Governments and police pushed ExpressVPN to share data on people like YOU over 1.38 million times

Governments and police pushed ExpressVPN to share data on people like YOU over 1.38 million times

ExpressVPN regularly updates its subscribers about the number of demands sent from law enforcement and governments

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KAPE TECHNOLOGIES PRESS OFFICE

Aaron Brown

By Aaron Brown


Published: 13/02/2026

- 12:03

Updated: 13/02/2026

- 12:10

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But it granted a total of 0 requests last year

ExpressVPN has published its latest transparency report, confirming that it shared 0 data on its users last year – despite immense pressure.

Between July and December 2025, the global security firm recieved 1.38 million requests made via the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) from 155 governments and law enforcement agencies across the globe. Believe it or not, this represents a decline compared to the number of requests for personal data on ExpressVPN in the first half of last year.


It's a frightening insight into the volume of requests for information on the websites that you visit, the anmount of time you spend on each webpage, the frequency of your visits, the devices you're using, and the approximate location when you head online.

ExpressVPN regularly shares the total volume of requests for data on its users – demands that it rebuffs each time

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KAPE TECHNOLOGIES PRESS OFFICE

"Requests for user data are a routine part of operating on today’s internet," Sonja Raath writes in a blog post on the ExpressVPN website about the sheer volume of requests – and why subscribers shouldn't be worried.

"Some arrive from authorities, and many more arrive through automated copyright systems.

"During this period [July - December 2025], most requests arrived at scale rather than individually. DMCA notices accounted for the overwhelming majority, generated and submitted through automated systems.

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"Requests from government, law enforcement, and civil entities were far fewer by comparison."

There are a few reasons why ExpressVPN subscribers shouldn't be concerned with the incredible volume. As one of the best VPN deals, ExpressVPN is headquartered outside of the jurisdiction of Five Eyes.

For those who don't know, FVEY countries are an intelligence alliance of five English-speaking nations: United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United States, formed after World War II for joint signals intelligence. They share vast amounts of intelligence and cooperate on national security, including user data from online platforms.

But most importantly, ExpressVPN are built from the ground-up with no-logs.

From launch, it architected its entire VPN network to never save any record of the sites you've spent time on – or the frequency of those visits, traffic destination or metadata, DNS queries, device markers, or any IP addresses assigned when you connect to a VPN. Essentially, it never stores anything that could identify its users as they connect and use its award-winning VPN service.

ExpressVPN has published multiple independent audits to verify those claims.

Honestly, it likely makes things much easier for the ExpressVPN team too, since it can simply rebuff the 1.38m requests for user data from police and governments around the world as that data simply does not exist.

ExpressVPN hopes its users will appreciate the transparency offered by sharing the number of requests that it received.

Discussing its approach to privacy, Chief Operations Officer at ExpressVPN, Shay Peretz, told GB News: "Security isn't just something you prove once—it's something you build into how a company operates every day. These ISO certifications reflect a real shift in how we run ExpressVPN, with clear standards, stronger governance, and greater transparency at the core.

"It's about putting proven systems in place so privacy and quality are built into every product we ship, and giving users real confidence their data is protected for the long term."

expressvpn With its most affordable subscription, ExpressVPN lets you secure up to 10x devices with military-grade encryption to secure everything you online — blocking hackers, advertisers, and even your broadband supplier from checking which websites you visit, and even removing any throttling on your internet speeds | KAPE TECHNOLOGIES PRESS OFFICE | GB NEWS

The relentless focus on privacy is something flagged in our ExpressVPN review. The publication of its latest transparency report comes after the company announced a standalone password manager for its subscribers, and a new tool designed to keep your email addresses anonymous – even when you need to use these inboxes to sign-up to new apps and online services.

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