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Peruvian streaming, banking, and government services all geo-restrict the moment you leave the country.
Privacy is a genuine concern. Legislative Decree 1182 (July 2015) gives Peru's National Police direct access to real-time geolocation data for any device in the country without a warrant. Telecom companies must retain all communications metadata for 36 months.
A Peru VPN encrypts your connection and adds a layer of privacy that Peruvian law does not provide on its own.
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Smart server selection connects you to the fastest available server based on real-time load. No manual picking needed.
The Lima server provides low latency for Peruvian streaming platforms, banking apps, and government portals. For users connecting from the US, expect 80 to 120ms.
From Spain, expect 160 to 200ms. From Argentina and Chile, expect 50 to 80ms. All comfortable for streaming and general browsing.
Leaving Peru usually means losing access to the TV you watch at home. Every major platform geo-restricts to Peruvian IPs:
Connect to VPN Super's Peru server and those platforms see a Peruvian IP instead.
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VPN Super encrypts your connection with AES-256, the same standard used by banks and governments. Your real IP is hidden, your data is encrypted, and your browsing stays between you and your screen.
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Yes. VPN use is fully legal in Peru. There are no laws restricting individuals from using VPN services. Peru's Constitution (Article 2, Section 10) protects the secrecy and inviolability of private communications. As with any jurisdiction, activities illegal without a VPN remain illegal with one.
Peru has one of the most aggressive metadata retention regimes in Latin America.
Legislative Decree 1182, enacted on July 27, 2015, established two policies. First, it gives the National Police direct access to real-time geolocation data for any device in the country without a warrant. Police only need to inform a prosecutor (not seek approval), and notify a judge within 24 hours after accessing the data. Second, it compels telecom companies (Movistar, Claro, Bitel, Entel) to retain all communications metadata for 12 months with immediate police access, plus an additional 24 months accessible upon judicial authorisation within seven days. That totals 36 months of metadata retention.
Access Now and the IAPP have both flagged this decree as disproportionate, noting that it conflicts with the Inter-American Court of Human Rights' standards on the right to privacy (Article 11, American Convention on Human Rights). Peru's data protection authority (ANPD) enforces Law 29733 (Personal Data Protection Law), but Decree 1182 operates separately under national security justifications.
A VPN encrypts your connection, so your ISP sees traffic to a VPN server rather than the specific websites you visited. It does not prevent geolocation tracking at the device level, but it does block ISP-level metadata collection for your browsing activity.
América TV (americatv.com.pe) geo-restricts live TV and most on-demand content to Peruvian IP addresses. Open VPN Super, connect to the Lima server, then visit americatv.com.pe or open the América TV app. If content still shows as restricted, clear your browser cache and cookies.
L1 MAX (liga1max.pe) replaced GOLPERÚ in January 2026 and now broadcasts every Liga 1 match. The channel is operated by 1190 Sports and the Peruvian Football Federation (FPF). Movistar TV carries two L1 MAX channels at no extra cost to subscribers, and Bitel offers similar access.
Outside Peru, L1 MAX streams are blocked. Open VPN Super, connect to the Lima server, then open the L1 MAX app or website. You need an active subscription through a Peruvian operator.
Yes. VPN Super works across all Peruvian ISPs and mobile carriers, including Movistar (Telefónica), Claro (América Móvil), Bitel (Viettel), and Entel. The VPN encrypts your traffic regardless of which provider you use. There are no ISP-level VPN blocks in Peru.
