Tor By Country

Using Tor in Turkey During Internet Shutdowns

Turkey has a long history of internet censorship, from blocking Wikipedia for over two years to throttling social media during political crises and natural disasters. The government uses its control over internet service providers to impose blocks on websites, social media platforms, and VPN services, particularly during elections, protests, and national emergencies. Tor is a vital tool for Turkish citizens seeking uncensored information.

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Internet Censorship in Turkey

Turkey's internet censorship is governed by Law No. 5651, which gives the Information and Communication Technologies Authority (BTK) broad powers to block websites and content. Over 400,000 websites have been blocked in Turkey, including Wikipedia (blocked 2017-2020), various social media platforms during crisis events, and thousands of news outlets deemed critical of the government.

During the 2023 earthquakes, the Turkish government throttled Twitter and other social media platforms where citizens were sharing criticism of the government's disaster response. Similar social media throttling occurred during the 2016 coup attempt, the 2015 Ankara bombings, and numerous protests. The pattern is clear: when public discourse becomes inconvenient for the government, the internet is restricted.

Turkey also blocks many VPN services, though enforcement is inconsistent. The BTK has targeted popular VPN providers by blocking their IP ranges and intercepting their DNS queries. Tor's public relays are periodically blocked, particularly during politically sensitive periods, making pluggable transports necessary for reliable access.

Recommended Tor Configuration for Turkey

Turkey's censorship infrastructure is less sophisticated than China's or Iran's, meaning simpler circumvention methods often work. However, during active crackdowns, you should be prepared with pluggable transports:

Snowflake: Works reliably in Turkey and is the recommended first option. Snowflake connections are typically established within seconds, and the transport maintains stable performance even during social media throttling events. Enable Snowflake in Tor Browser's connection settings.

obfs4 Bridges: Both public and private obfs4 bridges generally work in Turkey. During normal periods, even the default built-in bridges in Tor Browser may function. During active blocking events, switch to private bridges obtained from bridges.torproject.org or via email to [email protected].

Direct Connection: Outside of active censorship events, Tor may connect directly without bridges in Turkey. Tor Browser will automatically detect whether bridges are needed and suggest them if a direct connection fails. However, using bridges proactively is recommended to avoid your ISP logging that you connected to a known Tor relay.

VPN + Tor Combination for Turkey

For Turkish users, combining a VPN with Tor provides both circumvention and privacy benefits. A VPN masks your Tor usage from your ISP and the BTK's monitoring systems, while Tor provides anonymity that the VPN alone cannot guarantee.

Choose a VPN provider based outside Turkey that does not comply with Turkish government data requests. Providers based in the EU, Iceland, or Switzerland are good options. Ensure the VPN supports obfuscation features, as Turkey periodically blocks standard VPN protocols like OpenVPN and WireGuard by identifying their traffic signatures.

During total internet shutdowns — which Turkey has imposed on specific regions, particularly in Kurdish-majority areas — neither VPNs nor Tor will function. In these situations, satellite internet services or cross-border Wi-Fi connections near land borders may provide the only internet access. Once connectivity is restored, Tor with Snowflake is typically among the fastest tools to resume operation.

Deploy Tor-Hosted Content with AnubizHost

If you operate a news outlet, activist organization, or any service that Turkish users depend on, a .onion mirror hosted on AnubizHost ensures your content remains accessible regardless of what the BTK decides to block. Turkish censorship is unpredictable — sites can be blocked without warning and without legal basis — so proactive Tor hosting is the best defense.

AnubizHost runs Tor hosting infrastructure on offshore servers in Iceland, Romania, and Finland, completely outside Turkish jurisdiction. We accept cryptocurrency payments including Bitcoin and Monero, require no KYC or identity verification, and enforce a strict no-logging policy across all servers.

Our infrastructure is optimized for Tor performance with NVMe storage, generous bandwidth, and automatic health monitoring. Deploy your .onion mirror in minutes and give Turkish users a censorship-proof path to your content. AnubizHost — because information should be accessible to everyone.

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