things with a smart server recommendation based on your location, alongside a streamlined short list of recommended server options. You can search for countries or cities that aren’t listed or scroll through alphabetised server locations by country. While the ExpressVPN Windows app has come a long way since I first used it in 2020, there were still some quirks in my recent tests. Other VPNs I’ve used update the software within the app, but ExpressVPN forces you to download the file again and effectively treat it as a new installation (though it mercifully retains your credentials). There was an odd bug where ExpressVPN started with Windows and automatically connected to a server, though I had neither option selected (and they were both unchecked in the settings). ExpressVPN works seamlessly with almost every typical app I threw at it, though there were some website oddities. One Australian website told me I couldn’t use it outside of Australia when I was connecting via an Australian server, and another US website refused to load during US server tests. There are also frequent ‘verify you’re not a robot’ tests from Google, which is typical of VPN servers with a lot of people connected to a server that has the same IP address. While not a unique annoyance, ExpressVPN doesn’t let you manually select servers, so your best bet is to try a nearby location if you’re doing a lot of Google searches and want to avoid this message. When I tested ExpressVPN on an Nvidia Shield TV Pro, I was frustrated to be greeted with a username and password request, seemingly without a QR or web link option to enter credentials on another device. It felt particularly strange given that ExpressVPN provides an activation key that I assumed could be used in lieu of credentials on other devices. None of these issues is detrimental but given how easy ExpressVPN is to use most of the time, these quibbles become more noticeable when they do crop up. As for which devices are officially supported by ExpressVPN, check out the full list below: Still, when manually selecting a location, the hit to download speeds was manageable, alongside respectable results for upload speed and latency. It’s an expected story for the automatic UK server selection, with a typical hit to download speed alongside great results for upload speed and latency. Check out the table below to see which popular US and Australian streaming services work with ExpressVPN. BBC iPlayer was fast to load and stream when ExpressVPN automatically selected a London server. Connected to a Brisbane or Sydney server, I was able to easily access Stan regular content and Stan Sports programming. Things were a lot slower for Kayo, particularly when it came to loading the library, but streams usually started after 10 or so seconds. Admittedly, the stream quality was lacking and didn’t seem to buffer beyond SD or lower quality. Below is a table that uses the 16% and 24% best-case difference in download percentage when connecting to a US server or UK server with ExpressVPN. Those percentages are then applied to the average typical evening download speeds (TEDS) among NBN providers across all available speed tiers. The three columns on the right give an indication of how many simultaneous streams (if any) can be run for a single account on popular US 4K streaming services, including Netflix, Hulu and HBO Max. There’s also a column for BBC iPlayer in the UK. Both Hulu and BBC iPlayer have unlimited screens options, so that’s reflected in the table below. There’s also a Smart DNS service and, if you don’t know what that is, you can learn more about it by tapping into what’s by far the best not-so-hidden gem of ExpressVPN: guided support. There are tonnes of guides available on the official website to help with connecting devices or other troubleshooting issues. It helps that a lot of them have corresponding videos, too, to make life even easier. ExpressVPN has also added Threat Manager, which is available for iOS, Mac and Linux users. It’s a free feature that pledges better protection against trackers and malware. Android, iOS and Google Chrome users can also make use of ExpressVPN Keys, which is a great value-add for those in the market for a password manager. ExpressVPN went from slightly slower to connect to noticeably faster to connect and disconnect, though NordVPN is still fast to connect. ExpressVPN had faster Australian and UK download speeds than NordVPN in our tests but slightly slower US download speeds. NordVPN worked seamlessly with all streaming services except for Kayo, but ExpressVPN worked with Kayo (even if it wasn’t the best experience). NordVPN also offers one more simultaneous connection than ExpressVPN (six vs five), but ExpressVPN supports a wider range of devices.