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Why are servers fast at peak hours? How does the Mainland China–Hong Kong dedicated line keep service stable?


Published: Apr 1, 2026 14:28

Simplified and Traditional Chinese versions are also available — click a language below:

Many people ask whether a VPN gets slow or flaky during evening peak hours. For users in Mainland China, our design relies on contracted dedicated circuits between Mainland China and Hong Kong: you get committed, non–best-effort bandwidth on a path that does not compete with the busiest public international internet exits at night. The cross-border access leg therefore usually stays low-latency and predictable at peak times, on carrier-grade private connectivity with the SLAs that come with it.

Important distinction: once traffic leaves our Hong Kong edge toward faraway destinations (for example services that only have a US front door), it crosses Hong Kong’s international interconnects and submarine segments. During Hong Kong peak hours, that international segment can congest. You may then notice a few sites or apps feel slower—that is usually the HK→destination path, not our Mainland–HK dedicated access “throttling.”

Major apps are generally optimized for Hong Kong and APAC with local or nearby points of presence, so day-to-day browsing rarely shows those effects. A smaller set of services that mostly live in the US and hit a busy path are more likely to feel slower at peak.

We have served the China market for sixteen years. Planned work, major events, and routing updates are announced through our official news feed; you can browse the archive at news and past notices.