Your Router Says It Has “AI Security” — Do You Still Need a VPN in 2026?

We know a guy who bought a new router last month, mostly because his old one kept dropping the connection every time someone microwaved popcorn. The box he brought home had a sticker on it — big, glossy, impossible to miss — promising “AI-Powered Threat Protection.” He texted us asking if he could finally cancel his VPN subscription. Honestly, we get why he asked. The marketing on these routers has gotten aggressive enough that it’s starting to sound like the VPN is obsolete tech, something you’d find next to a CD burner.

It isn’t, though. And the confusion is worth untangling because it’s not really about which product is “better” — it’s that the two things are doing entirely different jobs, and the branding makes them sound like they overlap much more than they do.

The Sticker on the Box Is Doing a Lot of Work

Every router brand has some version of this now. ASUS has AiProtection, Netgear has Armor, and 2026’s crop of routers leans hard into the “AI-Shield” label, which sounds futuristic but mostly describes pattern-matching against known threat lists, plus some traffic analysis to flag devices on your network that are behaving strangely. That’s genuinely useful. It’s also not new — security appliances have done versions of this for years. What’s new is the marketing budget behind it.

A growing number of people are quietly letting their VPN subscriptions lapse this year, assuming their routers now cover that ground. If you’re one of the people reconsidering after canceling, getting back in isn’t a project — the ExpressVPN download page has installers for every platform, so it’s a five-minute thing if you change your mind later, not a weekend project.

But here’s the part that actually matters: the router-level protection lives entirely on your home network. It can block a known malicious domain before your laptop connects to it. It can notice your smart thermostat suddenly trying to talk to a server in a country it has no business contacting. What it can’t do — at all, structurally — is hide who you are from the outside world. Your IP address still goes out the door exactly as it always has. The router isn’t standing between you and your internet provider or the website you’re visiting. It’s standing between your devices and each other, watching for weirdness.

What It Still Can’t Touch

People assume HTTPS has already solved the privacy problem, since everything has that little padlock now. That’s only half true. HTTPS keeps the contents of what you’re sending private — your ISP can’t read your messages or see your search terms — but it can absolutely still see where you’re going. Think of it less like a sealed envelope and more like a sealed envelope with the destination address printed in huge letters on the outside. Your provider knows you’re on a medical forum at 1 a.m., or checking a job board during work hours, or visiting a competitor’s pricing page. None of the “AI Security” branding touches that. It was never designed to.

We got into a lot of these quieter exposure points — the stuff that leaks before encryption even becomes relevant — in our article “How to Keep Your Personal Data Safe When Browsing the Internet,” and the short version is that most of what compromises people online has nothing to do with router-level threats at all.

So what does the AI-branded router protection actually earn its keep on? A few things, and they’re not nothing:

  • Catching devices on your home network that have already been compromised, based on traffic patterns
  • Blocking known bad domains and command-and-control servers before a connection completes
  • Giving you visibility into which device on your network is doing something it shouldn’t

That’s a real layer of defense. It’s just a different layer from the one a VPN provides, and treating them as competing products rather than complementary ones is where the confusion sets in.

So, Cancel or Keep Paying?

It depends more on how you live than most people think. If you’re mostly home, mostly on your own network, and not particularly worried about your provider knowing your browsing habits, the router-level protection is genuinely doing useful work and might be enough on its own — assuming the router is decent to begin with. Worth noting that not every router on the market backs up its security claims with real hardware; a quick look at PCMag’s picks for the best Wi-Fi routers for 2026 makes it pretty clear how uneven this category still is, with some models clearly built for it and others slapping the label on as an afterthought.

If you travel, work from coffee shops, or just don’t love the idea of your ISP building a profile of your browsing habits, dropping the VPN because your router has a fancy name for its firewall is a mistake. The two aren’t redundant. One protects the inside of your house. The other protects you the moment you step outside it.

Our honest take, for what it’s worth: most people don’t need to choose. Run both. The overlap between what they actually do and what marketing wants you to believe is smaller than it wants you to believe, and the gap that’s left uncovered if you drop either one is exactly the kind of gap that ends up mattering at the worst possible time.

Don’t hesitate to contact Big Orange Planet. We are centrally located on 2401, 15th street in downtown Denver. Phone: 720 272 0770

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