Bypasser is split tunneling — it lets you mark specific destinations to bypass the VPN and go through your direct internet connection instead. Useful for local services that block VPN traffic, banking apps that flag VPN IPs, or anything you want to keep on your real network while the VPN handles the rest.
What you can bypass
- Websites — exclude specific URLs / hostnames from the tunnel
- Domain zones — exclude whole zones (e.g.,
*.bank.com) - Apps — exclude specific applications by executable path (Windows only)
App-level bypass is currently Windows-only. iOS, macOS, and Android apply Bypasser at the website / domain level only.
How to configure it
- Open the app
- Go to Settings → Bypasser
- Toggle the master switch on
- Add entries to the list (websites, domains, or apps depending on platform)
- Each entry has its own active/inactive toggle — only active entries are bypassed
The master switch and per-entry toggles are independent — you can keep entries in the list but turn them off temporarily.
When to use Bypasser
- A website blocks VPN IPs (banking, government services, regional streaming) — bypass that site
- A local service (printer, NAS, intranet) doesn't work over VPN — bypass it
- An app that needs your real IP — on Windows, bypass the executable directly
Don't bypass too many things — every bypassed destination uses your real IP, which is the opposite of what the VPN is for.
Bypasser vs disconnecting
Bypasser keeps the VPN running for everything else. If you only need to access one banking site, bypassing it is better than disconnecting the VPN entirely — the rest of your traffic stays protected.
What Bypasser doesn't do
- It doesn't reroute traffic through a different server — bypassed traffic goes through your default network
- It doesn't apply to system-level connections that the OS itself routes (e.g., Apple Push, Google Cloud Messaging) — those follow OS rules
- It doesn't provide partial encryption for bypassed sites — they're as encrypted as they would be without the VPN