The first thing people try after a Pure app ban is turning on a VPN and creating a new email. But this approach almost never leads to a successful Pure unban. According to PureHelper service data, in 94% of ban cases changing the IP address has zero effect.
How Pure Tracks Banned Users
Pure uses sophisticated tracking that goes far beyond IP addresses. When you get banned on Pure, the system records a multi-layered device fingerprint:
- SSAID/IDFA — unique hardware identifiers that survive factory reset on most Android devices (see Android Developers — User data IDs)
- On iOS — IDFA restricted by Apple App Tracking Transparency, but Apple ID compensates
- Behavioral biometrics — swipe speed, typing patterns, delays between actions
- Linked email addresses, phone numbers and payment history
"VPN changes only one of 40+ parameters," explains Alex, an unban specialist with 4 years of experience. "Pure recognizes the same device fingerprint regardless of IP."
Why VPN Does Not Work for Pure Unban
A VPN only changes your IP address, but a Pure app device ban is tied to your device identity via SSAID, behavioral biometrics, and account history. Even with a new IP, Pure recognizes the same device and maintains the ban. This is why DIY Pure ban appeal methods from forums typically fail.
What Actually Works?
To successfully remove Pure app ban, you need to address all tracking vectors simultaneously. This requires understanding the exact ban type and applying the right restoration method — PureHelper specialists handle this daily.
Summary: VPN changes only 1 of 40+ parameters Pure tracks. PureHelper neutralizes all fingerprint layers simultaneously, with a 79-87% success rate across 3,000+ cases in 2025. Contact PureHelper for a free ban diagnosis.