Protect a server in Bangkok, Chiang Mai, or Phuket without moving it. Traffic is scrubbed at our Singapore edge — the nearest in-region scrubbing point to Thailand — over self-serve GRE / VXLAN / WireGuard tunnels or real BGP sessions, with sub-second mitigation and no cross-ocean detour to a US or EU scrubbing center. Free trial, per-hour billing, from $25/mo.
Sucura protects Thailand-hosted servers and networks by scrubbing attack traffic at our Singapore edge — the nearest in-region scrubbing point to Bangkok, typically around 25–35ms depending on your carrier and route. That keeps mitigation in-region instead of backhauling your traffic to a distant US or EU scrubbing center, which can add 150–250ms or more. Setup is self-service — a GRE, VXLAN, or WireGuard tunnel, or a real BGP session — with sub-second mitigation, a free trial, and per-hour billing from $25/mo.
Backhauling Thai attack traffic to a US or EU scrubbing center can add 150-250ms or more. We scrub at the nearest in-region edge — Singapore — so Thailand stays fast.
Filtering happens at the Singapore edge — the nearest scrubbing point to Bangkok — not on another continent. Clean traffic takes the shortest regional path back to Thailand.
Announce your own IP space (BYOIP) from Thailand, or take a protected IP over a tunnel — deployed yourself in the panel, no sales gate.
Spin up a protected tunnel on a trial and convert it to a paid subscription in place — no teardown, no long contract.
Pay by the hour or $0.05/GB scrubbed, not a $3,000/mo enterprise minimum. Transparent USD pricing.
Clean-traffic tiers in USD. Usage-based scrubbing at $0.05/GB, hourly billing available. All tiers include L3/L4/L7 mitigation, GRE/VXLAN/WireGuard tunnels or BGP, and sub-second detection.
Two ways to route your Thailand traffic through the Singapore scrubbing edge — both self-service in the Nexus panel.
Terminate a protected tunnel from our Singapore edge to your origin server in Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Phuket, or anywhere else in Thailand. You get a clean, protected IP; attack traffic is filtered before it reaches you. Works on Linux and Windows.
Announce your own /24 to AS398999 over a session to our Singapore edge. Inbound traffic for your Thai IP space routes through our scrubbing network first, and clean traffic returns over the tunnel. IRR and RPKI aware.
Volumetric SYN/UDP/ICMP floods are dropped at the edge; application-layer (L7) abuse — bot checkout traffic, credential-stuffing, HTTP floods — is filtered with protocol-aware rules. Always-on, no manual toggling.
Arena of Valor (RoV), Valorant, Free Fire, and FiveM servers hosted in Thailand stay online under attack. Protocol-aware filtering keeps real players connected while floods are absorbed at the Singapore edge.
Singapore is the nearest in-region scrubbing edge to Thailand — short regional paths, no cross-ocean detour, real self-service tooling.
Thailand sits on the same regional cable systems that connect Southeast Asia to Singapore, including routes such as AAE-1 and MCT. That proximity is why Bangkok-to-Singapore latency typically runs ~25-35ms depending on carrier and path, rather than the 150-250ms+ of a US or EU detour.
Generic cloud DDoS services often backhaul traffic to a scrubbing center in North America or Europe. We scrub at the Singapore edge instead, so Thailand traffic isn't detoured across an ocean before clean traffic is delivered back.
Not a quote-gated enterprise product. Deploy tunnels and BGP yourself over our own AS398999 network, whether your uplink runs through AIS, True, 3BB, or another Thai carrier.
Game servers, VPS, dedicated hosts, e-commerce sites, or your own IP space — protect infrastructure in Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Phuket, or anywhere else in the country without migrating it.
Common questions about anti-DDoS for Thailand-hosted servers and networks.
At our Singapore edge — the nearest in-region scrubbing point to Bangkok. Regional routes typically put Bangkok-to-Singapore latency around 25–35ms depending on your carrier and path, versus the 150–250ms or more that gets added when a provider backhauls Thai traffic to a scrubbing center in the US or Europe. Attack traffic is filtered in Singapore before it can saturate your Thai uplink, and clean traffic returns over the shortest available regional path.
Yes. Your server stays exactly where it is — Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Phuket, or anywhere else in Thailand — and inbound traffic is routed to it through a GRE, VXLAN, or WireGuard tunnel terminated at our Singapore edge, or you announce your own IP space via BGP. Arena of Valor (RoV), Valorant, Free Fire, and FiveM servers are common use cases; there is no migration and no need to re-point your player base to a different region.
We won't promise an exact millisecond figure, because real latency depends on your carrier, route, and time of day. What we can say honestly is that scrubbing happens at the nearest in-region edge — Singapore — not on a different continent, so you avoid the large 150–250ms penalty of US- or EU-based scrubbing. Most Bangkok-to-Singapore routes run in the ~25–35ms range, which is a modest add for most real-time games and far better than a cross-ocean detour.
Yes. The same GRE/VXLAN/WireGuard tunnel or BGP setup that protects game servers works for web and e-commerce origins. Layer 3/4 volumetric floods — SYN, UDP, ICMP — are dropped at the Singapore edge, and Layer 7 application-layer abuse aimed at checkout pages, login forms, or APIs is filtered separately, so legitimate shoppers and staff keep access while the flood is absorbed upstream.
It doesn't require anything from your ISP. Whether your server's uplink runs through AIS, True, 3BB, or another Thai carrier, you either run a tunnel from that connection to our Singapore edge or announce your own IP block over BGP to AS398999. Your existing ISP just carries the tunnel or BGP session like any other traffic — the actual filtering happens on our network, not theirs.
Plans start at $25/mo for 100 Mbps of clean capacity and scale to $500/mo for 5 Gbps, all in USD. Usage-based scrubbing is $0.05/GB, and billing can run per-hour. You can start a free trial self-service in the Nexus panel and convert it to a paid subscription in place, with no teardown.
2 Tbps+ of scrubbing capacity across our global anycast network with sub-second (under 1s) detection and mitigation. Frankfurt, Singapore and Toronto anchor the three-continent footprint.
Deploy a protected tunnel or BGP session at the Singapore edge in minutes — free trial, per-hour billing.
One anycast anti-DDoS network across three continents.