Two security operations working in tandem—one defending you against threats as they happen, the other scrubbing your personal information from the places it's already been sold.
In an era when personal data flows freely between corporations and criminals alike, a bundled service now offers individuals a rare chance to both shield themselves from incoming threats and reclaim information already scattered across the digital marketplace. For roughly six dollars a month, Surfshark One+ with Incogni combines active encryption and malware defense with a systematic campaign to remove personal records from over 420 data brokers — addressing not just the dangers ahead, but the vulnerabilities already left behind. It is a modest price for what amounts to a two-front effort at digital self-determination.
- Most people accept the slow erosion of online privacy as inevitable, but this bundle treats it as a problem with two distinct and solvable fronts.
- Data brokers have already distributed your name, address, and phone number across hundreds of databases — Incogni sends deletion requests repeatedly, even when your data resurfaces.
- The VPN layer encrypts connections across multiple device types simultaneously while blocking malware, monitoring for credential breaches, and substituting real identity details with anonymized alternatives.
- The combined effect is measurable: fewer spam calls, fewer scam attempts that know your name, and searches that aren't being logged and sold.
- Available to new and existing users at $74.99 for a full year — down from $250.20 — with a unified dashboard and a 30-day redemption window to activate both services.
For seventy-five dollars, Surfshark is offering something most people say they want but rarely act on: a year of moving through the internet without leaving a trail. The Surfshark One+ bundle, now paired with Incogni, combines two distinct security operations — one defending against threats in real time, the other working backward to erase personal data already sold and distributed.
The VPN side handles live exposure. It encrypts connections across five devices at once, covering everything from Windows laptops to Apple TV, while blocking malware, ransomware, and spyware before they arrive. It also monitors for leaked credentials, offers an alternative identity for browsing, provides ad-free and tracker-free search, and includes up to one million dollars in identity theft coverage.
Incogni operates on a different principle. Rather than protecting what's ahead, it pursues what's already out there — contacting over 420 data brokers to request deletion of your name, address, phone number, and family information. When data reappears, it requests removal again. A real-time dashboard lets users track progress; the service has already processed more than 245 million removal requests.
The practical result is quieter: fewer spam calls, less junk mail, fewer scam attempts that feel uncomfortably personal. Both services run under a single login. The offer is open to new and existing users, with thirty days to redeem after purchase — roughly six dollars a month for a year of protection that normally runs over twenty.
For seventy-five dollars, you can buy yourself a year of something most people claim to want but few actually pursue: the ability to move through the internet without leaving a trail. Surfshark One+ bundled with Incogni is now selling for $74.99, a steep discount from its regular price of $250.20, and what you're getting is essentially two separate security operations working in tandem—one defending you against threats as they happen, the other scrubbing your personal information from the places it's already been sold.
The VPN component of the bundle handles the live threats. It encrypts your connection across five devices simultaneously, which means you can protect a Windows laptop, a Mac, an iPhone, an Android phone, and a tablet all at once. The service also covers Linux machines, Chromebooks, Fire TV devices, and Apple TV if you want to add those to the rotation. Beyond encryption, the VPN blocks malware, spyware, and ransomware before they reach your device. It monitors for leaked credentials—those moments when your password shows up in a breach you didn't know about—and can substitute what Surfshark calls an Alternative ID in place of your real information when you're browsing. The package includes identity theft coverage up to one million dollars and provides ad-free, tracker-free search results, which means your searches themselves aren't being monitored or sold.
But the VPN is only half the equation. The other half is Incogni, which operates on a different principle entirely. While the VPN protects you going forward, Incogni works backward, hunting down personal information that's already been distributed across the internet. Data brokers—companies that buy and sell your name, address, phone number, and family information—maintain databases of millions of people. Incogni has connections to over 420 of these brokers and will request deletion of your records from each one. If your data reappears, the service requests deletion again, and again, as many times as necessary. Users get access to a dashboard where they can watch the progress in real time and receive reports on what's been removed. The company has already processed more than 245 million removal requests for its users.
The practical effect of this second prong is the elimination of much of the noise that follows you through daily life. No more spam calls from numbers you've never heard of. No more junk mail addressed to you at addresses you haven't lived at in years. No more scam attempts that somehow know your name and enough about you to sound plausible. Both services operate under a single login and a unified interface, so you're not juggling separate apps or accounts.
The offer is available to both new subscribers and people who already use Surfshark or Incogni individually. You purchase the bundle and have thirty days to redeem the code. For a year of dual protection—one layer defending against active threats, another layer removing the data that makes you vulnerable in the first place—the math is straightforward: you're paying roughly six dollars a month for security that normally costs over twenty.
Citas Notables
If your data reappears, they will request it be deleted again and again.— Surfshark/Incogni service description
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Why does a VPN and a data removal service need to be bundled together? Aren't they solving different problems?
They are solving different problems, but they're both problems that come from the same source: your information being exposed. The VPN stops people from seeing what you're doing right now. Incogni stops people from having your information to target you in the first place. Together they're more effective than either one alone.
So if I use the VPN, my data is still out there being sold?
Exactly. A VPN encrypts your traffic, but it doesn't erase the fact that your name and address are in a hundred databases. Incogni goes after those databases. It's preventive and reactive at the same time.
How often does your data actually reappear after Incogni removes it?
Often enough that they built the resubmission into the service. Data brokers acquire information constantly, so deletion isn't permanent. The service just keeps asking for it to be removed again until it stops coming back.
And the identity theft coverage—what does that actually protect?
It's insurance. If someone uses your information to open accounts or make purchases in your name, the coverage helps you recover financially. It's not prevention; it's damage control.
Is there a reason someone wouldn't want this?
Cost, mainly, if you're not worried about privacy. Or if you're already using separate VPN and data removal services. But at this price, the redundancy is worth it.