You need to remove the default gateway that's being set by your VPN (you might have to ask your work's IT support guy, as it might be a setting that's pushed out from the VPN server). A temporary fix can be obtained as follows:
- Start a command prompt as administrator.
Check your current gateways with route print
(There will be a lot more, but this is the part you're looking for):
IPv4 Route Table
===========================================================================
Active Routes:
Network Destination Netmask Gateway Interface Metric
0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 XX.YY.48.1 XX.YY.50.199 20
0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 192.168.0.1 192.168.0.107 4000
10.254.254.252 255.255.255.252 On-link 10.254.254.253 286
(Your Metrics might be different, and your IPs will likely be different, but you can see I have two default gateways here (the 0.0.0.0
entries) One of them will correspond to your internet, and one will correspond to your VPN.)
- Delete the appropriate gateway with
route delete 0.0.0.0 <gateway>
. In this example, to delete the 192.168.0.1
gateway, we'd use route delete 192.168.0.1
Don't worry too much about making a mistake here; the routing table is regenerated every time you reboot the machine, or connect/disconnect from a network. If you get the wrong gateway and take down all of your internet, just reboot and reconnect.
This is only a temporary fix. Ideally, you'd contact your tech support at your work and ask him how to make the VPN stop pushing a default gateway. Another alternative is to adjust the metric of the VPN gateway, so that the system prefers the non-VPN connection (as you can see in the example, while I have two gateways, one is set with a really high metric (think "cost") to use it, and so the system only uses it if it has no other choice).
possible duplicate of How To Use Local Internet Connection To Access Internet While Still Connected with VPN and/or Windows 7 VPN how to not tunnel internet?
– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007 – 2011-12-14T20:56:05.473What type of vpn are you using? – Zoredache – 2011-12-15T03:15:55.447