Surfshark quietly dropped a technical milestone this week: a 100 gigabits-per-second VPN server running out of Amsterdam. On paper, it’s a big, neat number — ten times the capacity of the 10Gbps ports most VPN providers (and Surfshark itself, until last year) have been using — and the company is pitching it as a way to make VPN connections more stable and less congested as demand grows.
Surfshark published a short blog post announcing that it has put 100Gbps hardware live in Amsterdam as part of a small trial. The company frames the move as “creating a new standard in VPN technology” and says the rollout is intentionally limited for now while it tests the setup and lays groundwork for future expansion.
This is a capacity play rather than a promise of instant, household-level speed increases — the goal is to reduce server-side congestion and give heavy-usage scenarios (think lots of simultaneous 4K streams, cloud backups, big game downloads, or future AI workloads) more headroom.
The key distinction is capacity vs. single-connection throughput. A server with a 100Gbps uplink can move far more total data at once than a 10Gbps box, which lowers the chance that the server itself becomes the bottleneck when lots of users are connected. That matters most during peak load or in dense data-center peering spots — and explains Surfshark’s choice of Amsterdam, where major internet exchanges and dense routing make it an attractive testbed.
But: your home-to-VPN speed is still pinned to other factors. The distance between you and that Amsterdam node, your ISP’s own limits, the CPU and encryption overhead on the client and server, and protocol choices (WireGuard, OpenVPN, etc.) all shape the speed and latency you actually see. In short — less congestion at the server helps, but it’s not a magic bullet for everyone.
Surfshark’s post calls the upgrade “preparing for the future” and explains the test-nature of the deployment: a few 100Gbps servers are live while engineers evaluate performance and routing behavior before deciding whether to expand. That cautious language is notable: it’s a long lead-in to a broader change rather than an all-at-once network retrofit.
(Separately, the company moved most of its fleet from 1Gbps to 10Gbps ports in 2024 — so the 100Gbps step is the next rung on an obvious ladder. That 10Gbps upgrade is a useful reminder that these infrastructure moves tend to be iterative rather than instantaneous.)
What this means for users today
Short answer: for most people, nothing dramatic will change tomorrow.
- If you already connect to a nearby Surfshark server, your speed is still likely to be limited by your ISP, your Wi-Fi, and the VPN protocol and device CPU. The single Amsterdam box won’t change that directly.
- If you connect to a crowded Surfshark node during a peak period and your traffic happens to be routed through the new 100Gbps machine (or benefits from the reduced load it enables in the cluster), you may notice more consistent speeds and fewer hiccups.
- For businesses, power users, or scenarios with many simultaneous connections at one endpoint (for example, shared work-from-home households backing up a lot of data), the extra server-side capacity can improve reliability.
Even if a single Amsterdam server only benefits a sliver of Surfshark’s user base right now, the move is significant at the level of industry expectations. When one provider proves the model — big-capacity pipes, smarter load distribution, and optimized routing — others tend to follow or risk being left behind. That’s how infrastructure standards creep forward: one trial, then more rollouts, then a gradual normalization of higher-capacity hardware across providers.
A 100Gbps VPN server is an infrastructure-forward play: it doesn’t promise immediate speed fireworks for every user, but it removes a class of server-side bottlenecks that could become relevant as higher-resolution streaming, cloud syncing, and bandwidth-hungry applications proliferate. For what it’s worth, Surfshark is explicit that this is an early test in Amsterdam — a first step toward a possible wider shift — and the practical benefits for most people will be incremental rather than revolutionary.
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