The interaction between the protein and surface plays an important role in biology and biotechnology. To understand how surface tethering influences the folding behavior of frustrated proteins, in this work, we systematically study the thermodynamics and folding kinetics of the bacterial immunity protein Im7 and Fyn SH3 domain tethered to a surface using Langevin dynamics simulations. Upon surface tethering, the stabilization often results from the entropic effect, whereas the destabilization is usually caused by either an energetic or entropic effect. For the Fyn SH3 domain with a two-state folding manner, the influence of nonnative interactions on thermodynamic stability is not significant, while nonnative interactions can weaken the effect of surface tethering on the change in the folding rate. By contrast, for the frustrated protein Im7, depending on where the protein is tethered, the surface tethering can promote or suppress misfolding by modulating specific nonnative contacts, thereby altering the folding rate and folding mechanism. Because surface tethering can change the intrachain diffusivity of unfolding, the kinetic stability cannot be well captured by the thermodynamic stability at some tether points. This study should be helpful in general to understand how surface tethering affects the folding energy landscape of frustrated proteins.