VNC Viewer, TightVNC and TigerVNC all speak the same open VNC protocol, so any of them can talk to the others. The differences are in features, platform focus and how actively each is developed. Here's an honest, practical comparison to help you choose.
The quick answer
If you're on Windows and want the richest feature set — file transfer, a service mode, encryption plugins and remote-support extras — VNC Viewer is usually the pick. If you want something minimal and cross-platform, TightVNC or TigerVNC are lean and dependable. TigerVNC in particular is popular in Linux and enterprise environments.
VNC Viewer: the Windows powerhouse
VNC Viewer is the most feature-complete option on Windows. It bundles two-way file transfer, an optional encryption plugin system, a Windows service mode for unattended access, and support-oriented tools like text chat.
- Best for: Windows-centric IT support and administration
- Strengths: features, service mode, encryption plugins
- Watch-outs: Windows-focused; secure setup takes a few steps
TightVNC: lightweight and simple
TightVNC earned its name from the 'Tight' encoding that reduces bandwidth. It's small, straightforward and available for Windows, with a Java viewer for other platforms.
- Best for: quick, no-frills remote control
- Strengths: small footprint, efficient encoding
- Watch-outs: fewer advanced features than VNC Viewer
TigerVNC: cross-platform and modern
TigerVNC is a high-performance, actively maintained fork with strong Linux support and good security options. It's a common choice in mixed or enterprise environments.
- Best for: Linux and cross-platform setups
- Strengths: performance, active development, TLS options
- Watch-outs: fewer Windows-specific extras than VNC Viewer
Side-by-side at a glance
| Factor | VNC Viewer | TightVNC | TigerVNC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary platform | Windows | Windows | Linux + cross-platform |
| File transfer | Yes | Limited | Varies |
| Service mode | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Encryption | Plugin (DSM) | Add-on / tunnel | TLS options |
| Feet-first simplicity | Moderate | High | Moderate |
Whichever you choose, the security fundamentals are identical: strong passwords, encryption, and no raw ports exposed to the internet. See our security guide.