Key Takeaways
- Telegram remains accessible to tens of millions in Iran through VPN technology despite years of official restrictions
- Pavel Durov, Telegram’s co-founder, reports that 50 million Iranians and 50 million Russians currently rely on VPNs for app access
- A complete internet shutdown occurred across Iran starting January 2026 amid escalating tensions with Israel and the United States
- Alternative connectivity methods include Starlink satellite service and BitChat, a Bluetooth-based mesh messaging platform
- Nepal experienced 48,000 BitChat downloads during its 2025 social media restrictions, preceding the government’s removal from power
Telegram’s restriction in Iran has failed to achieve its intended goal.
This conclusion comes directly from Telegram co-founder Pavel Durov, who announced Friday that millions of Iranians continue accessing the platform by channeling their internet connections through virtual private networks (VPNs).
VPN technology operates by routing user data through international servers. This process masks the user’s actual geographic position and enables access past national internet restrictions.
Durov explained that Iranian authorities anticipated their prohibition would drive citizens toward government-sanctioned messaging platforms subject to state surveillance. The outcome proved different, with users embracing privacy-focused technology instead.
“The government hoped for mass adoption of its surveillance messaging apps, but got mass adoption of VPNs instead,” Durov wrote.
He estimates approximately 50 million Iranians now use VPNs. Russia shows comparable figures, with over 50 million citizens employing similar circumvention methods.
Complete Internet Shutdown Across Iran
The digital landscape in Iran has deteriorated significantly following January 2026, when authorities implemented a comprehensive internet shutdown. This action correlates with intensifying regional hostilities involving Israel, the United States, and Iran, with restrictions continuing indefinitely.
Despite comprehensive blocking measures, certain residents maintain online connectivity. Starlink, the satellite internet platform operated by SpaceX, provides one avenue. Iranian authorities have prohibited Starlink as well, yet usage persists.
BitChat represents another solution—an application functioning entirely without internet infrastructure. The software establishes mesh networks through Bluetooth connectivity between proximate devices. Every smartphone becomes a transmission node, forwarding communications to additional app-equipped phones within signal range.
BitChat’s functionality continues operating when both conventional internet and satellite connections face disruption.
BitChat’s Emergence During Civil Unrest
BitChat has appeared previously when governments implement internet shutdowns.
During September 2025, Nepal restricted social media access throughout a wave of public demonstrations. Within that week, BitChat recorded more than 48,000 downloads throughout Nepal. Protesters successfully removed the Nepali government from authority during that same month.
Madagascar witnessed comparable BitChat download surges during concurrent protest activity.
Durov characterized these developments as digital opposition, mentioning what he described as “50 million members of the digital resistance in Iran.”
Iran’s nationwide internet shutdown, which commenced in January 2026, remained active at the time Durov published his Friday statement.

