You log in like you always do.
Same device. Same password.
Then suddenly — “Foreign login detected.”
You didn’t travel. You didn’t move.
So why does the system think you’re overseas?
This Isn’t About Geography — It’s About IP Signals
When you use a VPN, your visible IP address changes.
To the platform, that new IP may look like:
- A different country
- A high-risk region
- A shared data center location
- An anonymized proxy network
That’s when the “overseas login warning” appears.
It doesn’t mean someone hacked you.
It means your VPN foreign access triggered a location mismatch.
Why It Gets Flagged Immediately
Security systems compare three things in seconds:
- Previous login country
- Current IP region
- Behavior consistency
- Device fingerprint
If yesterday you logged in from Chicago
and today your VPN server shows Romania —
That’s enough for a suspicious location login flag.
Even if it’s you.
What To Do Right Now
- Turn off the VPN and log in once from your real location
- Complete any identity verification prompt
- Avoid switching VPN servers repeatedly
- Wait 12–24 hours before retrying access
Most foreign login detected warnings clear automatically after normal login behavior resumes.
When It Doesn’t Clear
If access remains restricted after 24–48 hours,
it’s no longer just an IP issue.
That’s when you contact support and confirm:
- No unauthorized access occurred
- You were using a VPN at the time
- Your device and location are consistent
In most cases, this isn’t a punishment.
It’s a temporary security response to VPN foreign access signals.
Once the system sees stable login behavior again, the warning disappears.