Picture the scene. You have been saving the season finale for the flight, or for the quiet evening once you reach the hotel. You land, connect to the Wi-Fi, open the app — and the episode is gone.
Not buffering. Not loading slowly. Gone.
In its place is a catalogue you barely recognise and a scattering of titles you have never heard of. The subscription you pay for every month suddenly feels like someone else’s subscription in someone else’s country.
It is one of travel’s smaller betrayals, and almost everyone who streams abroad has felt it. The good news is that it is entirely predictable once you understand what is happening behind the screen.
A Catalogue That Follows the Map, Not You
Streaming platforms do not own the worldwide rights to most of what they show. They license films and series country by country, which is why the same service can offer a title in one nation, hand it to a rival broadcaster in another, and leave it off the menu entirely in a third.
The app works out which version of itself to show you by reading your IP address — the digital return label that suggests which country your connection is coming from.
Cross a border and that label changes. The app dutifully swaps in the local catalogue, your half-watched series vanishes from the carousel, and your watchlist quietly reshuffles around licensing rules you never see. Your account did not change. Your location signal did.
Watching What You Pay For, Without Ignoring the Rules
For most travellers, the aim is modest: to keep watching the services they already subscribe to while away from home. It is worth being clear-eyed here. VPN use is legal in many places, but streaming platforms may restrict VPN use under their terms of service, and enforcement is entirely up to the provider. Some services block known VPN traffic, some trigger extra verification, and some simply show a different catalogue.
Knowing the rules of the services you use is part of being a sensible traveller.
Within those limits, a VPN may help by routing your connection through a server in your usual region, so the streaming app sees a location closer to home. It is one of the most common reasons people try one in the first place. For casual travellers, using a VPN for streaming through a free plan or trial can be a low-stakes way to test whether it works with the services and devices they actually use.
The important word is test. Performance differs by provider, platform, server location, and streaming service. Sort it out at home, on a trusted connection, rather than discovering the problem in a hotel lobby at midnight.
The Quieter Reason It Earns Its Place
Restoring your box set is the benefit you notice. The benefit you do not notice is the one that may matter more.
Hotel, airport, and café Wi-Fi are shared networks run by strangers. Modern apps and websites are much safer than they used to be because encryption is more common, but that does not make every public network trustworthy. For banking, email, work accounts, or private messages, it is still wise to add protection before relying on a network you do not control.
Here, the entertainment fix and the security fix overlap. Encrypting your connection for travel streaming can also help protect ordinary browsing on the same hotel or airport network. The tool you reached for to finish a series may also reduce what that network can see about your other online activity.
Sort It Out Before You Pack
A few minutes at home can save a great deal of fiddling on the road. For travellers who watch on a laptop, protecting the whole machine is usually better than relying only on a browser extension that covers one tab.
If yours runs Windows, installing X-VPN from the Microsoft Store is one example of setting up system-level protection before you travel. That kind of setup can cover a streaming app in the evening and more sensitive activity, such as email or cloud documents, over the same hotel network.
Set it up and test it before you leave, on a connection you trust. Do that, and you are less likely to spend your first night away troubleshooting the cliffhanger you thought you had packed.