SideLinQ for Android
A native Android app is in development. Auto-connect, widgets, split tunneling, and always-on mode — all without third-party clients.
Planned features
Auto-connect
Automatically connects on device boot and reconnects when switching between Wi-Fi and mobile data.
Home screen widget
One-tap connect/disconnect widget for your home screen. See connection status at a glance.
Split tunneling
Choose which apps go through SideLinQ and which use your direct connection.
No third-party client
No need for HAPP or other apps — everything in one native application.
Always-on
Keep the connection active at all times. Automatically reconnects if the connection drops.
Use SideLinQ right now
While the Android app is in development, you can get your link via Telegram and connect using HAPP.
Connect via Telegram →Common questions
What Android version is required? +
How will the app be distributed? +
When will it launch? +
Do I need a separate subscription? +
Other platforms
Why the Android app matters
People searching for SideLinQ on Android usually want the same thing: secure access that feels native on a phone, not a setup that requires repeated manual steps. That is why this page should do more than say “coming soon.” It should clearly explain what the Android app is expected to deliver: faster connection control, better background behavior, easier network switching, and more flexible routing for different apps on the same device.
Android is also where features like split tunneling, always-on mode, and quick widgets make a big practical difference. A native app gives users more control over how SideLinQ fits into their daily device usage, especially if they want some apps protected while leaving others on the direct connection.
What works today
The service is already available today through the Telegram bot and HAPP client. Users can receive a personal connection link, import it, and start using SideLinQ immediately while the native Android app is still in development. That means the page can target Android-related intent without misleading people into thinking the whole service is unavailable right now.
It also helps set the expectation for the launch: the Android app is meant to improve the user experience, not replace the product or create a separate subscription model. Existing subscribers should be able to move into the native app without re-buying access or learning a new account flow.
Who this page is for
This page now serves people looking for SideLinQ for Android, a secure access app for mobile, or a simpler way to connect through Telegram until the native release is ready. By explaining both the future Android experience and the already working Telegram path, it covers more real search intent than a minimal launch stub.
That makes it more useful to users and more defensible from an SEO standpoint. It adds substance, intent coverage, and clearer product positioning without pretending the Android app is already live.