Networking, refined.
A private network you run yourself. Every device you own — and every network they're already on — joined into one secure overlay. Built on WireGuard. No cloud account. No telemetry.
Wait, what is this?
Think of UTM as your own private internet. Every device you add can reach every other device — at home, at the office, in the field — no matter where in the world they are or what network they're on. Nobody outside the people you've invited can see any of it. You run it. You own it. Nothing leaves it unless you say so.
What you can do with it
Whatever you'd want a network for — minus the third party in the middle.
Your stuff, from anywhere
Get to your home computer, NAS, security cameras, or smart-home gear from a coffee shop, an airport, or another country. As if you were sitting in your living room.
Your team, one network
Remote employees, multiple offices, contractors. Everyone reaches the same internal tools the same way — no extra logins, no external service in the path.
Your services, hosted by you
Run chat, file shares, dashboards, maps, game servers. They work for every device you own without renting space from someone else's cloud.
Your gear, finally talking
Tactical radio meshes, industrial sensors, equipment on remote sites. Plug a UTM node in and the whole network joins your overlay automatically.
Friends and family, privately connected
Share your photos, files, Plex library, or printer with people you trust — in different houses or different cities. Nothing of yours ever touches a public service to make it work.
Private game servers, no port forwarding
Host a Minecraft, Valheim, or whatever-they're-playing-this-month server. Only people you invite to your mesh can connect. No router config, no public exposure.
Developer environments, always reachable
Your dev box, staging server, or build machine — accessible the same way whether you're at your desk or on a plane. No "I can only test this from the office" anymore.
Multiple sites, one network
Head office, warehouse, satellite location. Devices at each site reach the others as if they were all in the same building. No enterprise router contract required.
Smart home, off the public internet
Cameras, sensors, smart-home hubs that you can reach from anywhere — but the public internet can't see at all. Much safer than poking holes through your router.
What's in the box
Fully self-hosted. Feature-rich. Actually easy to set up. That combination is rare.
Everything on one network
Laptops, phones, servers, and even other mesh networks all live on the same private overlay. One namespace, one set of addresses, no per-service network setup.
Works on networks that usually don't
Carrier NAT, restrictive firewalls, same-LAN connectivity quirks — UTM finds a working path automatically. No router config, no port forwarding, no "works on my Wi-Fi" surprises.
Bring other meshes in
Plug a UTM node into a Silvus radio or any other isolated network and the whole subnet joins your overlay. The mesh that connects to other meshes.
Stays up when things break
Run more than one coordinator and the network keeps going if one is down. New coordinators join with a single command. No single point of failure.
Permissions that match how your team works
Open by default so things just connect. Switch on role-based rules when you need to control who can talk to whom — your engineers, your admins, your guests.
Updates that just happen
One click pushes a new version to your coordinator and every connected device. If a release goes sideways, roll back instantly to the previous one.
Real apps, not browser tabs
A proper admin window and a per-device window — installed like normal applications, sitting in your dock or taskbar. No tab to lose, no SaaS dashboard to log into.
Yours to install anywhere
Every release is one self-contained download. Carry it on a USB stick, install it on an airgapped network, run it on the road. No internet required after install.
See everything from one screen
An admin window shows every device on your network at a glance — who's connected, who they're talking to, what they're running. No log-diving. No per-device debugging. Just a clean view of the whole thing.
Why choose UTM
- Your network, your hardware. No external service in the path. No third party that has to be trusted with your topology, your members, or your traffic patterns.
- Less to manage. One overlay covers every device, every site, every link — including ones you don't normally think of as IP networks. Self-hosted services (chat, file shares, maps, sensors) reach every node automatically.
- Faster, more reliable comms. Direct peer-to-peer paths when possible, no SaaS round-trip, no dependency that can be denied or rate-limited.
- You decide when it changes. Updates ship when you click, not when somebody else pushes. Roll back if you don't like what you got.
Ready to set up your first mesh?
Coordinator on Linux. Agents on Linux and Windows today. Apple platforms coming.