Firefox’s built-in VPN is getting a quiet but meaningful upgrade: you can now choose your virtual location, turning what was already a generous free privacy feature into something that feels much closer to a full VPN experience inside the browser.
When Mozilla first announced Firefox’s free built-in VPN back in March 2026, the pitch was simple: give everyday users a way to hide their IP address without asking them to install extra apps or pay for another subscription. The browser would route your traffic through a proxy network, mask your IP, and give you up to 50GB of VPN-style browsing every month, all for free. It was positioned as an “IP-protection” feature — a step up from standard tracker blocking, but still clearly framed as a browser-level tool rather than a full system VPN. Now, with location selection rolling out, that line between “extra privacy” and “real VPN” is starting to blur in a way that’s very good news for Firefox users.
The new update, announced on May 19, 2026, adds the one capability people tend to expect from any serious VPN: being able to pick where in the world your connection appears to come from. Firefox users in the US, UK, France, Germany, and Canada can now choose to browse from any of the countries where Mozilla has launched VPN support, directly from inside the browser. In practice, that means you’re no longer just turning on a generic privacy shield; you’re also deciding which region’s IP address you want associated with your browsing, whether that’s for slightly better local relevance or just an extra layer of control. Mozilla does note that your browsing is still subject to the local laws and content restrictions of the region you select, which is an important reminder that a VPN doesn’t magically free you from every legal boundary on the internet.
What makes this especially interesting is how it fits into Mozilla’s long-running privacy story. Firefox has spent years building out protections like tracker blocking, anti-fingerprinting, and Total Cookie Protection, all designed to quietly reduce how much data companies can collect about you as you move around the web. The built-in VPN is another piece of that puzzle: every time you visit a site, instead of exposing your real IP address — which can be used to approximate your location and tie your activity together across different services — Firefox swaps in the IP of its proxy network. Combined with HTTPS encryption, that means someone snooping on your traffic at a coffee shop can see far less about what you’re doing and where you’re coming from.
The practical appeal is very down to earth. Mozilla’s free tier offers an “industry-leading” 50GB of VPN browsing each month, which is more than enough for most people’s day-to-day tasks like banking, shopping, or researching sensitive topics. When you hit that limit, Firefox doesn’t quietly switch you back to an unprotected connection; it pauses IP protection and prompts you to confirm before continuing without the VPN, so you don’t accidentally browse in a way that feels private but isn’t. Add location selection on top of that, and the feature stops feeling like a bonus toggle buried in settings and starts feeling like a real privacy control panel for your browser.
Mozilla is also very aware of the skepticism around “free VPNs.” A lot of them are free because your data is the product: they sell user information, inject ads, or quietly log more than they admit. In its post, Mozilla leans hard on the trust angle, emphasizing that Firefox’s built-in VPN does not sell browsing data and does not inject advertising into your traffic. The business model is straightforward: you get a limited, browser-only VPN experience for free, and if you want full-device protection with unlimited data across multiple devices, you upgrade to Mozilla VPN, the company’s separate paid service. That division makes the browser feature feel less like a trap and more like a genuinely useful free tier.
It’s also worth remembering what this built-in VPN is and isn’t. Inside Firefox, it protects only browser traffic: it masks your IP for the sites you visit in Firefox, and helps shield your activity when you’re on public Wi-Fi or untrusted networks. But it doesn’t extend to other apps on your device, like messaging clients, game launchers, or streaming apps, which is where Mozilla VPN — the standalone subscription product — comes in with full-device coverage and unlimited data. Mozilla even links out to an explainer on how VPNs differ from web proxies, which underlines the point that while this is a strong privacy feature, it’s not meant to replace every kind of VPN use case.
Right now, the built-in VPN is still in a beta rollout, available to Firefox desktop users in the US, UK, Germany, and France, with plans to bring it to more countries over the next few releases. It’s tied to Firefox 149 and later, and Mozilla is clearly treating it as one of those features they’ll iterate on based on feedback — which is how a lot of Firefox’s more ambitious privacy tools have matured over time. The addition of location selection feels like one of those incremental but important steps: a feature that doesn’t completely redefine the product, but meaningfully changes how everyday users can take control of their privacy without installing yet another app or fiddling with complex settings.
If you’re already a Firefox user in one of the supported countries, this update essentially turns your browser into a more complete privacy hub: tracker blocking, cookie isolation, anti-fingerprinting, and now a free, data-capped VPN with location selection built in. For people who care about privacy but don’t want to think like security engineers, that’s a compelling package. And for Mozilla, a company that has spent years framing itself as the browser for people who care about how the web treats them, it’s a logical next move.
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