8 Integrations with AWS VPN

View a list of AWS VPN integrations and software that integrates with AWS VPN below. Compare the best AWS VPN integrations as well as features, ratings, user reviews, and pricing of software that integrates with AWS VPN. Here are the current AWS VPN integrations in 2026:

  • 1
    Amazon Web Services (AWS)
    Amazon Web Services (AWS) is the world’s most comprehensive cloud platform, trusted by millions of customers across industries. From startups to global enterprises and government agencies, AWS provides on-demand solutions for compute, storage, networking, AI, analytics, and more. The platform empowers organizations to innovate faster, reduce costs, and scale globally with unmatched flexibility and reliability. With services like Amazon EC2 for compute, Amazon S3 for storage, SageMaker for AI/ML, and CloudFront for content delivery, AWS covers nearly every business and technical need. Its global infrastructure spans 120 availability zones across 38 regions, ensuring resilience, compliance, and security. Backed by the largest community of customers, partners, and developers, AWS continues to lead the cloud industry in innovation and operational expertise.
  • 2
    OpenVPN

    OpenVPN

    OpenVPN

    Access Server gives you the ability to rapidly deploy a secure remote access solution with a web-based administration interface — all on general purpose computing hardware or virtual machines. Your team will have access to the built-in OpenVPN Connect App and bundled connection profiles. All without adding a ton of extra work to your IT to-do list. OpenVPN Access Server is a full-featured SSL self-hosted VPN software solution that integrates OpenVPN server capabilities, enterprise management capabilities, simplified OpenVPN Connect UI, and OpenVPN Client software packages that accommodate Windows, MAC, and Linux, mobile OS (Android and iOS) environments. OpenVPN Access Server supports a wide range of configurations, including secure and granular remote access to internal network and/ or private cloud network resources and applications with fine-grained access control. OpenVPN also has a cloud-delivered solution called CloudConnexa.
    Starting Price: Free Up to 3 Users
  • 3
    Collate

    Collate

    Collate

    Collate is an AI‑driven metadata platform that empowers data teams with automated discovery, observability, quality, and governance through agent‑based workflows. Built on the open source OpenMetadata foundation and a unified metadata graph, it offers 90+ turnkey connectors to ingest metadata from databases, data warehouses, BI tools, and pipelines, delivering in‑depth column‑level lineage, data profiling, and no‑code quality tests. Its AI agents automate data discovery, permission‑aware querying, alerting, and incident‑management workflows at scale, while real‑time dashboards, interactive analyses, and a collaborative business glossary enable both technical and non‑technical users to steward high‑quality data assets. Continuous monitoring and governance automations enforce compliance with standards such as GDPR and CCPA, reducing mean time to resolution for data issues and lowering total cost of ownership.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 4
    Active Directory
    Active Directory stores information about objects on the network and makes this information easy for administrators and users to find and use. Active Directory uses a structured data store as the basis for a logical, hierarchical organization of directory information. This data store, also known as the directory, contains information about Active Directory objects. These objects typically include shared resources such as servers, volumes, printers, and the network user and computer accounts. For more information about the Active Directory data store, see Directory data store. Security is integrated with Active Directory through logon authentication and access control to objects in the directory. With a single network logon, administrators can manage directory data and organization throughout their network, and authorized network users can access resources anywhere on the network. Policy-based administration eases the management of even the most complex network.
    Starting Price: $1 per user per month
  • 5
    AWS Client VPN
    AWS Client VPN is a fully managed remote access VPN solution used by your remote workforce to securely access resources within both AWS and your on-premises network. Fully elastic, it automatically scales up or down based on demand. When migrating applications to AWS, your users access them the same way before, during, and after the move. AWS Client VPN, including the software client, supports the OpenVPN protocol. Many organizations require multi-factor authentication and federated authentication from their VPN solution. AWS Client VPN supports these and other authentication methods. Traditional on-premises VPN services are limited by the capacity of the hardware that runs them. AWS Client VPN is a pay-as-you-go cloud VPN service that elastically scales up or down based on user demand. Unlike on-premises VPN services, AWS Client VPN allows users to connect to AWS networks using a single VPN connection.
    Starting Price: $0.05 per hour
  • 6
    AWS Site-to-Site VPN
    AWS Site-to-Site VPN is a fully managed service that establishes secure connections between your on-premises networks and AWS resources using IPsec tunnels. Each VPN connection includes two tunnels, each terminating in a different availability zone, to provide increased availability to your VPC. If there's a device failure within AWS, your VPN connection automatically fails over to the second tunnel so that your access isn't interrupted. For globally distributed applications, the accelerated Site-to-Site VPN option provides even greater performance by working with AWS Global Accelerator to intelligently route your traffic to the nearest AWS network endpoint with the best performance. AWS Site-to-Site VPN supports both static and dynamic routing options, including BGP peering, to give you flexibility in your routing configuration. It also supports NAT traversal, allowing you to use private IP addresses on private networks behind routers with a single public IP address.
    Starting Price: $0.05 per hour
  • 7
    Amazon Virtual Private Cloud

    Amazon Virtual Private Cloud

    Amazon Web Services

    Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC) is a service that lets you launch AWS resources in a logically isolated virtual network that you define. You have complete control over your virtual networking environment, including selection of your own IP address range, creation of subnets, and configuration of route tables and network gateways. You can use both IPv4 and IPv6 for most resources in your virtual private cloud, helping to ensure secure and easy access to resources and applications. As one of AWS's foundational services, Amazon VPC makes it easy to customize your VPC's network configuration. You can create a public-facing subnet for your web servers that have access to the internet. It also lets you place your backend systems, such as databases or application servers, in a private-facing subnet with no internet access.
  • 8
    AWS Global Accelerator
    AWS Global Accelerator is a networking service that helps you improve the availability, performance, and security of your public applications. Global Accelerator provides two global static public IPs that act as a fixed entry point to your application endpoints, such as Application Load Balancers, Network Load Balancers, Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) instances, and elastic IPs. Take advantage of the performance, security, and availability of the AWS Global Infrastructure to onboard your user traffic at one of the Global Accelerator edge locations. Users can access your application endpoints through static IP addresses to enjoy deterministic routing independent of DNS.
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