


It’s also worth noting that the country count was 62 at the time of updating this review. Most of the rest of the countries are limited to a single connection option except for Canada (three), France (three), Germany (four), India (three), Italy (two), Poland (two), Portugal (two) and Spain (three). While the 3,200 servers and 65+ countries are on the short side compared to our current best VPN recommendations, there are five cities to choose from for Australia, three for the UK, and 23 for the US.

This speedy connectivity ensures that uptime-sensitive tasks like music streaming aren’t disrupted during connection or disconnection for the majority of my tests (with a few occasional one-second disruptions). Surfshark takes around five seconds to connect to a server, whether locally or somewhere else in the world, and a second or two to disconnect. I wasn’t off to a great start with Surfshark but it was pretty much all smooth sailing thereafter. In fairness, this was a good way to test the Surfshark support, which was very quick to respond on live chat and offered timely assistance to help me resolve this issue (one I haven’t faced with other VPNs).
#Amazon prime blocking vpn surfshark update
This is an admirable inclusion unless, like me, you get stuck on that page and are then are later unable to change your password because the temporary one it assigned you (but didn’t tell you) is requested when you do want to update it. While most of this process is as straightforward as other providers, Surfshark wants you to immediately change your password to something incredibly secure when you sign up via browser. After paying more than what was advertised, my next hurdle was during the sign-up process.
