How to Choose & Set Up Proxies for an Anti-Detect Browser: Step-by-Step Guide

· anonymous

An anti-detect browser hides your fingerprint, but your IP address tells its own story. If your fingerprint says “a phone in Berlin” while your IP says “a datacenter in Virginia,” you’ve defeated the whole point. This guide takes you from zero to a correctly configured proxy, step by step, with a provider reference table at the end.

The one rule everything follows

The proxy’s location and the profile’s fingerprint must agree. Anti-fraud systems cross-check the IP’s geo, timezone, ISP type and fraud score against the browser’s declared timezone, language and behavior. A clean, consistent IP that matches the account’s history beats the most exotic fingerprint settings. Keep this rule in mind through every step below.

Step 1 — Choose the proxy type

Pick based on what you’re protecting:

TypeLooks likeSpeedCostUse it for
Mobile (4G/5G)Real carrier user, shared via CGNATMedium$$$Strictest platforms — Facebook/Instagram ad accounts, account warming
ResidentialReal home ISP userMedium$$Most multi-accounting — media buying, SMM, e-commerce
ISP / static residentialResidential but server-hostedFast$$Long-term logged-in accounts — stores, aged accounts
DatacenterServer IP, easy to spotFast$Low-risk tasks, scraping easy targets, testing

Rule of thumb: the more valuable the account and the stricter the platform, the further up this table you go.

Step 2 — Choose the billing model

  • Per IP / month — you rent specific static IPs. Best for logged-in accounts you keep long-term (one steady IP per profile).
  • Per GB — you pay for traffic through a rotating pool. Best for scraping and short tasks where you spread requests across many IPs.

Buying per-GB residential for a logged-in account that should never change IP is a common, expensive mistake — and vice versa.

Step 3 — Rotating vs sticky

  • Sticky / static session — holds one IP for the life of the profile. Use it for any logged-in account, so the session never appears to jump countries mid-task.
  • Rotating — new IP on a schedule or per request. Use it for web scraping and data harvesting.

Match the mode to the job: stick for accounts, rotate for scraping.

Step 4 — Dedicated, and one per profile

Two non-negotiables for multi-accounting:

  1. Dedicated, not shared. A shared IP carries your neighbors’ reputation; if they get flagged, so do you. Pay for dedicated on accounts that matter.
  2. One proxy per profile. Reusing an IP across “different” accounts links them — exactly the pattern anti-Sybil and anti-fraud systems hunt for in airdrop farming, bonus hunting and account farming.

Step 5 — Pick a provider (2026 reference)

Two billing models, two tables. Prices move constantly and depend on volume and term — treat these as ballpark and confirm on the provider’s site.

Legend: DC = datacenter · Resi = residential · Mobile = mobile · shared = shared IP · premium = premium/private · v4 = IPv4 · v6 = IPv6 · API = automation-friendly. The (!) marker = community-flagged for questionable practices; test small first.

Billed per IP / month (best for sticky, logged-in accounts)

ProviderDatacenterResidentialMobileMinNotes
WebShare$0.018–0.03 shared$0.3–0.33 shared20–100cheapest entry; free tier
PapaProxy$0.07–0.191–500ISP/UPD $0.45–1.57
Proxy.market$0.05–0.38 v6, $0.39–0.58 v4 shared, $1.74–1.9 v4 premiumduration 3/30d
Oxylabs$0.75–1.2010free trial
Thordata$0.75–1.51ISP $0.75–1.5
BrightData$0.9–1.410ISP $1.3–1.8; up to 50% off (≤$500)
Proxy-Seller$0.9–3.3 v4, $0.02–1.6 v6$1.89–3$49–110 prem, $20–40 shared1term 7–365d
IPcook$1.11–1.210ISP $1.38–1.5
Proxy-Cheap$1.18–1.39 v4, $0.15–0.18 v6$1.27–1.49 v4, $0.52–0.64 v6$19–28.71term 7/30/365d
ProxyWing$1.25–21ISP $1.9–2.5
Proxymus$1.51
Proxy-store$1.4–2.6 shared1term 5/10/20/30d
IPRoyal$1.57–1.8$2.7–41real prices in dashboard
Cyberyozh$2.33–2.92$5.29$50–162 prem, $50 shared1
ASocks$0.3–0.9511 GB free for connecting Telegram
OkeyProxy$1.5–5$2.5–51term 7/30/90d
Evomi$1 shared, $2.5–4.5 premium5
RapidProxy$5
HypeProxy$4–5
SX$5$5$151unlimited traffic
IPFoxy$4.99 v4, $3.99 v6$7.991term 30–365d
BestProxy$7.8$101term 10/30/60d
FlyProxy$7.7$111term 10/30/60d
ProxyEmpire$2 + data$125–2501
FloppyDataISP from $5
IPLoop2M+ resi IPs, 195 countries, HTTP/SOCKS5, SDKs with TLS fingerprinting
LunaProxy (!)$4.51flagged — caution
922proxy (!)$5–61flagged — caution
AbcProxy (!)$4.5–6.5$5–6.51flagged — caution

Billed per GB (best for rotating / scraping)

ProviderDatacenterResidentialMobileNotes
Evomi$0.3–0.45$0.5–1$3.4–4cheap resi
OkeyProxy$0.35–1.6$0.64–2.483 GB min, 30-day validity
DataImpulse$0.5$1$2$5 min
Soax$0.4–0.6$1.5–3 (USA)$2–3.6
BrightData$0.4–0.6$2.9–4.2$5–8API
FloppyData$0.6$1$1
SX / ASocks$0.45–0.6$4.13–5.5$4.5–6
ProxyEmpire$0.4–0.6$3–7$4–9
IPRoyal$1.4–1.6$2.4–3.5$123/mo
GeoNode$0.5–3
Packetstream$1budget resi
WebShare$1.4–3.5free tier
Proxy.market$2–3.45$2.15–7
IPcook$0.5–3.2never-expiring traffic
Proxymus$4
Proxy-Cheap$2.99–3.49$3.59–4.19
Proxy-Seller$1.45–3.5$3.59–4.19
Oxylabs$3.5–4$7.5–9API
ProxyWing$2.5, $6 premium$7.5–9
NstProxy$1.8–5 v4, $0.4 v6$20 min
MangoProxy$0.5–5.2API
BestProxy$1.40–3API; expires 30–180d; unlim resi $68.33/day
IPFoxy$3–6
Cyberyozh$2.5–3.9
RapidProxy$1–2
IPLoop$0.5–1.50.5 GB free; SDKs with TLS fingerprinting
Thordata$0.65–3.5API; unlim resi $69–280/day
IpnProxy$2.25/day unlim$1.75+$2.75+ prem, $4.99+/day unlim+VPN, Google Maps scraper
FlyProxy$1.90–2.5$50 min; unlim resi $72.58–270/day; ISP $1.4–2.75; free 0.5 GB via support
AstroProxy$3.94+$7.87+$13.14+$3 min, 100 Mb/port, 30-day port, KYC required
LunaProxy (!)$0.77–3.3flagged; API; monthly sub; ISP $0.4–1.2; unlim $79–252
922proxy (!)$0.8–3.3flagged; sessions up to 120 min
AbcProxy (!)$0.77–3.3$1.2–3.4flagged; unlim resi $66/day

Free to start: WebShare and Oxylabs offer free datacenter/trial IPs; ProxyEmpire offers free data; ASocks gives 1 GB for connecting Telegram; IPLoop gives 0.5 GB free.

We review browsers, not proxy providers — this table is a reference, not an endorsement. Prices verified June 2026 and change frequently. Avoid flagged providers for anything valuable, and note some (e.g. AstroProxy) require KYC.

Step 6 — Test before you trust it

Never warm a real account on an untested IP. Run this 30-second check first:

  • Fraud / risk score is low (check with IPQualityScore or similar)
  • Geo, timezone and ISP type match what your profile claims
  • It’s flagged as residential/mobile, not datacenter (for strict platforms)
  • The IP isn’t already on a blocklist

Some browsers surface this in-app — for example Wade has built-in IPQS checks. A “residential” proxy with a high fraud score or mismatched timezone is worse than no proxy at all.

Step 7 — Add the proxy to a profile

The flow is the same in most anti-detect browsers: open the profile’s settings → Proxy → choose protocol (HTTP/HTTPS or SOCKS5) → paste host:port:user:passtest connection → save. Then set the profile’s timezone/geo to “based on IP” (or match it manually). Bind one proxy per profile, and import in bulk via Excel/CSV when setting up many at once.

Step 8 — Browsers that bundle proxy traffic

If you’d rather not buy proxies on day one, a few browsers include traffic: GoLogin bundles 2 GB of residential traffic on paid plans; Multilogin includes residential traffic and offers cloud mobile profiles; Wade has its own WADE Proxy network plus native TOR and SSH. Convenient to start, but for scale you’ll still bring your own.

Cheat sheet by niche

  • Facebook / TikTok media buying & ad-account farming: mobile or premium residential, sticky, dedicated.
  • E-commerce / dropshipping (Amazon, eBay): ISP / static residential, one stable IP per store.
  • Crypto airdrop & Sybil farming: clean residential, one dedicated IP per wallet/profile, geo-matched.
  • Web scraping & data harvesting: rotating residential (per-GB) for tough targets, datacenter for easy ones.
  • SMM / social growth on a budget: residential, sticky, dedicated where the platform is strict.

Recap

Match the IP’s geo and timezone to your fingerprint, use one sticky dedicated proxy per logged-in profile, rotate only when scraping, pick the billing model that fits the task, and always check the IP’s reputation before trusting an account to it. Do that and your anti-detect browser can finally do its job.


Written by anonymous, following our evaluation methodology.