Reach your NAS from outside without nasty surprises. This guide compares two common paths and shows where each makes sense.

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Overview

Remote access is convenient, but you should decide how to expose services with care. Port forwarding publishes a specific port on your router to the NAS. A VPN builds an encrypted tunnel and keeps services private on internal addresses.

What is port forwarding

A router maps an external port to an internal host and port. It is easy to set up and works with almost any device. The trade off is exposure: anyone on the internet can reach the service and attempt to sign in.

  • Simple to configure on most routers
  • No extra software needed on client devices
  • Highest exposure and frequent scanning by bots

What is a VPN

A VPN creates a private tunnel between your device and the office network. Once connected, you reach the NAS as if you were on site. This adds a sign in step at the network edge and reduces the attack surface.

  • Encrypts traffic end to end
  • Restricts who can even see the NAS
  • Requires a client app or router support

Comparison and risks

Port forwarding is fast to deploy but carries higher security risk. VPN takes a little more planning, but limits exposure and centralises access control.

  • Port forwarding - simple and direct, but vulnerable to password guessing and exploits if services are unpatched
  • VPN - extra step for users, but safer defaults and easier to audit
  • Both approaches still need strong passwords and updated DSM

When to use each

Choose based on how many users you have and what you are publishing.

  • Small family access to Photos - VPN preferred, keeps uploads private
  • Business file access - VPN or site to site, plus reverse proxy for selected apps
  • Temporary testing - limited port forward with strict firewall rules, then remove

Planning and prerequisites

Decide on addressing, DNS, and accounts before rollout.

  • Avoid overlapping subnets for site to site links
  • Create a VPN users group with least privilege
  • Use internal DNS names so laptops find the NAS cleanly

Setup outlines

Two quick paths work well for most homes and small offices.

  • Router VPN - configure a client or site to site tunnel on the router and test access to the NAS subnet
  • Synology VPN Server - enable the package, create profiles, distribute configs to users
  • If you must port forward - restrict to HTTPS only, use non default external ports, and enable auto block

Troubleshooting checklist

If a client connects but cannot see shares, focus on routing and DNS.

  • Confirm routes to the NAS subnet are pushed to clients
  • Check DNS suffix and search domain so hostnames resolve
  • Verify the NAS firewall allows the client subnet

FAQs

Quick answers for planning and sign off.

  • Will a VPN slow copies - minor overhead, usually acceptable
  • Do I need a static IP - dynamic DNS is fine for many homes
  • Can phones use VPN - yes with platform client apps

Need technical support or more detailed guidance? Please contact Synology via our Synology Support – Australia page. It includes ticket, Live Chat, warranty and downloads links.

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