You’ve probably read a hundred warnings about public Wi-Fi, and most of them haven’t been updated since 2015. The threats have changed since then. So have the defenses. Some of the advice you still hear is genuinely useful in 2026, some of it is harmless but pointless, and a small but important slice of it is actively misleading. Here’s what’s actually worth doing.
What’s changed since the old advice
The biggest shift is that almost all web traffic is now encrypted by default. According to Google’s own data on HTTPS adoption in Chrome, the percentage has been sitting in the 95-99% range since around 2020. That single change made the classic “someone is stealing your password at Starbucks” warning largely outdated, because the attacker on the coffee shop network can no longer read what’s inside an HTTPS connection.
What hasn’t gone away is the rest of the threat landscape. Attackers adapted. Evil twin networks — fake hotspots imitating legitimate ones — are now the most common public Wi-Fi threat, and CISA explicitly warns about them. DNS hijacking and malicious captive portals still work. This is where a VPN download from a reputable provider still genuinely matters: a VPN routes your traffic through an encrypted tunnel even if you accidentally connect to a malicious access point, so a fake “Hotel_Free_WiFi” can’t see which services you’re connecting to or redirect you to a spoofed login page. It isn’t a magic shield, but it neutralizes the threats public Wi-Fi is actually used for in 2026.
What works, what’s outdated, and what’s just noise
|
Advice |
Status in 2026 |
Why |
|
“Don’t do online banking on public Wi-Fi” |
Outdated |
Bank sites use HTTPS and certificate pinning. The real risk is your device, not the network. |
|
“Use a VPN on untrusted networks” |
Still works |
Encrypts traffic end-to-end and hides which services you’re connecting to. |
|
“Disable file sharing in public” |
Still works |
Prevents lateral attacks from other devices on the same network. |
|
“Verify the network name with staff” |
Still works |
The simplest defense against evil twin attacks. |
|
“Turn off Wi-Fi when not in use” |
Still works |
Prevents automatic reconnection to spoofed SSIDs. |
|
“Look for HTTPS in the URL” |
Half-true |
HTTPS is now default. Its absence is suspicious, but its presence alone is no guarantee. |
|
“Public Wi-Fi will steal your passwords” |
Outdated framing |
Misses the actual modern threats, which are phishing portals and device-level exploits. |
A useful way to think about this: in 2026, public Wi-Fi attacks are less about eavesdropping and more about redirection. The attacker doesn’t need to see your data — they need to send you somewhere fake.
A simple defensive routine
You don’t need a security degree. You need a short checklist you actually run:
- Confirm the network name with the venue every time
- Keep file sharing off unless you’re on a trusted home network
- Run a reputable VPN whenever you’re on a network you don’t control
- Keep your phone and laptop OS up to date — most modern attacks rely on unpatched devices
- Be skeptical of any captive portal that asks for more than basic login info
For the official US government guidance, CISA’s Securing Wireless Networks page is the cleanest reference and is updated regularly. If you also want to harden your accounts against the phishing attacks that often follow public Wi-Fi exposure, our piece on password spraying attacks is a useful next read.
The takeaway
The public Wi-Fi conversation has matured. The risks are real but specific, and the defenses are simpler than the doom-y articles suggest. Treat an untrusted network the way you’d treat a strange door: it’s probably fine, but you wouldn’t leave your wallet on the other side of it without thinking twice.


