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popularphoinix | Staff posted Today 12:16 PM
popularphoinix | Staff posted Today 12:16 PM

[YMMV, AC] $79.98 | TP-Link Festa FR307-M2 | Multi-Gigabit VPN Wired Router Gateway at Amazon

$80

$200

60% off
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Amazon [amazon.com] has TP-Link Festa FR307-M2 | Multi-Gigabit VPN Wired Router Gateway for $99.98 - $20.00 when you 'clip' the coupon on product page = $79.98.
Shipping is free.

Price
$120.01 lower (60% savings) than the list price of $199.99
$20.01 lower (20% savings) than the previous price of $99.99

Savings
[Regional/MidAtlantic] Coupon price $79.98 (check and activate [amazon.com])

Customer reviews
4.2⭐ / 22,531

amazon.com/dp/B0FFPZRPX9 [amazon.com]

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Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon [amazon.com] has TP-Link Festa FR307-M2 | Multi-Gigabit VPN Wired Router Gateway for $99.98 - $20.00 when you 'clip' the coupon on product page = $79.98.
Shipping is free.

Price
$120.01 lower (60% savings) than the list price of $199.99
$20.01 lower (20% savings) than the previous price of $99.99

Savings
[Regional/MidAtlantic] Coupon price $79.98 (check and activate [amazon.com])

Customer reviews
4.2⭐ / 22,531

amazon.com/dp/B0FFPZRPX9 [amazon.com]

Please report the deal if expired
My other deals

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Price Intelligence

Model: TP-Link Festa FR307-M2 | Multi-Gigabit VPN Wired Router Gateway | 2 * 2.5G+5*Gigabit+1*USB WAN | Self-Organizing Network | Free Cloud | Load Balance | IPSec/PPTP/L2TP/OpenVPN | Does not Work w/Omada

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Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 2/3/2026, 02:22 AM
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16 Comments

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Today 01:47 PM
898 Posts
Joined Jul 2013
mkm85Today 01:47 PM
898 Posts
Sorry for the newbie question.
If I replace my regular Ethernet switch with this VPN gateway, do I still need to subscribe to a service like NordVPN?

I don't necessarily need to hide my IP address, but I want my data to be protected.
I'm having trouble understanding how the gateway works without an external provider.
1
2
Today 01:50 PM
394 Posts
Joined Nov 2013
p3dalToday 01:50 PM
394 Posts
How does this compare to something like a pfsense box?
3
Today 02:14 PM
10 Posts
Joined Nov 2013
SergeyS3233Today 02:14 PM
10 Posts
good deal.
Today 02:22 PM
87 Posts
Joined Feb 2019
SlickClub9184Today 02:22 PM
87 Posts
Shows $100 for me, no coupon 😔
Today 02:24 PM
129 Posts
Joined Dec 2005
punkdigeratiToday 02:24 PM
129 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank punkdigerati

Quote from mkm85 :
Sorry for the newbie question.
If I replace my regular Ethernet switch with this VPN gateway, do I still need to subscribe to a service like NordVPN?

I don't necessarily need to hide my IP address, but I want my data to be protected.
I'm having trouble understanding how the gateway works without an external provider.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vir...te_network
The term VPN has been popularized to mean using a proxy server to access the Internet through an encrypted tunnel, especially from paid services, but it's actually just the way to connect two separate computer networks together securely. This device has the ability to help create those connections, including to such proxy services, but is more aimed at businesses/organizations to facilitate their users being able to access their systems remotely, or connect two separate locations so they act as if on the same network.
This isn't a replacement for a service such as NordVPN, it's a router, it sits between your Internet service provider (ISP) and the rest of your network and provides a number of services for your network. While it technically has an Ethernet switch in it, it's way overkill and would be wasted as a replacement for your switch.
Something like this might be a way to help protect your network, but it's likely a bit complicated for the first dip into the area. Maybe start by logging into your existing router and seeing what kind of features it has and if playing around with that kind of thing is of interest to you.
4
Today 02:25 PM
73 Posts
Joined Jan 2010
suhas2000Today 02:25 PM
73 Posts
It's showing coupon price $69.98 for me.
Today 02:43 PM
119 Posts
Joined Sep 2012
flyto9Today 02:43 PM
119 Posts
I would stay away from TP-Link for security purpose. You don't want your network to get hacked or monitored. UniFi is a better choice since it's US base. Although they sell to Russia? lol. But hey, even Russia likes it, so it must be good, reliable and no malware!
5

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Today 02:58 PM
181 Posts
Joined Jul 2016
NathanH3041Today 02:58 PM
181 Posts
Quote from p3dal :
How does this compare to something like a pfsense box?
This one gives the Chinese government direct access to your network, so I guess that could be a plus or minus depending on how you look at it.
1
1
4
Today 03:20 PM
851 Posts
Joined Aug 2012
riffdexToday 03:20 PM
851 Posts
Quote from punkdigerati :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vir...te_network
The term VPN has been popularized to mean using a proxy server to access the Internet through an encrypted tunnel, especially from paid services, but it's actually just the way to connect two separate computer networks together securely. This device has the ability to help create those connections, including to such proxy services, but is more aimed at businesses/organizations to facilitate their users being able to access their systems remotely, or connect two separate locations so they act as if on the same network.
This isn't a replacement for a service such as NordVPN, it's a router, it sits between your Internet service provider (ISP) and the rest of your network and provides a number of services for your network. While it technically has an Ethernet switch in it, it's way overkill and would be wasted as a replacement for your switch.
Something like this might be a way to help protect your network, but it's likely a bit complicated for the first dip into the area. Maybe start by logging into your existing router and seeing what kind of features it has and if playing around with that kind of thing is of interest to you.
I run a few businesses from home, and do some self-hosting. My WiFi router is super dated, a Linksys 2012 model. Would it make sense to buy this to replace my personal router at home entirely - routing all my personal and business traffic through it? I assume I would need to add an access point if I wanted to broadcast WiFi?
Today 03:43 PM
172 Posts
Joined Mar 2017
BellmarToday 03:43 PM
172 Posts
Quote from riffdex :
I run a few businesses from home, and do some self-hosting. My WiFi router is super dated, a Linksys 2012 model. Would it make sense to buy this to replace my personal router at home entirely - routing all my personal and business traffic through it? I assume I would need to add an access point if I wanted to broadcast WiFi?
Not an expert at all, but maybe look into something from Microtik? They have some entry level hardware options that many of the features you're looking for.

Hopefully someone with actual IT/selfhosting experience could chime in.

I purchased a mikrotik rb750gr3 a few years ago and have had great luck with it so far.
Today 04:33 PM
293 Posts
Joined Jan 2016
sharartimundaToday 04:33 PM
293 Posts
Quote from mkm85 :
Sorry for the newbie question.
If I replace my regular Ethernet switch with this VPN gateway, do I still need to subscribe to a service like NordVPN?

I don't necessarily need to hide my IP address, but I want my data to be protected.
I'm having trouble understanding how the gateway works without an external provider.
there are tons of resources on youtube. this can not be answered here.
Today 04:34 PM
293 Posts
Joined Jan 2016
sharartimundaToday 04:34 PM
293 Posts
Quote from NathanH3041 :
This one gives the Chinese government direct access to your network, so I guess that could be a plus or minus depending on how you look at it.
meanwhile linksys, netgear, unifi etc gives direct access to NSA, CIA, Mossad, ICE access. Pick your poison. I'd rather let chinese have it, they cant touch you here.
1
Today 04:35 PM
293 Posts
Joined Jan 2016
sharartimundaToday 04:35 PM
293 Posts
No Omada, Deal breaker. Omada interface is greattt
1
Today 04:38 PM
1,702 Posts
Joined Dec 2004
Jack SchittToday 04:38 PM
1,702 Posts
No Standalone Mode: The FR307-M2 does not have a traditional, locally hosted standalone interface. It must be adopted into a Festa Cloud account (via app or web) to be configured.

So, you are completely dependent on the security of tplink for yours. Don't walk, RUN from this.
2

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Today 05:59 PM
56 Posts
Joined Nov 2020
spicyramenttToday 05:59 PM
56 Posts
So this is basically a router minus wifi, that can accept multiple isp connections for failover, or bonding for maximum bandwidth.
This essentially duplicates the functionality of their omada line (for some reason, ask their tapo and kasa division the same question)
Just like the omada division, this system provides wifi via access points sold separately.
Unlike the omada, the festa has the router and the device manager that handles the access point in a single box. The old omada systems had the router and controller in separate boxes.
This whole system competes with UnIfi at a lower price point.

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