Nepal's Social Media Blackout.

Nepal blocked 26 major social media platforms on September 4, 2025, leaving millions cut off from their digital lives. While the ban was eventually lifted after massive protests, similar restrictions could happen again. Anywhere, anytime.

Censorship
Privacy
Digital Rights
VPN Super
September 11, 2025

What's happening in Nepal?

VPN Connections in Nepal Soar by Over 1,500% Amid Social Media Ban

Nepal blocked 26 major social media platforms on September 4, 2025, leaving millions disconnected from their digital lives. While authorities eventually lifted the ban after massive protests, similar restrictions could happen anywhere, anytime.

Date implemented:
September 4, 2025
Platforms blocked:
Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, YouTube, Twitter (X), LinkedIn, Reddit, Discord, Pinterest, Snapchat, Threads, Signal, Messenger, WeChat, and 12+ others
Still accessible:
TikTok, Viber
Reason cited:
“To maintain public order” ahead of large-scale student protests
Censorship method:
DNS blocking + SNI filtering

How the blackout was measured

To understand how people in Nepal responded to the September 4 blackout, VPN app download activity was tracked from two sources.

App telemetry

Connection data from the VPN app in Nepal was monitored during the blackout period. This data showed how quickly users turned to workaround tools once social media platforms were blocked. All data was anonymous and grouped by country only—no personal details or browsing history was collected.

  • Data was grouped, not tied to individual users
  • Only country-level connection counts were used
  • No personal information or browsing activity was collected

Third-party app ranking tools

App store ranking trends from providers like AppFollow and Sensor Tower were also analyzed. These services track which apps are rising or falling in the iOS App Store and Google Play.

  • When VPNs suddenly enter the Top Free Apps charts, it signals increased demand
  • Comparing multiple data sources removes unusual results or single-brand patterns

By combining these two approaches, it became possible to measure how quickly Nepal users adapted to the blackout and which tools they used to stay connected.

Third-party app ranking tools

Impact on daily life: What people in Nepal reported

What was analyzed

Public conversations on Twitter/X and Reddit between September 4 and 9, 2025 were reviewed. Posts mentioned access issues, workarounds, and impacts of Nepal's social media blackout. Personal details were removed, keeping only country-level insights from 100 posts across both platforms.

How posts were grouped

Each post was sorted into themes:

  • News and information access
  • Workarounds (VPNs, proxies, DNS)
  • Messaging and family communication
  • Safety and protest coordination concerns
  • Business and freelance disruption
  • General sentiment (anger, frustration)
Theme Share of posts Anonymized quote
News/updates inaccessible 37% "TikTok is deliberately hiding all the events happening in Nepal from the international audience."
— Reddit
Workarounds (VPN/DNS) 33% "Private DNS, static stopped working. VPN is the only option now."
— Reddit
Messaging to family blocked 13% "How am I supposed to communicate with my aged parents back home? They barely learned WhatsApp after months."
— Reddit
Safety/coordination 7% "Journalists marched under banners like 'Freedom of Expression Is Our Right' and 'Democracy Is Being Hacked.'"
— Twitter
Freelance/work disruption 7% "This single decision made us buy multiple VPN subscriptions. An entire business of 30 people might shut down."
— Twitter
General frustration 3% "This is the end goal. COMPLETE CENSORSHIP."
— Reddit
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User voices

"I've been using multiple DNS for days. Instagram comments aren't working, WhatsApp can't send texts. VPN is now essential." — Reddit
"I was on a call with my friend in Australia, and the call suddenly ended. After that, I couldn't text him and messages weren't sent either. VPN isn't working either." — Reddit
"My brother has international clients he can't afford to lose. Vianet internet is in shambles. When we call Support they don't pick up, and the voicemail just says to reset the router hourly." — Reddit

PRIVACY NOTE: Only publicly available posts are analyzed. Private messages, account details, or exact locations are not collected. Quotes are made anonymous and reworded when needed.

Nepal VPN connections explode by over 1,500% as citizens defy social media ban

  • As the government tried to silence the nation by shutting down social media, citizens responded almost overnight. VPN connections surged by more than 1,500% in a massive act of digital resistance against censorship.
  • Search interest for "VPN" in Nepal jumped 733% during the social media blackout, peaking on September 6, 2025.
Users should be aware: Using VPNs during blackouts can come with risks. While Nepal has no explicit law against VPN use, your traffic may be monitored.

The Reality Check

When governments flip the switch on your favorite apps, you're suddenly:

  • Cut off from family and friends abroad
  • Unable to run your business or side hustle
  • Missing out on news, entertainment, and connection
  • Stuck with whatever the government allows

Your internet freedom shouldn't depend on politics.

Your Way Around It: VPN Super Unlimited Proxy

While others panic-downloaded Viber, smart users connected to the world they actually want. Here's how you stay connected, no matter what:

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Step 1: Download

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  • Tap "Get Started"
  • Allow VPN permissions (this protects you)

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  • You're in.

Best Servers for Nepal Users

For Social Media Access:

  • Singapore - Lightning fast, closest to home
  • Japan - Reliable, great for streaming
  • India - Super stable connection

For Global Access:

  • US East Coast - Netflix, Hulu, Disney+
  • UK - BBC iPlayer, UK Netflix library
  • Canada - Broader content selection
💡Pro tip: Our 10Gbps servers (marked with ⚡) give you blazing speeds—no more buffering while your government buffers their decisions.

Why this matters (and why the VPN is different)

Other VPN companies dance around these issues. This one doesn't. When your digital rights get trampled, the VPN is here, simple as that.

What you get:

  • One tap to instant freedom
  • Military-grade encryption
  • No activity logs (ever)
  • 80+ global locations
  • Unlimited everything

What don’t you get:

  • Complicated setup
  • Data limits
  • Speed throttling

Why this page was built

Most VPN companies gloss over what censorship really looks like. This one doesn’t. The belief:

  • Internet freedom is a right, not a privilege
  • Everyone deserves access, especially during crises
  • Transparency and real data beats vague claims

Methodology and sources

To analyze the Nepal blackout, a mix of first-hand data and independent third-party sources was used:

  • VPN app download data (August 25 to September 9, 2025) — anonymous, country-level connection surges
  • App store ranking data from AppFollow confirming VPN apps entered Nepal’s Top Free charts during the blackout
  • Local and international news outlets (Kathmandu Post, Reuters, BBC) for timeline confirmation of the government's announcement and lifting of the ban

Privacy note: All app data was grouped at country level. No personally identifiable information (PII) was collected or analyzed.

Got Blocked? Help Track It

If you're in Nepal (or another country under blackout), you can help:

  • Submit anonymous data: error screenshots, connection logs, timestamps
  • Run a test via OONI Probe

Together, censorship can be mapped and fought.

Safeguard your digital privacy and keep your internet connection secure.
Get VPN Super
Censorship
Privacy
Digital Rights
VPN Super
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