Simple, honest pricing
Pay once to set it up. Then it's yours.
No monthly toll. No data caps. You buy two small routers (about $170, you keep them), we get your private home VPN running and rock-solid — and then it's yours to use forever. The fee is for setting it up right, once.
This is for you if you can:
- • Plug a small box into your home router (one cable)
- • Run a one-click app on a Mac or Windows computer
- • Spend about 10 minutes on your home Wi-Fi during setup
- • Buy two small routers (~$170) and keep them
Please don't buy if:
- • You'd rather not plug in a router or run a setup app
- • You can't be at home for the first setup
- • Your home internet failed the pre-check (it won't work)
- • You want a phone-only app, or speeds beyond your home internet
What you'll need (the kit)
Two small routers — a Beryl AX you carry and an A1300 that stays home (different boxes, so they're easy to tell apart). You buy them from Amazon and keep them; we don't sell hardware. Both set up over Wi-Fi — no cables to your computer.

As an Amazon Associate, Ownhearth earns from qualifying purchases. It doesn't change your price.
Ownhearth setup
≈ $249 to start, incl. $170 of routers you buy & keep. No subscription — that's the whole price.
- A guided helper sets up both routers for you
- Self-healing connection that fixes itself
- 30 days of email support included
- Runs forever on your own hardware
That's the complete product — it works and protects you on its own.
Before you buy — the honest checklist
Ownhearth is simple, but it isn't a tap-and-go phone app. Please confirm these so you know exactly what you're getting — if any feel like too much, this isn't the right product for you (and that's okay):
Backed by our 30-day money-back guarantee — 30-day money-back guarantee: if your home line is compatible (the free pre-check confirms it in 30 seconds) and we can't get it working within 30 days, we refund the setup fee. You keep the routers.
$79 one-time. No subscription. · Tick the boxes above to continue.
Not sure it'll work on your home internet? Run the 1-minute check first →