Location Spoofing vs VPN: What's the Difference?
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A VPN changes your IP address, which alters the location websites infer from your network. Location spoofing changes the browser's Geolocation and timezone APIs, which alters the location your browser reports directly. They cover different signals — a VPN doesn't touch the Geolocation API, and spoofing doesn't change your IP — so for a consistent location you usually want both together.
People often assume a VPN hides their location completely. It hides one signal. Browsers leak several, and the two tools cover different ones.
What a VPN changes
A VPN routes your traffic through a server elsewhere, so websites see that server's IP address instead of yours. Since IP maps to an approximate region, the location a site infers from your network changes.
What a VPN does not do: it doesn't touch the browser's Geolocation API or
your timezone. If a site asks navigator.geolocation for coordinates, the
browser still answers with your real GPS-based location regardless of the VPN.
What location spoofing changes
Location spoofing overrides the browser APIs that report where you are:
navigator.geolocation— the GPS-style coordinates sites request.IntlandDate— your timezone, which leaks your region with no permission prompt.- WebRTC — network details that can expose your real location.
What spoofing does not do: it doesn't change your IP address. A site reading your IP still sees your real network region.
Side-by-side
| Signal | VPN | Location spoofing |
|---|---|---|
| IP address | Changed | Unchanged |
| Geolocation API (GPS) | Unchanged | Changed |
| Timezone | Unchanged | Changed |
| WebRTC location leak | Partly | Patched |
Why you usually want both
Used alone, each leaves a contradiction. A VPN exit in Tokyo with a browser reporting New York coordinates and US Eastern time is easy to flag. Spoofing to Tokyo while your IP still resolves to the US is the same problem in reverse.
Someone is always interested in where you are.
Run a VPN pointed at a region, then spoof your browser location and timezone to match it. GeoSpoof is built for exactly this: its optional Sync with VPN feature detects your VPN's exit region and aligns your spoofed location to it automatically.
Neither tool bypasses server-side checks tied to your account, login history, or payment method. Use them responsibly and within each site's terms.