P0 pillar
VPN on your own VPS
This page answers the key practical question: what a VPN on your own VPS gives you compared with a public service, and why this model fits users who want more control without a long manual setup process.
Quick take
- The user chooses the VPS provider and region separately.
- The infrastructure does not live inside a generic commercial pool.
- You can change the server without changing the overall model.
Why use your own VPS at all
Your own VPS matters because the core access point no longer depends on a generic service deciding which IPs to use, how to rotate them, and when to overload specific nodes.
That gives you a clearer boundary of responsibility: the server belongs to the user, while `Single Node VPN` handles the service layer, onboarding, and the setup flow.
What remains under the user's control in this model
The user controls the VPS itself: the provider, country, basic server credentials, and the moment of migration to another infrastructure.
This is not a DevOps project for its own sake. The point is to keep control over the node without forcing the user to assemble the entire flow manually from scratch.
What the launch looks like without unnecessary routine
The user goes through the site and Telegram onboarding, pays for the service through TonConnect, provides VPS details, and waits for automated setup. The output is app install and activation links, not just a collection of abstract instructions.
This approach is especially useful for people who want a private VPN as a working tool rather than as another side project for manual administration.
FAQ
Who pays for the VPS?
The VPS is paid by the user separately. That is part of the model where the infrastructure belongs to the user rather than to the service.
Do I need deep technical knowledge?
No. The idea is to remove most of the manual routine and keep only the necessary steps.
Can I switch the server later?
Yes. Migrating to another VPS is a normal lifecycle scenario for this model.
Does the site provision the VPS itself?
No, the VPS is rented separately by the user. The site and bot guide you through the setup flow that connects the service to your server.
Single Node VPN does not promise absolute anonymity and does not guarantee that blocking will never happen. The service is built as a more controllable private VPN model on your own VPS.