Mozilla VPN
Mullvad infrastructure rebranded with Mozilla's trusted name. Open-source clients, WireGuard-only, no streaming optimization — privacy first.
About Mozilla VPN
Mozilla VPN is a WireGuard-based service that puts a familiar, trusted brand name on top of infrastructure operated by Mullvad. In practice, that means the technical backbone comes from a provider with a long-standing privacy reputation, while Mozilla — the organization behind Firefox — handles branding, distribution and the consumer-facing relationship. The clients are open-source, the protocol is WireGuard-only, and there is deliberately no streaming optimization: the pitch here is privacy first, not unblocking Netflix.
The jurisdiction reality is the main thing to weigh. Mozilla is a US company, which places this service in Tier 4 in our jurisdiction scoring — the United States sits inside the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing arrangement, and that is a documented fact worth knowing regardless of how strong a no-logs stance is on paper. That said, the privacy dimension scores 92, reflecting a documented no-logs policy that has been independently audited, plus a kill switch. The overall Scout Score is 83.
On pricing, the verified official plans are a 12-month plan at $4.99/mo intro, billed $59.88, and a 1-month plan at $9.99/mo intro, billed $9.99. Renewal pricing for both is undisclosed in the data we hold, so treat the intro rates as introductory and confirm renewal cost at checkout. A 30-day money-back window is documented.
One honesty note on performance: we do not run a lab, and we publish no speed benchmarks of our own. WireGuard is generally efficient, but for real-world throughput you should lean on published third-party tests rather than any claim from us; our Scout Score reflects documented evidence and methodology, not stopwatch results.
Who it fits: privacy-focused users who want open-source clients, a WireGuard-only setup and the reassurance of an independent audit, and who are comfortable trusting a Mozilla-branded, Mullvad-operated stack. Who should skip it: anyone whose priority is streaming or geo-unblocking (there's no optimization for it), and privacy maximalists who consider a US jurisdiction a dealbreaker — for them, a provider outside Five Eyes territory may be the better match, even with an audited no-logs policy in place here.
Profile by Tomas, Scout VPN Team — built from documented evidence.
Pros
- No-logs policy (audited)
- Kill switch included
- WireGuard protocol support
Cons
- Limited to 5 simultaneous devices
- No port forwarding
- No phone support