To erase a VPN from an iPhone, delete the VPN configuration profile in Settings and remove the app — toggling the VPN off leaves the profile behind, so it can reconnect automatically.
Tapping the VPN toggle feels like you have fixed things, but it only disconnects the session. The actual configuration stays on the phone, and Connect On Demand or the app itself can bring the connection back the moment you lock the screen or open a browser. Knowing how to erase a VPN from an iPhone means removing both the profile and the app — that is the only way to stop it from returning.
Why Toggling The VPN Off Isn’t Enough
Flipping the VPN switch in Settings or inside the app disconnects the tunnel temporarily. The VPN profile remains installed, and any profile with Connect On Demand enabled will automatically reconnect when the phone accesses the internet. Some VPN apps also have a built-in auto-connect feature that re-establishes the link every time you open the app.
The result is a pattern that confuses many users: they turn the VPN off, but it turns itself back on. Only deleting the configuration profile stops this loop.
How To Erase a VPN From Your iPhone: Profile Deletion Walkthrough
Removing the VPN profile is the core step. The following menu path works on current iOS and iPadOS versions and is documented by Apple’s VPN settings guide.
- Open Settings.
- Tap General.
- Tap VPN & Device Management.
- Tap VPN (you may see the VPN provider name instead).
- Tap the ⓘ icon next to the active VPN connection.
- Tap Delete VPN or Remove Profile — the wording depends on the VPN provider and profile type.
- Enter your device passcode if prompted, then confirm the removal.
The VPN entry disappears from the VPN list, and the profile is gone. If the Delete VPN option is grayed out, the profile may be managed by an organization — see the section on managed devices below.
If The VPN Came From An App
Many VPN services install their configuration through an app. Deleting the app does not always remove the profile automatically, so check Settings > General > VPN & Device Management after uninstalling. If the profile is still listed, follow the steps above to delete it manually. If the profile is gone, the app is the only remaining item — delete it from the Home Screen by pressing and holding the icon, then tapping Remove App > Delete App.
| Method | Effect | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Toggle Off | Disconnects temporarily; profile stays, can reconnect | Brief breaks from the VPN |
| Delete Profile | Removes the configuration completely | Permanent exit from a specific VPN |
| Delete App | Removes the app and most of its data; profile may linger | Cleaning up after a VPN service is no longer needed |
| Remove MDM | Removes organization management and all associated profiles | Leaving a work or school managed environment |
| Reset Network Settings | Wipes all Wi-Fi passwords, VPN configs, and Bluetooth pairings | Last resort when a profile is corrupted or stuck |
| Ignore Connect On Demand | Disables auto-reconnect without deleting the profile | Keeping the profile but stopping automatic reconnection |
| Factory Reset | Erases all content and settings, including every profile | Extreme measure for selling or trading in the device |
What About Managed Or Work VPNs?
If the VPN profile was installed through a Mobile Device Management (MDM) system — common for company or school devices — the standard delete method won’t work. The profile is locked and can only be removed by the organization’s IT admin or by removing the entire management enrollment.
To check, go to Settings > General > VPN & Device Management. If you see a management section below VPN, tap it and look for Remove Management. Tapping this removes the MDM profile and all its settings, including any VPN configurations it enforces. Note that this may also remove corporate email accounts, Wi-Fi configs, and other policies.
Contacting the IT department is usually the safer route — especially if the device is required for work tasks.
| Scenario | Key Action | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| VPN from a store app (ExpressVPN, NordVPN) | Delete the app, then check for leftover profile | Some apps auto-clean the profile; others do not. |
| VPN from a manual configuration file | Delete profile directly in Settings | No app to uninstall — profile is standalone. |
| MDM-managed VPN | Remove the management profile or contact IT | Standard delete may be grayed out. |
| VPN with Connect On Demand enabled | Turn off Connect On Demand in the profile info | Prevents auto-reconnect without deleting the profile. |
| Work VPN on a personally owned phone | Remove the VPN profile, then delete the work app | If MDM is not involved, standard deletion works. |
| Google ResearchMeterVPN profile | Settings > General > VPN & Device Management > profile name > Remove Profile | Enter passcode, then confirm removal. |
| Leftover profile from an old device backup | Delete profile manually, or reset network settings | Old profiles can survive a restore from backup. |
How To Keep The VPN From Returning
After deleting the profile and the app, the VPN should stay gone. If it reappears, check for these three things:
- A second profile — some services install multiple profiles (one for the VPN, one for a firewall or DNS). Scan the entire VPN list again.
- Backup restore — restoring from an iCloud or iTunes backup can bring old VPN profiles back. Delete them again after the restore finishes.
- Beta or profile-based apps — a few VPN apps install a configuration profile during setup that persists even after the app is deleted. Manual removal in VPN & Device Management is the only cure.
Once the profile is gone and no app remains, the VPN will not reconnect on its own. You can verify success by opening Settings > General > VPN & Device Management and confirming the VPN section is empty or shows only the option to add a new configuration.
References & Sources
- Apple Support. “View or change VPN settings on iPhone.” Official removal path and MDM management guidance.
- ExpressVPN. “How to Turn Off VPN on iPhone (and Stop It From Reconnecting).” Explanation of Connect On Demand and toggle-vs-profile issue.
- Google Support. “Remove ResearchMeterVPN from your iPhone or iPad.” Steps for deleting a Google research VPN profile.
- Bitdefender. “How to Turn Off VPN on iPhone & Stop It from Reconnecting.” Additional context on auto-reconnect behavior.
