How to Choose a European VPN for the Job You Actually Have
A practical guide to European VPNs — Mullvad, Proton VPN, and NordVPN — based on whether you need anonymous payment and audits, a private suite tunnel, or a fast everyday network.
The EuroMakers Editorial Team
Researching European software

The Journal · Made in Europe
A VPN is not a personality. It is a tunnel. Some people need that tunnel to be almost invisible — paid in cash, audited, stubbornly minimal. Others want it to sit beside mail and a password vault in one coherent suite. Many just want a fast, polished app that stays out of the way on airport Wi-Fi.
That is why the useful question is not which European VPN is best? It is what job is this tunnel doing this month? In EuroMakers, the Security category holds three clear European answers: Mullvad VPN from Sweden, Proton VPN from Switzerland, and NordVPN from Lithuania.
Write the sentence you keep postponing
Most VPN pages compete on server counts. Start with the friction already on your calendar.
- I want a VPN that treats anonymity as craft — number accounts, cash payment, audited apps.
- I already live in a private European suite and want the tunnel to match mail, calendar, and passwords.
- I travel, stream, and work on public Wi-Fi — I need speed, a big network, and an app that feels finished.
- I am moving off a US consumer VPN and want a European home that still works on every device I own.
Write that sentence once. The shortlist gets quieter the moment you stop treating every VPN as the same product with different logos.
Three European tunnels
Here is how the current listings differ when you ask what the tunnel is for — anonymity as craft, suite coherence, or everyday reach.
Mullvad VPN — Swedish anonymity as product craft
Mullvad VPN, based in Sweden, is built around anonymity and transparency: number-based accounts, no-logs claims that are audited, WireGuard and OpenVPN, and payment methods that include cash and other privacy-preserving options. It is closely related to the Mullvad Browser project covered in our European browsers guide.
Choose Mullvad when the job is restraint. The product refuses to become a lifestyle brand: fewer upsells, clearer claims, and a design that assumes you already know why you opened a VPN. If you want a tunnel that feels deliberately minimal — and you are willing to live without flashy extras — this is the European answer that takes that brief seriously.

Proton VPN — a Swiss tunnel inside a larger private suite
Proton VPN extends the Proton stack with a no-logs VPN from Switzerland. Secure Core routing, WireGuard and OpenVPN, free and paid plans, streaming-friendly options, and apps across major platforms make it a coherent everyday tunnel — especially if you already care about Proton Mail, Proton Pass, or Calendar.
Choose Proton VPN when the tunnel should feel like part of one European suite, not a lonely security utility. It is the option for people who want the same craft standards across mail, vault, and network — and who prefer a Swiss home for that stack.
NordVPN — Baltic scale for everyday encrypted traffic
NordVPN, part of Nord Security in Lithuania, is one of the world's most widely used VPN services: a large global server network, threat protection features, WireGuard-based NordLynx, Meshnet for device networking, audited no-logs policy, and polished apps for every major platform. It sits beside NordPass and NordLayer in a broader cybersecurity suite.
Choose NordVPN when the job is reach and finish. Remote workers and travelers often want encrypted traffic on public Wi-Fi without thinking about the product. If you want a European brand that competes on speed, network size, and consumer polish — not on cash-payment anonymity — NordVPN is the practical pick.

A shortlist by the tunnel you need
- You want audited anonymity, number accounts, and cash payment → start with Mullvad VPN.
- You want a Swiss tunnel that fits mail, calendar, and a password vault → try Proton VPN.
- You want a large network, threat tools, and a polished everyday app → look at NordVPN.
- You want both suite coherence and hard anonymity → trial Proton VPN for daily suite use and Mullvad for high-sensitivity sessions; do not force one product to cover both cultures if they clash.
Sweden specializes in anonymity as craft. Switzerland brings a polished suite tunnel. Lithuania ships Baltic cybersecurity at consumer scale. That spread is the point of a healthy European market — not three logos fighting over the same sentence.
How to trial without living in settings
VPN trials fail when people flip every feature on day one and never learn the default. Keep the first week boring on purpose.
- Pick one job: anonymity craft, suite coherence, or everyday reach.
- Install the desktop and mobile apps before you change any advanced routing.
- Use the VPN for five ordinary days — commute Wi-Fi, video calls, browsing, and one streaming check if that matters to you.
- Test the boring moments: reconnect after sleep, a server switch, kill switch behavior, and whether the app stays quiet in the background.
- Only then add extras (Secure Core, threat protection, Meshnet) if the default week already felt trustworthy.
Where Made in Europe feels premium
Made in Europe matters in networking when it shows up as craft: audited claims, clear payment options, apps that respect your attention, and products that treat encrypted traffic as something worth building carefully — not as another growth funnel. It is a premium quality label when the tunnel feels designed for people who live online all day.
There is also a quiet unity story here. A Swedish anonymity specialist, a Swiss suite tunnel, and a Lithuanian consumer network can sit in the same week without pretending to be the same product. European software is often strongest when countries specialize and still belong to one continent of craft.
Choose the tunnel that matches the job on your calendar, not the one with the loudest server map.
— EuroMakers Editorial
Start here
Open the Security category, read the listings that match your job, and run one careful week on ordinary traffic. If credentials or browsers are next instead, keep reading with our guides to European password managers and European web browsers. Missing a European VPN we should know about? Tell us.
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