Ivacy has announced that PureVPN, one of the provider’s initial backers, has gained controlling stakes, which has prompted the two VPNs to enter a partnership. More precisely, Ivacy is evolving into ‘Ivacy Powered by PureVPN’ to offer enhanced security features and an expanded range of products.
Ivacy subscriptions are no longer available to purchase, and existing subscribers will be automatically migrated. If you’re a current user, you should receive an email that explains how to migrate your account, which should be an effortless process. PureVPN promises to honor all subscriptions and add-ons offered by Ivacy in the past, meaning that you won’t lose any of the existing features you have.
Migrating your existing account from Ivacy to PureVPN doesn’t require a new account. You’ll only have to consent to migrate your data, which will transfer your Ivacy login details and payment information if you decide to keep auto-renewal active. Speaking of renewals, you’ll keep your current pricing as well.
The above applies to direct payment users who have subscribed using a payment card, PayPal, Stripe, etc. If you subscribed on your iOS or Android device, you must cancel your existing subscription and migrate to PureVPN independently.
As Ivacy explains, moving your account to PureVPN lets you experience the VPN’s 6,000+ servers in 65+ countries and 80+ locations. In addition, PureVPN offers residential IPs from the US, dedicated IPs, port forwarding, dedicated servers for specific online activities, and up to 50 simultaneous logins, which is why this provider has found its place among the best VPN services, as per our team’s hands-on tests.
The company behind PureVPN offers additional cyber-security solutions, which will be available to Ivacy users should they decide to upgrade. These include PurePrivacy, available on iOS and Android, and PureKeep, which is supported on Windows and Mac. Lastly, there’s also PureEncrypt, which works on desktop devices.
We’ll also note that PureVPN offers apps for Windows, Mac, Android, iOS, Linux, Chrome OS, Amazon TV, and Android TV, and it also supports routers.