
Overview

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This offering is locked to 500 connections. If you need the flexibility to scale, we recommend our PAYG listing instead: https://aws.amazon.com/marketplace/pp/prodview-f5qcwyw2gy256
Access Server for AWS delivers the best-of-breed VPN solution for secure remote access, site-to-site VPN and secure SaaS access for organizations of all sizes. Our award-winning open-source protocol is the industry standard for accessing private information securely, ensuring safe access to internal data and delivering zero-trust network access.
Access Server for AWS is a self-hosted VPN software that provides rapid deployment for secure remote access with a built-in web-based user interface for ease of use. Access Server provides an extra layer of security, with end-to-end encryption and granular access control to limit the risk of exposed data for remote users, site-to-site connectivity, or securing SaaS access and IoT devices. Certificate PKI management provides simplified installation and configuration. Additional features include balancing traffic across a cluster of Access Servers with DNS round robin and tunneling only your private traffic, optimizing your network bandwidth and making your environment more secure.
Access Server for AWS technical support and onboarding is available 24/7. Schedule a demo at https://hs.openvpn.net/request-demo .
OpenVPN client software accommodates Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, iOS, and ChromeOS environments. Includes a built-in local authentication system and support for authentication with Active Directory, PAM, LDAP, RADIUS, SAML, and even a custom Python3 authentication module is possible.
Our subscription model is based on the number of concurrent connected devices. The tiered instance type comes in various sizes and is locked to the specific size. The cost for the software subscription for the chosen tier is charged directly through Amazon. This means these instances get a subscription automatically at launch and are suitable for automated launch and autoscaling scenarios.
Highlights
- This offering is locked to 500 connections. If you need the flexibility to scale, we recommend our PAYG listing instead: https://aws.amazon.com/marketplace/pp/prodview-f5qcwyw2gy256
- A self-hosted scalable secure remote access, site-to-site VPN solution to give your employees the freedom to work securely with end-to-end encryption for accessing SaaS, the internet, and company resources. Essential security controls needed to evolve from a trusted-perimeter security model to an identity-based ZTNA approach.
- OpenVPN client software that accommodates Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, iOS, and ChromeOS environments. Includes a built-in local authentication system and support for authentication with Active Directory, PAM, LDAP, RADIUS, SAML, and even a custom Python3 authentication module is possible.
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Dimension | Cost/hour |
|---|---|
c5.4xlarge Recommended | $4.50 |
t3.micro | $4.50 |
t2.micro | $4.50 |
x1.16xlarge | $4.50 |
c3.large | $4.50 |
c6i.24xlarge | $4.50 |
c6ad.2xlarge | $4.50 |
m6a.48xlarge | $4.50 |
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64-bit (x86) Amazon Machine Image (AMI)
Amazon Machine Image (AMI)
An AMI is a virtual image that provides the information required to launch an instance. Amazon EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud) instances are virtual servers on which you can run your applications and workloads, offering varying combinations of CPU, memory, storage, and networking resources. You can launch as many instances from as many different AMIs as you need.
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For instructions on using the OpenVPN Access Server appliance on the AWS Marketplace, please visit https://openvpn.net/as-docs/aws-tiered.html
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For product activation to succeed your firewall and/or security group settings must allow connections to our online activation servers - details can be found in our FAQ section here: https://openvpn.net/as-docs/faq-aws.html . If you experience any problems, you can register for a free account on our website here: https://openvpn.net/as-docs/support-for-aws.html and then open a support ticket so our technical team can assist you.
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Customer reviews
Secure access control has protected client platforms and supports reliable SLA commitments
What is our primary use case?
OpenVPN Access Server is our main solution to ensure that the VPN is properly connected at the client's location so that they are able to access our system, as we have a platform for inventory invoice management.
Just as there are typical firewalls in a system, such as Cloudflare 1.1.1.1, I use OpenVPN Access Server to allow access from specific IPs and block access to specific IPs in my invoice management platform.
How has it helped my organization?
OpenVPN Access Server has positively impacted my organization by helping us design a reliable infrastructure and even providing definite SLA metrics to our clients.
We have different SLA levels such as L0, L1, L2, and L3 in a typical IT scenario. Some clients need immediate access within 24 hours, while other clients, depending on their SLA levels, need support within one to two days. There are also some clients who are low priority and need support within five days or a week. This is how we organize our SLA structure. The high-priority clients who are hosted on our private server need immediate resolution, or a penalty is applied.
What is most valuable?
The best features OpenVPN Access Server offers are the secure access to the portal and the ability to stop irrelevant IPs from accessing our system.
The secure access feature and blocking irrelevant IPs help my team on a day-to-day basis by protecting us. The unnecessary load on the servers is avoided in the first place. The regular backups that are taken are also easily available for our clients. Even the support team feels updated with all such features.
What needs improvement?
OpenVPN Access Server needs improvement as it requires definite marketing in the East Africa region so that many people have access to it. It should also be available offline and not always dependent on the internet. It should have AI-based observability metrics as well.
From the user experience perspective, OpenVPN Access Server should be more user-friendly in the East Africa market where I am located. It should be easy to use and compliant with local norms. From the technical perspective, it should not be heavily dependent on the resources of the PC.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using OpenVPN Access Server for the past three years.
How are customer service and support?
Others who are looking to use OpenVPN Access Server should evaluate the proper feature benefits and costing as per their use cases.
What other advice do I have?
From the user experience perspective, OpenVPN Access Server should be more user-friendly in the East Africa market where I am located. It should be easy to use and compliant with local norms. From the technical perspective, it should not be heavily dependent on the resources of the PC.
I found this interview to be good, but it can be improved with a more manual touch. My overall review rating for this product is 9 out of 10.
Secure remote access has streamlined our hybrid cloud workflows and reduced onboarding effort
What is our primary use case?
I use OpenVPN Access Server as a VPN to access many of the applications. For example, I access a DataDog website where I monitor many tools and all, using OpenVPN Access Server .
I have been using OpenVPN Access Server for about 12 to 13 months, and our main use is managing secure remote access for our internal teams and technical engineers who need to connect to our private cloud infrastructure and staging environments. We rely heavily on it to establish stable, secure connections so the team can access databases, internal applications, and server dashboards safely from anywhere.
We use a hybrid cloud setup for our deployment of OpenVPN Access Server, which is hosted on virtual machines within our private cloud infrastructure to securely gatekeep our internal applications, main databases, and core staging environments.
For public cloud resources in our hybrid setup, we primarily use AWS and Microsoft Azure to host several of our front-facing applications, customer portals, and some record testing environments. Having OpenVPN Access Server tied into this mix is great because it allows our team to securely hop between our internal private network and these public cloud resources without needing multiple different VPN clients or configuration setups.
What is most valuable?
OpenVPN Access Server offers a secure remote access VPN, web-based administration console, multi-factor authentication MFA support, integration with LDAP, Active Directory, RADIUS, SAML, centralized user and device management, client software for Windows, macOS and Linux OS, Android and iOS.
The admin web UI is easily at the top of the list of best features, making managing user access and subnets incredibly simple without having to mess around with a command line. Another standout is the built-in client portal that lets users log in and download their own pre-configured profiles, saving the IT team a ton of manual setup. Additionally, it has a multi-factor authentication code that flexibly integrates with Active Directory and provides the enterprise-grade security we need.
Overall, OpenVPN Access Server has positively impacted our organization by giving us a highly reliable, stable environment for remote work. We handle critical infrastructure and having a secure gateway that doesn't drop connections unexpectedly is a huge win. It has greatly improved our security posture without adding administrative headaches because our engineers and technical teams can securely connect to private cloud resources and databases from anywhere without a hitch, ensuring our support and operational workload runs smoothly around the clock.
What needs improvement?
The main area for improvement is the pricing model, as the concurrent user license gets expensive quickly as our organization grows. More flexible or tiered pricing options would be a huge plus. Another area is the configuration disconnect, where while the admin web UI handles about 90% of what we need, the moment we need deep advanced routing customizations or to tweak specific variables, we still have to drop back into the command-line interface to make those changes. It would be great to see these deeper configurations fully integrated into the web portal. Additionally, native support for newer, lighter protocols like WireGuard built straight into the platform alongside standard OpenVPN for better performance efficiency would be beneficial.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been working in my current field for almost 15 to 15 plus years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
OpenVPN Access Server is very stable, and we have a hassle-free work experience using it.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
OpenVPN Access Server's scalability is much better, ensuring we can handle our growing needs.
How are customer service and support?
For customer support, I rate OpenVPN Access Server 9 out of 10. The ticketing system is responsive, and the technical team knows the product inside and out. Additionally, with such a massive community, we can almost always find immediate answers in their forum or documentation without needing to open a ticket. My advice is to map out your user access groups and routing subnets before configuring the server; this makes it easier to enforce least privilege.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
We previously relied on a legacy IPsec VPN solution and the standard open-source community edition of OpenVPN. We switched due to the administrative bottleneck, as managing the open-source version required our team to handle everything through the command-line interface, creating individual user configuration files to track down connection failures. It did not have a centralized dashboard or a user portal, which resulted in a massive number of internal support tickets. Moving to OpenVPN Access Server solved all of that by providing the web admin portal and seamless SAML integration, completely automating user management and relieving our administrators.
What was our ROI?
Regarding the return on investment from OpenVPN Access Server, it really comes down to the drastic drop in onboarding and engineering time. Before we implemented it, our senior technical staff had to spend 20 to 30 minutes per user manually generating cryptographic keys, setting up routing rules, and securely transferring profile files to each employee. This was a significant drain on highly skilled personnel, but now with our SAML identity provider integration, the entire workflow takes under two minutes. The platform automatically reads the user role and maps them to the correct network subnets instantly, saving us countless hours of administration overhead every month, allowing our engineering team to focus on managing critical infrastructure rather than grinding through access tickets. For us, that efficiency completely justifies our licensing cost.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
The pricing for OpenVPN Access Server is fine and very straightforward, and we did not face any hassles accessing it. The pricing, setup cost, and licensing were within our limits and budget, making it very user-friendly.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
Before choosing OpenVPN Access Server, we evaluated other options, looking closely at WireGuard and Cisco AnyConnect. Cisco AnyConnect was a strong enterprise contender, but it felt overly complex for our hybrid cloud needs and required locking into their ecosystem, which we wanted to avoid. We valued WireGuard for its raw connection speed and lightweight protocol, but it lacked the necessary enterprise features including a built-in administrative web portal, straightforward SAML integration, and robust access control list. Ultimately, OpenVPN Access Server won out because it offered the ease of management and advanced user governance features we needed.
What other advice do I have?
If I had to give advice to others looking into using OpenVPN Access Server, my biggest recommendation is to carefully map out your user access groups and routing subnets on paper before diving into the configuration. The platform makes it incredibly easy to enforce least privilege and zero-trust principles, but the setup goes smoother if you have a clear architecture of who needs to access what private resources. Utilize the two free concurrent connections to test your identity provider integration, enforce multi-factor authentication, and provide the automation workflow during the testing phase to illustrate how much administrative time you will save, making it easier to justify the licensing cost when scaling up. I rate my overall experience with OpenVPN Access Server an 8 out of 10.
Which deployment model are you using for this solution?
If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?
Secure remote access has simplified user management and reduced support workload
What is our primary use case?
My main use case for OpenVPN Access Server involves managing secure remote access for our internal teams and technical engineers who need to connect to our private cloud infrastructure. We rely heavily on established secure connections so the team can certainly access the database, internal applications, server dashboards, and the web admin UI makes it straightforward to manage user cases and integrates well with our existing authentication setup, which gives us significant time savings on the IT support side.
A quick specific example of how my team uses OpenVPN Access Server day to day includes the admin web UI being at the top of the list because it makes managing user access and subnets incredibly simple without having to use the command line. Another standout feature is the built-in client portal that allows users to log in and download their configured profile, saving our IT team considerable manual setup work. Lastly, the authentication flexibility helps us regularly, specifically how smoothly it integrates with our Active Directory and multifactor authentication, which enhances our IT support experience on a daily basis.
How has it helped my organization?
OpenVPN Access Server has positively impacted our organization by providing a high, reliable, stable environment, especially for remote work. We handle critical infrastructure, and having a secure gateway that does not drop connections unexpectedly is a huge win, greatly improving our security posture without adding administrative headaches, as engineers and technical teams can securely connect to private cloud resources and databases from anywhere without a hitch, ensuring that our operations workflow runs smoothly around the clock and offering total peace of mind regarding remote access security.
Regarding specific outcomes, the clear impact of OpenVPN Access Server has been a massive drop in VPN-related support tickets. We previously handled profile issues, broken connections, and credential setups manually which used to be a daily headache for the IT team. Those tickets have now dropped by seventy percent to eighty percent, roughly because of the self-service client portal. It saves significant time on user onboarding as it used to take administration about twenty to thirty minutes to generate and securely send configuration files, but now, thanks to Active Directory integration, it takes hardly two to three minutes, resulting in considerable hours saved weekly and monthly.
What is most valuable?
The main feature of OpenVPN Access Server that stands out to me is the admin UI, and it is very well integrated with the Active Directory multifactor authentication, which provides the kind of enterprise-grade security we have been looking for, and we are very happy with that.
The admin web UI makes managing user access and subnets incredibly simple without having to use the command line. Another standout feature is the built-in client portal that allows users to log in and download their configured profile, saving our IT team considerable manual setup work. The authentication flexibility helps us regularly, specifically how smoothly it integrates with our Active Directory and multifactor authentication.
What needs improvement?
The main area for OpenVPN Access Server improvement is its pricing model, as the concurrent user license gets expensive quickly as the organization grows, so more flexible pricing options would be a huge plus for AVIARC. Another area I would specify is the configuration disconnect, as the admin UI handles about ninety percent of what you need, but when it comes to advanced routing customization, tweaking specific variables requires dropping back into the command line interface. It would be great to see those deeper configurations integrated into the web portal for ease of use, along with support for newer, lighter protocols like WireGuard built straight into the platform for better performance and efficiency.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using OpenVPN Access Server for about three and a half to four years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
OpenVPN Access Server demonstrates absolute stability with no issues regarding its reliability, scalability, or other concerns.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
OpenVPN Access Server scales very well from a technical standpoint. You can easily upgrade the underlying hardware resources or spin up additional nodes in a cluster configuration to handle a massive surge in concurrent users. The only real constraint to its scalability is financial, as the concurrent user licensing model leads to expenses increasing quickly as you scale up to support larger teams, meaning while the software handles growth seamlessly, your budget is the main thing you need to plan around.
How are customer service and support?
I would rate customer support nine out of ten. The ticketing system is responsive, and the technical team knows the product inside and out. Moreover, due to the massive community around VPNs, you can almost always find immediate answers in their forum documentation without needing to open a ticket.
How was the initial setup?
Installing and setting up OpenVPN Access Server is very easy, especially compared to the community edition of OpenVPN. In our environment, we deployed it without a manual script or built-in installation from scratch, simply pulling a pre-configured image directly onto our virtual machine. The initial setup wizard guided us through core settings like admin password configuration and a primary network interface through the terminal, from where we immediately transitioned to the web UI to handle the rest of the configuration, which included setting up routing paths and subnets. It took less than an hour for the fully functional server to be up, which is a massive time-saver for our engineering team.
What other advice do I have?
My advice to others looking into using OpenVPN Access Server is to map out your user access groups and routing subnets before configuring the server, as the tool makes enforcing least privilege incredibly easy, but it is smoother with clearly defined access policies on paper first. I would also recommend taking full advantage of the two free concurrent connections to test out the SAML or Active Directory integrations completely before purchasing licenses, allowing you to prove the workflow and see how much time it can save your IT team before making a financial commitment. I would rate this product an eight out of ten overall.
Secure remote access has protected critical data and now simplifies role-based user management
What is our primary use case?
One of the main use cases for OpenVPN Access Server is managing secure remote access for our internal teams and technical engineers who need to connect to our private cloud infrastructure and staging environments.
We rely heavily on it to establish stable and secure connections so the team can access the database, internal applications, and server data safely from the server dashboard anywhere in the world.
The web admin UI makes it straightforward to manage user access and it integrates well with our existing authentication setup, which saves us a lot of time on the IT support side.
Our main way of using OpenVPN Access Server is primarily for security, where it saves us from hacking and prevents data from going outside of our secure connection by using this VPN.
What is most valuable?
The best features OpenVPN Access Server offers include security, which protects our data so that no one can access our connection.
We have one secure connection which we are using with OpenVPN, and providing secure remote access for our technical teams to connect to our infrastructure is definitely the main way that we use it in day-to-day life.
The admin web UI is at the top of the list because it makes managing user access incredibly simple without having to use the command line.
Another best feature is its built-in client portal where users can log in and download their own pre-configured profiles, which saves the IT team a ton of manual setup work.
Lastly, the authentication flexibility, specifically how smoothly it integrates with Active Directory and multi-factor authentication, gives us exactly the kind of enterprise-grade security we need.
The web UI and the authentication integration have massively improved our team's daily productivity.
On the IT management side, we do not have to waste time manually writing configuration files or handling complex command line setups just to onboard someone into the company.
Since it syncs seamlessly with our existing authentication and multi-factor setup, user management is basically automated.
For the rest of the team, they can log in to the portal, get what they need, and connect in seconds.
It has cut down on connection-related support tickets, letting everyone focus on their actual work without any technical issues.
OpenVPN Access Server has positively impacted our organization by giving us a highly reliable, stable environment for remote work.
Since we handle critical infrastructure, having a secure gateway that does not drop connections unexpectedly is a huge win.
It has greatly improved our security posture without adding administrative headaches because our engineers and technical teams can securely connect to private cloud resources and databases from anywhere without a glitch.
It ensures our support and operational workflows run smoothly around the clock, giving us total peace of mind regarding work access security.
What needs improvement?
An area for improvement is the pricing model. The concurrent user licenses get expensive pretty quickly as your organization grows, so more flexible pricing options would be a huge plus.
Another area is configurational disconnect. While the admin web UI handles about 90% of what you need, the moment you have to do deep, advanced routing customization, you still have to drop back to the command line interface to make those changes.
It would be great to see those deeper configurations completely integrated into the web portal.
Lastly, it would be awesome to see native support for newer, lighter protocols through WireGuard built straight into the platform alongside standard OpenVPN for better performance efficiency.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been working in the current field for 2.8 years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
I have never faced any network or internet connection speed issues when I am connected to OpenVPN Access Server compared to other VPN solutions. I feel that it is highly stable and perfectly fine for day-to-day corporate work.
For tasks involving accessing databases, managing server infrastructure, or using our internal applications, I really do not notice any lag.
Compared to older VPN protocols through IPsec, it feels much smoother and establishes connections faster.
I do not feel any connection speed issues when using OpenVPN Access Server. Everything looks simple and smooth, and I have not encountered any issues.
OpenVPN Access Server is 100% stable in my experience.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
The scalability of OpenVPN Access Server is very natural and incredibly stable. In my experience, we rarely ever deal with unexpected service drops.
It just sits there and does its job, which gives us a lot of peace of mind when our teams are accessing critical infrastructure.
From a purely technical standpoint, it scales very well. You can easily upgrade the underlying hardware resources or spin up additional nodes in a cluster configuration if you need to handle a massive surge in concurrent users.
The only real constraint to its scalability is not technical; it is financial because of the concurrent user licensing model.
Scaling up to support much larger teams gets expensive quickly. So while the software handles growth seamlessly, the budget is really the main thing that we have to plan around as we scale.
How are customer service and support?
It is very easy to raise a ticket with them. We also have email support and a direct help desk we can contact via their service desk number and email, and we can raise tickets using their website portal. It is very easy.
I would definitely rate customer support 10 out of 10. They really respond to our queries so fast and help us in resolving issues.
How was the initial setup?
Installing and setting it up is very easy, especially compared to the community edition of OpenVPN. For example, when we deployed it in our environment, we did not have to build it from scratch or manually script out the installation.
We just pulled a pre-configured image directly onto our virtual machine, and the initial setup wizard walked us through the core settings including setting up the admin password and configuring the primary network interface right in the terminal.
From there, we immediately transitioned over to the web UI to handle the rest of the configuration including setting up our routing paths and subnets.
It took less than an hour to get the fully functioning server up, which is massive time saved for our engineering team.
What about the implementation team?
We use a local authentication method, which is primarily using SAML authentication integration to tie everything into our primary identity provider. We also utilize local authentication for emergency administrator backup accounts.
In terms of effectiveness, I would rate the SAML integration a solid 9 out of 10. It makes mapping user roles and enforcing multi-factor authentication incredibly smooth, meaning our users get a seamless single sign-on experience.
The only tiny friction point is that setting up the initial attribute mapping for custom security groups can be a little tedious in the interface, but once it is logged in, it runs flawlessly and completely automates our lifecycle management for access easier.
I have utilized the access control features of OpenVPN Access Server, and I would rate it 9.5 out of 10.
Instead of letting everyone onto the entire network once they connect, we can use the access control list to restrict access strictly by group or user roles.
Our engineering groups are given precise routing rules so they can hit specific staging subnets and databases, while other teams are restricted to only the internal applications they need for daily work.
It allows us to implement the zero trust principle very effectively at the network level without making the configuration overly complicated for our administrators.
What was our ROI?
We definitely see a clear return on investment from using OpenVPN Access Server, mostly driven by operational time savings and efficiency.
From a technical administrative perspective, the biggest metric is the reduction in manual onboarding time.
It used to take our engineers around 20 to 30 minutes per user to generate keys and distribute profile configurations manually.
Now, with the SAML and Active Directory integration, the process is down to under two minutes, which frees up our senior staff to focus on critical infrastructure tasks instead of managing access tickets.
Additionally, the client portal is so user-friendly that we have seen a massive reduction in routing IT support tickets related to connection drops or profile issues.
While the user licensing cost can add up, the savings in engineering hours and reduction in overhead for support make it a net positive investment for our organization.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
I use it for a client, so I do not have much information regarding the pricing, setup cost, and licensing.
But from what I have gathered, the pricing and setup costs are a little more expensive compared to any other VPN solutions, according to some of my seniors who have been working on this tool for the last five to six years.
The only thing I can advise is that the licensing cost is quite expensive, but it saves a lot of time for our IT engineers so that your senior IT engineers can focus on other ongoing IT issues in the company culture or any other tools they have.
It mainly saves time in configuring user profiles, as everything is automated. It is very easy to configure the rules of our organization, and it blindly follows them in order to create user profiles.
The user-friendly interface allows everyone to understand it easily, and it is easy to install.
What other advice do I have?
We purchase it from AWS Marketplace .
We use the role-defining features, and it has had a huge impact on how we enforce least privilege. Because it integrates so well with our identity provider via SAML, users are automatically placed into their respective groups based on their actual roles the moment they authenticate.
This makes enforcing least privilege practically effortless on our end. Instead of an administrator having to manually assign permissions to individual users every single time, the server reads the group role and immediately locks down or opens up access to a specific subnet based on the profile.
It ensures our security policy is strictly followed without creating any extra manual work or friction for our IT team or support team.
The user interface for OpenVPN Access Server is very user-friendly, very easy to understand, very easy to configure, and very easy to install in our virtual machines.
On the end-user side, the client web portal is completely foolproof. It is incredibly simple, allowing users to log in, see exactly what they need, and download their pre-configured connection profiles without any confusion.
On the administrative side, the admin web UI is highly organized and straightforward. It moves away from complex command-line configuration and lays out user management, routing rules, and authentication settings in a very logical menu system.
My only real critique is that it looks a bit traditional or dated compared to some modern SaaS dashboards, but from a purely functional perspective, it gets the job done cleanly and makes managing an entire team really intuitive.
Regarding AI capabilities, OpenVPN Access Server does not actually have built-in AI features right now. It is primarily a straightforward core networking and security tool.
However, looking at its overall governance and traditional security, it is exceptionally solid. The platform excels at access control, encryption standards, and secure logging, which gives us great oversight and compliance tracking for who is accessing our network infrastructure.
Regarding the accuracy and reliability of its output, OpenVPN Access Server does not actually have any native or built-in AI capabilities right now.
It is strictly a dedicated virtual private network and secure routing platform.
But if we look at the accuracy and reliability of its output from a pure networking standpoint, meaning connection stability, correct routing rules, and steady traffic management, it is incredibly reliable.
When you configure an access rule or subnet mapping, it works exactly as intended without bugs or random drops.
The platform is rock-solid on performance and does exactly what it is configured to do. It does not use artificial intelligence to get that done.
I would rate this product an overall 8 out of 10.
Secure remote access has transformed daily ticket resolution and reduced downtime for staff
What is our primary use case?
In my day-to-day work, we deal with customer tickets related to VPN access, such as VPN password resets, regardless of the region they are from.
Beyond user support, we typically handle these tickets with a single request every three days, provide secure encrypted options, give remote access, and utilize multi-factor authentication, along with cross-platform support that includes Windows, Linux, and macOS, while also implementing split tunneling to manage company traffic through the VPN.
For example, if an employee is working from home, they need OpenVPN Access Server to connect to the office network, which allows them to handle database servers and other resources securely while working from anywhere in the country, improving security through encrypted access.
OpenVPN Access Server governs secure and compliant VPN access through centralized user management, allowing admins to manage user accounts, monitor activity, and enforce access policies efficiently.
In my organization, OpenVPN Access Server is deployed as a centralized VPN gateway in my Azure cloud, which is a public cloud environment, enabling secure access to company resources.
What is most valuable?
The best features OpenVPN Access Server offers include the ability to grant employees access to office applications quickly; without OpenVPN Access Server, employees would need to travel, but once access is granted, they can reach all office resources within a minute, reducing the resolution time from one to two hours to just one minute.
We reduce VPN bandwidth consumption by providing OpenVPN Access Server connection access based on specific geographical regions, with separate VPN access for West, Central, and Canada, ultimately lowering our overall bandwidth usage.
I find the verification of credentials against Active Directory crucial; if credentials are not verified, access policies should define user groups, IP restrictions, and route-based access meticulously.
What needs improvement?
Regarding other features, I believe we can improve OpenVPN Access Server by implementing high availability through load balancing between multiple servers, which increases access control and user administration capabilities, while also adding stronger multi-factor authentication and continuous monitoring using tools like Splunk.
While it is easy to use, I would suggest regular updates to OpenVPN Access Server software, particularly before SSL certificate expirations or OS upgrades to protect against vulnerabilities while optimizing split tunneling for efficient bandwidth usage.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using OpenVPN Access Server for four years in my current company, PowerSchool .
How was the initial setup?
The setup process in my organization was straightforward as it was already pre-set up when I joined, and I experienced no complex issues during installation.
What was our ROI?
In terms of cost savings, there are tangible benefits, although specific numeric values were not specified.
What other advice do I have?
OpenVPN Access Server has positively impacted our organization by enabling remote issue resolution in minutes where previously critical alerts required hours of travel to fix, alongside improved productivity as employees can quickly access internal resources, file servers, and collaborate with teams.
I would rate OpenVPN Access Server as a 10 out of 10 because it significantly reduces downtime, enabling employees to address issues promptly.
For instance, if each engineer saves one hour daily on commuting, granting access with OpenVPN Access Server leads to significant productivity gains of around 300 hours saved monthly for the organization.
My overall review rating for this product is 10 out of 10.