Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Bebra VPN is a personal VPN service provided by LUPA LLP. Its website explicitly promotes it as “working in China” with “one-click connection,” and claims to have 35,650 servers across 174 country locations. Its positioning is closer to a general-purpose VPN for individual users, rather than a residential proxy, datacenter proxy, or mobile proxy service; the main content does not provide information about HTTP/SOCKS5 proxy protocols or proxy pool types.
Coverage is Bebra VPN’s most prominent selling point: all plans include access to all 174 locations, and even the trial plan allows country switching. In terms of performance, the page says it selects datacenters globally and connects servers to 10-Gbps ports wherever possible; however, the terms also state that actual coverage, speed, location availability, and quality may change. For concurrency, the terms say the number of client connections is not metered, but Bebra VPN reserves the right to reduce or limit connections to maintain system stability. As for anonymity, we did not see a clear no-logs commitment in the main text; it only states that using the service requires registration and submission of some personal information, which is handled according to the privacy policy.
Prices are shown in rubles: a 3-day trial costs 10 ₽, then renews automatically at 500 ₽ per month; the monthly plan is 500 ₽; the annual plan is 4200 ₽, equivalent to 350 ₽/month; the 2-year plan plus 6 free months costs 5700 ₽, equivalent to 190 ₽/month. Long-term plans are relatively inexpensive. For refunds, the marketing page says “if the VPN stops working, refund without problems,” but the terms of service state that users generally have no right to request a refund, and refunds are only considered at Bebra VPN’s discretion when the service is unavailable and the user has reasonably contacted support. Channels such as the App Store, Google, cryptocurrency, and prepaid cards also have additional restrictions.
The advantages are broad country coverage, a low-cost trial, inexpensive long-term pricing, and explicit messaging around use in China. The drawbacks are limited technical transparency: it does not disclose VPN protocols, encryption methods, detailed logging policy, payment methods, or whether the official website is directly reachable from mainland China. Another risk is inconsistency in the text: the page says a subscription can be shared with family and friends, while the terms state that account sharing is not allowed; the page provides instructions for downloading from the Russian App Store, while the terms say the service is not provided to Russia and certain other countries.
Bebra VPN is suitable for individual users who want a low-cost way to try VPN nodes in many countries and prefer simple one-click use. It is not suitable as an enterprise-grade proxy, crawler proxy, or for high-privacy scenarios that require a clearly audited no-logs policy. Regarding access from China, the main text only claims that it “works in China,” but provides no mainland network test results, payment availability details, or evidence of stable client downloads. Therefore, its China access status can only be rated as unknown.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on bebra.dk official site.
bebra.dk is an Denmark Proxies (Shadowsocks Vpn) provider. TG4G tracks its product information, with monthly pricing from $0.11, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach bebra.dk directly.