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Proxy Market Research 2023

Welcome to this fifth edition of Proxy Market Research – an annual report on the proxy server industry. To this day, it remains the only public resource providing large-scale technical benchmarks and an all-around view of the leading proxy services. You can use it to learn more about the market, compare major providers, and make informed decisions concerning proxy server infrastructure. This year’s report covers 12 companies. They range from market leaders like Bright Data and Oxylabs to up-and-coming providers such as IPRoyal and Webshare. We overview five products, with a particular emphasis on residential and mobile proxy networks. Compared to the previous year, we’ve expanded the collaboration with proxy providers, asking them to complete a survey. The results are aggregated and presented in the section on market trends. We’ve also tried to make the report easier to navigate by making its different sections expandable. Finally, each section on a proxy type includes an evaluation graph for quick comparison; some may find them too opinionated, but there’s always hard data to fall back on.

The majority of data were collected in February and March of 2023.

Participants

Proxyway logo

This year’s research includes 12 proxy service providers. Together, they occupy the majority of the proxy server market – especially in the area of residential proxies.

We reviewed many of these companies in our previous researches. This allows us to track their progress over time. Infatica and Webshare participate for the first time.

The adjacent tabs provide brief summaries of each participant.

Bright Data logo

Backed by the equity fund EMK Capital, Bright Data is a juggernaut that offers all-inclusive proxy services anywhere in the world. The provider targets business customers and Fortune 500 companies, positions itself as an ethical proxy service, and has built a strong ecosystem of data collection tools around its proxy networks. Bright Data fights as fiercely in court as it does in the market.

  • Country: Israel
  • Founded: 2014
  • Proxy networks: datacenter, residential, ISP, mobile
  • Web scraping tools: general-purpose and search engine APIs, scraping browser, cloud web scraping IDE
  • Data services: datasets, e-commerce insights

GeoSurf is a market veteran that targets enterprise customers. A broad selection of cities and a residential VPN historically made it a popular choice among ad intelligence and localization companies. Nowadays, many of GeoSurf’s services are tailor-made for clients. The provider seemed to be struggling for the last few years, but it looks to be in a better place now.

  • Country: Israel
  • Founded: 2009
  • Proxy networks: residential, ISP
  • Web scraping tools: general-purpose API

A Singapore-based company with largely Eastern European staff, Infatica focuses on selling residential proxies to mid-range and enterprise clients. The provider was among the first to foreground ethics. It sources proxies via an SDK and offers them at very competitive enterprise prices.

  • Country: Singapore
  • Founded: 2019
  • Proxy networks: residential, datacenter
  • Web scraping tools: general-purpose API

IPRoyal made a name for itself with a range of affordable proxy services. Since 2021, it’s grown into a robust provider with a large client base. IPRoyal maintains its own residential proxy pool through an app called Pawns. For now, the provider focuses on the lower-mid end of the market, though it wouldn’t mind giving the premium competitors a run for their money.

  • Country: Lithuania
  • Founded: 2021
  • Proxy networks: datacenter, residential, ISP, mobile
  • Web scraping tools:

netnut-logo

A subsidiary of Safe-T group and one more participant from Israel. Originally the major provider of ISP proxies, the company now sells four rotating proxy networks to cover more ground. NetNut primarily targets enterprises with data collection needs and proxy resellers. It also used to actively participate in the sneakerhead niche via a daughter company Chi Proxies.

  • Country: Israel
  • Founded: 2018
  • Proxy networks: datacenter, residential, ISP, mobile
  • Web scraping tools:

Oxylabs logo

One of the market leaders, Oxylabs controls the largest datacenter, residential, and mobile IP networks today. In addition, the provider offers an arsenal of tools for extracting data from the web, some based on cutting edge AI & ML technology. Oxylabs targets mid-to-large businesses, wooing them with SLAs, insurance, and personalized support.

  • Country: Lithuania
  • Founded: 2015
  • Proxy networks: datacenter, residential, ISP, mobile
  • Web scraping tools: general-purpose, search engine, social media, and real estate APIs

One of the first bandwidth-sharing marketplaces, PacketStream has been a strong budget option and reseller’s choice for several years now. However, it’s experienced few changes since 2019, which has allowed competitors to mimic the provider’s business model and reduce the price gap. PacketStream’s overall package remains compelling today, but it’s starting to get long in the tooth.

  • Country: United States
  • Founded: 2018
  • Proxy networks: residential
  • Web scraping tools:

rayobyte logo

A self-proclaimed largest US proxy provider and a datacenter proxy powerhouse. Started as Blazing SEO, the company rebranded in 2022 to show the extended scope of its services and target audience. Rayobyte currently tries to build its own ethically-minded residential proxy pool and aims to become a one-stop-shop for any data collection professional.

  • Country: United States
  • Founded: 2015
  • Proxy networks: datacenter, residential, ISP, mobile
  • Web scraping tools: general-purpose API

A long-standing proxy provider, Shifter built its client base by solving the major limitation of residential IP networks – traffic limits, basing the pricing on ports instead. The provider targets business clients and resellers that can afford paying hundreds to thousands of dollars for increasingly unlimited access.

  • Country: United Kingdom
  • Founded: 2015
  • Proxy networks: datacenter, residential, ISP
  • Web scraping tools: general-purpose and search engine APIs

The third major player beside Bright Data and Oxylabs, Smartproxy found its fame by offering a highly balanced rotating proxy service. Though considered a premium provider, Smartproxy emphasizes value and ease of use: it offers top-shelf quality while cutting fringe features to reduce the price. Recently, the company has been building tools to capture more value from its proxy networks.

  • Country: International
  • Founded: 2018
  • Proxy networks: datacenter, residential, mobile
  • Web scraping tools: general-purpose, search engine, e-commerce, and social media APIs, no code scraper
  • Other tools: antidetect browser

Similarly to Infatica, SOAX is a provider with Eastern-European roots and international presence. It sells residential and mobile IPs to SMBs and enterprises. As a company, SOAX invests a lot into company branding, makes big yearly performance improvements, and has one of the best starting packages in terms of features.

  • Country: UK
  • Founded: 2019
  • Proxy networks: residential, ISP, mobile
  • Web scraping tools: general-purpose API

Webshare

One of the newer companies on our roster, Webshare supplies individuals and SMBs with all kinds of proxy servers. Its polished self-service flow and extreme customizability have made the provider an increasingly popular destination – so much so that Webshare reached 10,000+ active customers and was acquired by Oxylabs in 2022.

  • Country: US
  • Founded: 2018
  • Proxy networks: datacenter, residential, ISP
  • Web scraping tools:

Market Trends

This section provides an overview of the proxy server market. It’s based on our own market knowledge, as well as responses from a survey we sent to all participating providers. You’ll learn about the current state of the industry, popular proxy types and use cases, and possible directions for the future.

State of the Market: Fast Growth, Cautious Optimism about the Future

  • 2022 was a great year across the board, with providers like IPRoyal and Webshare growing multiple times, and the largest players now having hundreds of employees under their belts.
  • The barrier to entry remains low thanks to mobile proxies, but the competition is toughest in the enterprise, and we may start seeing market consolidation.
  • Economic uncertainty hasn’t affected the participants yet; some believe this will continue, while others claim to be ready to weather possible storms.
Proxies, and the data extraction industry at large, have been on a growth spurt for years now. There’s no need to look far for proof – observing the major proxy providers is enough. In December 2021, Bright Data cleared the 100 million revenue mark, with a team that grew thrice in three years. Oxylabs has over 300 employees (30% yearly growth), and Smartproxy employs over a hundred. The providers that claim to serve enterprises are becoming enterprises themselves. That’s not to mention the newer entrants which have successfully found their place under the sun. SOAX and IPRoyal, both scrappy newcomers just a few years ago, today have a well-defined business presence, their own proxy networks, and conferences to attend around the world.
employee count

In our survey, IProyal reported tenfold growth in data usage compared to 2021. Webshare, which runs on self-service and inbound marketing channels, doubled its revenue in 2022 and introduced new proxy types. NetNut, whose money was hemorrhaged by legal disputes and infrastructure investments, has managed to become profitable again. Rayobyte’s residential proxy product took off, and GeoSurf hired additional people to build customized solutions for its clients. It was a good year across the board. 

When asked about competition, most participants believed that it had increased. However, they didn’t necessarily treat it as a bad thing. According to Webshare, many are resellers who will have a hard time scaling down the road. GeoSurf noticed that the number of providers returned to its starting position after growing early in the year. The majority found it hardest to compete in the enterprise segment.

market competition
Rayobyte raised a point that we also share: the industry is reaching a consolidation stage, and we should soon start seeing mergers and acquisitions. Several have already taken place: NetNut owns ChiProxies, and Oxylabs acquired Webshare in what we’re sure was an eye-watering deal. We expect to see at least one more high-caliber acquisition in 2023. At the same time, the technical threshold for entering the market remains low, maybe even lower than it’s been for years. We have to thank the availability of 4G/5G proxy software and hardware for that. The real challenge for now lies in finding and retaining clients by occupying the niches that major providers ignore. The broader economic outlook for 2023 is one of uncertainty. So far, however, it has yet to affect any participants; some think this will continue to be the case, while others are more cautious. Even then, they believe that data infrastructure is one of the last resources to be cut, and they’re ready to weather possible storms. Defying all broader predictions, Webshare expects to double its growth for the second year in a row. Ambitious indeed.

Market Direction: Up, Up but Not Away from Proxies

  • Providers have been expanding horizontally, but they’ve placed the most focus on releasing APIs to cover the web scraping (and to some extent, data parsing) stages of the data extraction lifecycle.
  • The participants have high hopes for their new tools, expecting fewer companies to run in-house scrapers in the future.
  • Despite this, they have no plans to discontinue selling proxies, though proxy servers in their raw form may support fewer use cases.

Growing fast in a booming industry, proxy providers naturally want to capture as much of it as possible. In addition to increasing market penetration with existing products, there are two ways to accelerate growth: horizontal and vertical expansion. 

Horizontal expansion allows providers to boost their addressable audience through new proxy products. We saw multiple companies bolster their line-ups in 2022: 

Datacenter Mobile ISP Residential
NetNut
Oxylabs ✅ (rotating)
Rayobyte ✅ (rotating)
Shifter ✅ (fast & on-demand rotation plans)
Smartproxy ✅ (IP-based shared)
Webshare

That being said, proxy servers are a resource, and they occupy only a small portion of the data extraction lifecycle. Having accumulated more manpower, expertise, and financial leeway, providers have increasingly started moving up the data value chain. 

data extraction lifecycle oxylabs
The data extraction lifecycle according to Oxylabs.

So far, the focus is on addressing the scraping (and, to some extent, parsing) stages with APIs and smart proxy networks like Zyte’s Smart Proxy Manager. This makes sense from multiple perspectives: the provider can save resources by better optimizing the scraping logic, while developers have an easier time accessing websites behind toughening protection systems. 

The expansion to APIs has been going on for some time now, but it especially accelerated during the last year. Infatica, Oxylabs, Shifter, Smartproxy, and SOAX all launched new products within that time frame. Today, only four out of the 12 participants offer no web scraping tools, with one of them (NetNut) planning to introduce something in the near future. 

Available web scraping products (* – released in 2022-2023)

Bright Data General-purpose, search engine APIs, cloud scraping IDE*, scraping browser API*, datasets*, e-commerce insights*
GeoSurf General-purpose API*
Infatica General-purpose API*
IPRoyal
NetNut
Oxylabs General-purpose (incl. proxy-like Web Unblocker*), search engine, e-commerce, real estate* APIs
PacketStream
Rayobyte General-purpose, Google, Amazon APIs
Shifter General-purpose*, search engine* APIs
Smartproxy General-purpose*, search engine, e-commerce*, social media* APIs, no-code scraper*
SOAX General-purpose API*
Webshare
As is often the case, Bright Data has gone the furthest in the process. In 2022, it started offering pre-collected data sets. And after the purchase of Market Beyond, the company entered into data analytics by launching Bright Insights. With these two moves, Bright Data effectively covered the full data extraction value chain.
bright data product layers
Bright Data's illustration from March 2022. The circle has expanded since with another layer for data insights.

Providers have high expectations for the new tools. All survey participants expected their usage share to grow in relation to proxies, forecasting that fewer companies will run in-house scrapers in the future. Bright Data’s scraper, Web Unlocker, was already the driving force in 2022. The provider also places high bets on data sets and on-request scrapers, as companies look to cut operational costs in the face of economic uncertainty. (According to Bright Data, 30% of IT budgets go to unstructured data management.) 

Despite this trend, proxies are going nowhere. Every respondent identified their role as corefoundational, or at least significant, with no plans to remove them from product portfolios. At the same time, most have plans to further build upon proxy networks, which may impact the ways how clients can use raw proxy servers (for example, by reducing the number of available targets). 

Proxy Types: Residential IPs Remain the Most Popular Product

  • Only two providers, Webshare and Rayobyte, have non-residential proxies as their dominant proxy type.
  • The demand for ISP proxies is largely covered by specialized vendors in the sneaker scalping niche.
  • We believe that major providers currently under-utilize mobile device farms, which have a thriving market in online communities.

When we interviewed Bright Data a year ago, we found that datacenter and residential proxies took 95% of the provider’s proxy use. In other words, the other two types, ISP and mobile proxies, were used only 5% of the time. This remains true a year later, with datacenter proxies being favored by budget-conscious customers and residential proxies seeing the most popularity with enterprises. 

What about the other survey participants? In all but two cases, residential proxies proved to be the most popular proxy type. One exception was Webshare, which sold only datacenter IPs until very recently; its shared proxies generated three quarters of the revenue. The second was Rayobyte, which specializes in datacenter proxies and experienced steady growth. 

most popular proxy type
These findings cause little surprise, and they confirm the survey we ran with Proxyway’s visitors back in October. At the same time, they raise questions whether mobile and ISP proxies really are such niche products or if their demand is better met by smaller and specialized proxy services. The situation with ISP proxies is interesting. One of their primary use cases, managing multiple accounts, is successfully covered by mobile addresses. The other, item scalping, faces tough competition in the sneaker niche, where specialized proxy sellers consistently manage to cook up excellent IPs from major internet service providers. Still, this proxy type has potential, and Webshare with Rayobyte both pointed to its growth.
hype proxies microsoft ISP addresses
Some of the ISP proxies specialized providers manage to procure.
The number of businesses operating mobile proxy farms remains high, and some have experienced significant success. Yet, most major providers either refuse to adopt them or, at best, intermingle dongle-hosted IPs with their peer-to-peer mobile addresses. IPRoyal is the only participant that sells such proxies in their most popular unlimited traffic configuration, while Rayobyte runs a fast-rotation network for web scraping. Proxy sourcing challenges might play a role here. With IPv4 prices so high, buying datacenter proxies is much easier than maintaining them in-house; the acquisition process of residential addresses is both demanding and legally challenging. Currently, the most acceptable sourcing method is via bandwidth-sharing apps, but they require too much effort for minor market participants and in-house data infrastructure. On the other hand, the barrier to entry for mobile proxy farms is low, so it’s relatively simple to build a device fleet for internal use or set up sufficient infrastructure for reselling. It won’t be easy to scale, but the myriad of providers that serve individuals or small businesses don’t need thousands of devices to turn a profit. We believe this is one area that the major players currently underserve.

Use Cases: E-Commerce Reigns Supreme, Data for AI Makes an Appearance

  • E-commerce is the largest business vertical for most providers, sometimes generating up to 50% of their business.
  • Aside from declining sneaker proxy sales, there have been no major changes in 2022.
  • Several participants identified data for decisions-as-a-service businesses as a potentially big (even enormous!) use case.
Proxy servers have various uses, many of which we listed last year. However, their distribution isn’t equal, meaning that some use cases, targets, and, by extension, products that work best with them, naturally dominate the provider’s marketing and technical resources. As we discovered from our own experience, surveys, and third-party data from sources like Apify (which published an excellent report on the state of web scraping earlier this year), e-commerce data collection is currently the dominant use case for proxy servers. To give you some concrete data, it constitutes 40% of Rayobyte’s and 50% of Infatica’s business, whereas the number of SOAX’s e-commerce users spiked by 32% in 2022.
use_cases

We asked the survey participants to list between three and five of their top industries. The other oft-mentioned use cases were digital marketing (including SEO), cybersecurity, ad verification, account management, and generic web data extraction. In brief, all the usual suspects.

The survey also included a question about changes that took place in 2022. Half of the respondents reported no major changes, other than the overall increase in demand. NetNut mentioned a drop in sneaker scalping, which we’ll get to in a second. Bright Data managed to unlock the financial services industry and expects it to continue growing fast.

Looking into the future, one use case that has inevitably surfaced is data for AI models. SOAX named this emerging business model Decisions-as-a-Service, where technologies like ChatGPT help people get quick and simple answers to their questions. Multiple surveyed providers emphasized the need for accurate and large-scale data to train these models. To rephrase Oxylabs, the potential in this space for data collection companies is enormous. 

(Not Quite) a Post Mortem: The State of Sneaker Scalping

  • The decline in sneaker scalping has affected all members of the ecosystem, hitting bot prices and forcing some proxy vendors to expand their audiences.
  • Nike and Shopify stores remain the two websites worth targeting.
  • Despite the shrinking market, thousands of users continue to visit our sneaker-related pages every month.

Last year, we wrote about the hard times that had befallen the sneaker botting industry. Pressured by tightening website defenses and fewer releases, sneakerheads were leaving for more profitable avenues like GPUs, consoles, and NFTs. What has happened since then, and where does the niche stand in 2023? In brief, it’s trudging along, but changes had to be made by all members of the ecosystem. 

First, sneakerheads no longer target the same websites. The former bread baskets, Yeezy Supply and Footsites, have both fallen off. Yeezy Supply is gone due to a series of unprofitable drops and recent Kanye scandals, whereas Footsites have largely transitioned to raffle releases and no longer offer the generous stocks they used to. At this point, Nike and around a dozen Shopify stores remain the targets worth the effort. 

The prices of most sneaker bots have tanked. Past faves like Cybersole now cost hundreds instead of tens of thousands of dollars; even Wrath, which consistently brought results, goes for less than $3,000 for lifetime access. It’s not the best time to be a shoe bot seller. 

Sneaker proxy vendors have also been affected. Some, namely Leaf Proxies and Oculus Proxies, have merged together. Others, such as Bart Proxies and Ping Proxies, have expanded their services to general-purpose use cases in places like Black Hat World. Quite a few smaller resellers likely closed without fanfare. 

sneaker proxy providers black hat world
Formerly-specialized sneaker proxy providers on Blackhatworld.

The general sentiment ranges from negative to cautiously realistic. Is it possible to earn money reselling shoes? Yes, but no longer easy. Can you still make a living doing so? Nowadays, the answer is often no, else it comes with multiple asterisks (such as sizable prior experience or ability to survive the slow months). For many, shoe botting has once again taken the role of a side hustle in addition to their regular day job. 

Still, the interest in sneaker botting hasn’t dried out. We are privileged to occupy some of the top Google positions for sneaker-related queries, and sneaker bot listings remain among our largest pages. 

sneaker bots google search console
Our sneaker-bot related pages still bring thousands of visitors per month.

Are these simply the latecomers, or does the industry still have life left? That’s tough to say, but for now, shoe cooks continue looking for their grails. 

Business Ethics: Proxy Networks Are Experiencing (and Embracing) More Scrutiny

  • The crackdowns of RSocks and 911 S5 shook the industry in 2022.
  • Commercial proxy services have started prioritizing ethics, which reflects not only in marketing materials but also KYC processes.
  • As a result, businesses are less likely to treat their relationships with providers as shameful secrets (according to the providers).
An irresponsibly managed proxy network is a menace. It burrows into the devices of unwitting people, using their resources to commit ad fraud, bring down websites, and empty stolen credit cards. This was the dominant image of proxies for a long while, and to this day it occupies a sizable portion of the discourse. The reasons aren’t hard to understand. It’s still very possible to acquire proxy servers by creating large botnets or running SIM card farms, and malicious businesses remain as profitable as ever. According to the FBI, the number of credential stuffing attacks through residential proxies is increasing, and even state actors have been using makeshift proxy networks to commit disinformation campaigns against their adversaries. In 2022, two big crackdowns shook the industry. Mid-June, visitors of RSocks, a then-popular proxy service, were met with a big banner informing that the FBI had seized the website. More than a month later 911 S5, another high-profile proxy provider, announced its permanent shutdown. Both businesses were well known in hacking communities, and some cybersecurity experts even called them critical cybercrime infrastructure.
rsocks website seized notice
Source: rsocks.net

On the bright side, commercial proxy services have started treating ethical business practices as an increasing priority. Initially a concern of Bright Data and Oxylabs, ethics has now made its way into the websites of SOAX, IPRoyal, and other emergent companies, at times even taking center stage. More providers now feel the need to explain their IP sourcing practices, and their KYC processes have become more stringent, often with the help of external specialists. 

Last year also saw some interesting initiatives. Five major proxy providers banded together to start The Ethical Web Data Collection Initiative, and SOAX launched a podcast focusing on ethics in the web data collection industry. We too have conducted interviews with Bright DataOxylabsSOAXRayobyte, and the newly formed i2Coalition about the ethicality of sourcing and using proxies. 

The majority of our surveyed participants approached the topic with optimism. They believed that the outlook toward proxies has shifted from perceiving them as hacking tools to treating proxy servers as a foundational part of the internet. Clients (especially enterprises) are increasingly asking about IP sourcing practices, and they’re less likely to treat the business relationship as a necessary but shameful secret. 

Fully understanding that most of the replies would be PR-friendly, we decided to throw a curveball: how do you distinguish a real commitment to ethics from virtue signaling? The answer is two-fold: research and ask

You should research how the provider vets customers, how it gets proxies, and whether the sources express clear consent. Ideally, this information should be publicly available; otherwise, you can always ask. Third-party audits help, and a little open source intelligence (like Googling the company’s name with certain keywords) goes a long way toward giving you a more balanced view of the service. 

Legal Challenges: Social Media Platforms Pressure the Industry

  • In 2022, the case of HiQ v. LinkedIn confirmed that scraping public data is legal and made litigation for CFAA violations less likely.
  • However, social media platforms have shifted to arguments based on breach of contract.
  • There are several high-profile cases taking place – we expect the industry to lay low about social media scraping in the meanwhile.
The practice of web scraping is rarely straightforward from the legal standpoint. It may involve extracting information that is copyrighted, personal, or private. What’s more, the websites worth scraping often have incentives against giving away their data. For example, Ryanair’s business model relies on additional services you can get when booking a flight directly on its website. Third-party aggregators threaten this model. Despite prohibiting automated access, major public data sources in e-commerce and search (read: Google and Amazon) have been reluctant to pursue legal action against web scrapers. Social media networks, however, are a different story. LinkedIn and Meta vigilantly fight data collection, both in and out of court. Out of the many cases (such as Meta v. Social Data TradingMeta v. Octoparse, or the recent Meta v. Voyager Labs), HiQ v. LinkedIn has been the most impactful in clarifying where web scraping stands when faced with websites that don’t want to be scraped. The developments in 2022 gave us two important messages:
  1. One, the CFAA (an anti-hacking law from 1986) doesn’t apply to publicly accessible data. The community lauded this as a great win, as companies relied on the CFAA to bully web scrapers – and because it incurs criminal liability! So, when the Ninth Circuit affirmed its position in April 2022, many sighed in relief.
  2. Two, breach of contract will become a new basis for lawsuits, and so far courts have been much friendlier to corporations here. HiQ lost on this count in October, even if the litigation process continues. This causes concern: this January, Meta sued Voyager Labs for allegedly running multiple bot accounts; however, the recent lawsuit against Bright Data barely even mentions bots – it’s enough that the company had business profiles on the platform (you can read the complaint here or listen to Bright Data CEO’s take here).
While we inch toward a resolution, the industry suffers from the effects of legal ambiguity. Multiple companies we’ve spoken to refuse to advertise social media scraping in fear of repercussions. As this Hacker News thread shows, small one-man businesses aren’t exempt from receiving cease & desist letters either. And even though HiQ fights on, the litigation destroyed its business years ago.
linkedin hacker news cease and desist
Many web scraping companies face similar challenges behind closed doors.
All things considered, scrapers have won some important battles. But with websites increasingly gating up, we still have a long way to go toward an open web. We predict that the industry will stay on the low while its unwilling representatives wrestle with the social media giants. Meta v. Bright Data (breach of contract) and 3taps v. LinkedIn (clarifying the HiQ v. LinkedIn decisions) are some of the cases worth following.

General Observations

This section provides general insights into proxy networks. Compared to the market trends, it’s based on hands-on data we collected while testing the participants. Here, we aggregate and compare different proxy types, as well as highlight notable developments from the product standpoint.

Residential and Mobile Proxy Infrastructures Have Become Impressively Robust

Webshare believes that the majority of proxy services are still slow and unreliable. While we tend to agree, the performance of peer-to-peer proxy networks has improved greatly. Residential proxies today barely lag behind datacenter addresses (without special optimizations), which was unthinkable several years ago.

For example, here’s the success rate of US-filtered proxies when connecting to the nearest server of a global CDN:

And here’s the response time – with our benchmark webpage (several kilobytes) and Amazon’s product pages (around 1 MB response size):

SOAX is a great case in point for how much optimization can impact performance. And even providers like Oxylabs, which already led the pack, still manage to make significant speed gains every year despite facing diminishing returns:

Sometimes, it’s possible to find creative solutions. Bright Data’s scale allows it to experiment with request caching, which returns pages other customers recently visited without making another request. In theory, this can speed up response times by 20 times, reduce website load, and decrease costs.

Mobile IPs Cost x3 More than Residential, x30 More Than Rotating Datacenter Proxies

It’s no secret that mobile and residential proxies are expensive compared to datacenter proxies. But by how much, exactly? The graph below illustrates the price differences between these three products. Simply put, a rotating datacenter proxy network will let you open 30 times as many pages as a similarly-priced mobile plan.

Of course, this comes at a cost: fewer locations and a significantly worse success rate with strict websites. Even in our limited-scale test (~2,600 connections), every third request with rotating datacenter proxies failed to reach Amazon. Running them with social media or Google wouldn’t have been a pretty sight:

ISP Proxies Face Issues with IP Databases, Inflate US Residential Proxy Pools

In most aspects, ISP proxies are very similar to datacenter proxy servers. But they do have one important difference: such IPs must be related to internet service providers that offer services to consumers.

This raises several challenges: 1) the provider may contract obscure regional ISPs  – their IPs may not appear as residential in databases; 2) It takes time until an ISP announces new IPs on its network and the updates appear in databases.

We saw the effect of these challenges first hand. Each participant had the opportunity to hand-pick 100 ISP proxies for our tests. Even then, the latest (March) version of IP2Location still identified a good part of them as datacenter:

The same problem affected residential proxy networks, as well. In particular, providers tended to inflate their US pools with what we assume were ISP proxies. As a result, the same IP2Location identified up to a third of their IPs as non-residential:

While this may not necessarily affect you in real-world use, some websites care about IP reputation and could block such proxies more.

Self-Service Has Become a Necessity – Even for Premium Providers

Gone are the times when you had to fill out lengthy forms and wait for salesmen to get in touch. Today, most providers have on-boarding flows that require no interaction with people. Mobile proxy networks remain an outlier, but that’s because some participants treat them as beta or situational products. We expect things to change soon.

One necessary obstacle in most self-service flows affecting residential or mobile proxies is the KYC procedure. Even here providers have found ways to reduce friction. Bright Data offers immediate access to 240+ pre-approved websites (though you have to install a certificate), while Rayobyte has a 50MB no-KYC trial. Finally, it’s interesting to see how elaborate some self-service tools have become. Webshare’s success shows the power of customization. The provider took the rigid pricing model of datacenter proxies and gave it with way more flexibility: customers can tinker with traffic allowance, available threads, IP quality, and network priority. They can even create rotating endpoints for proxy lists, which others would sell as a separate product.

New Proxy Filtering Options Have Entered the Scene

After several relatively stagnant years, residential and mobile proxy networks are starting to see new features. In particular, it’s now possible to get proxies with ZIP code and OS filtering.

The features aren’t exactly new. 911 S5, the formerly popular proxy provider, had ZIP-level targeting for years. But legitimate businesses were reluctant to implement it. For now, the two providers that have it, Bright Data and Oxylabs, don’t advertise the option much – you can mostly find mentions in the documentation.

OS-level targeting came with Smartproxy’s mobile proxies in 2023. It’s a useful feature if you need to emulate a particular mobile system, and changing request headers isn’t enough.

For many, these features will be nice to have. But the need for geo-targeting has risen in general. SOAX reported that the share of requests with precise targeting has increased by 2.5 times – in some countries, by four to seven times.

Residential Proxies

Residential proxies are the most popular proxy type in our research – all 12 participants sell them. They’re also among the most used in general; and with websites continuing to close down, their role should increase further.

Bright Data GeoSurf Infatica IPRoyal NetNut Oxylabs
PacketStream Rayobyte Shifter Smartproxy SOAX Webshare
Not tested

We’ll be looking at the advertised and actual pool sizes of these proxy networks, their performance in ideal conditions and with real targets, available features, and pricing strategies.

The comparison of advertised proxy pools shows four clear leaders: Oxylabs, Bright Data, Smartproxy, and Shifter. Their numbers haven’t changed for a while; as we’re dealing with dynamic residential IPs, they should be treated as rough monthly estimates.

Testing conditions: 1 million requests over 21 days, made from Germany, using the provider’s unfiltered proxy pool, to the nearest server of a global CDN (in relation to the proxy IP).

We can see that advertised numbers don’t translate accurately to practice. Shifter’s unfiltered pool returned fewer unique IPs than the much smaller SOAX. In the same way, PacketStream had fewer IPs than IPRoyal, despite advertising x3.5 proxies.

It’s important to note that some providers exclude specific locations from their unfiltered pool, which may impact the results. For example, you won’t find many US proxies when targeting Smartproxy’s random endpoint.

Some providers managed to grow their pools significantly: SOAX doubled its number, and Rayobyte grew over 10 times! Others, like PacketStream, Shifter, and IPRoyal, shed IPs from their unfiltered gateways.

Testing conditions: 500,000 requests over 14 days (or 140,000 over 7 days in Australia), made from Germany, using the provider’s country gateways, to the nearest server of a global CDN (in relation to the proxy IP).

The gap between proxy pools increased when we targeted specific high-demand locations. If Bright Data’s unfiltered pool was only twice larger compared to Infatica, it had eight times more US IPs.

Overall, Oxylabs, Smarproxy, and Bright Data clearly had the largest proxy networks. NetNut overperformed (especially in the US), and SOAX achieved more than expected, as well. On the other hand, PacketStream seems to be having a hard time.

Notice the two Rayobytes in the graph. For some reason, the majority of this provider’s proxies in Germany, France, and Australia weren’t actually from those countries. This was likely caused by a configuration error on Rayobyte’s end.

Percentage of proxies that the IP2Location database recognized as residential (ISP, ISP/MOB, and MOB categories). 

Unfiltered US UK DE FR IN AU Provider average
Bright Data 98.12% 99.10% 99.76% 98.90% 97.95% 97.97% 98.27% 98.58%
Smartproxy 96.96% 95.93% 97.30% 99.47% 99.71% 98.00% 98.13% 97.93%
Oxylabs 96.95% 96.23% 97.40% 97.80% 98.26% 97.97% 97.81% 97.49%
PacketStream 95.80% 86.58% 96.16% 95.92% 97.29% 97.40% 91.24% 94.34%
Rayobyte 96.89% 84.28% 96.64% 92.44% 97.55% 97.52% 94.07% 94.20%
SOAX 96.08% 61.51% 99.41% 97.80% 98.28% 96.18% 99.15% 92.63%
IPRoyal 94.08% 93.43% 98.00% 97.41% 94.48% 64.03% 98.82% 91.46%
NetNut 91.11% 95.51% 89.87% 71.01% 86.97% 91.71% 83.39% 87.08%
Shifter 94.99% 79.83% 93.58% 93.44% 77.27% 95.67% 72.20% 86.71%
GeoSurf 93.24% 62.83% 80.40% 90.07% 86.53% 95.12% 88.38% 85.22%
Infatica 93.02% 73.10% 73.41% 91.69% 91.41% 96.08% 76.55% 85.04%
Category average 95.20% 84.39% 92.90% 93.27% 93.25% 93.42% 90.73%

Though unwieldly, the table lets us see how many of the IPs we received were truly residential. Overall, Bright Data, Smartproxy, and Oxylabs had the cleanest proxy networks. On the other end, there’s GeoSurf, Infatica, NetNut, and Shifter with less than 90%.

SOAX was doing very well until we reached the US. In fact, this location had the lowest number of residential IPs overall, so let’s take a closer look at what happened.

It looks like the providers were trying to boost their pools with datacenter or lower quality ISP proxies. In all but a few cases, Ashburn was among the top locations, which is telling. Some of these proxies may become residential once IP databases update, but they can cause issues in the meantime.

Testing conditions: same as the pool test.

Let’s have a look at how well the residential proxy networks performed. We’ve been running Proxy Market Research for several years, so this gives us the benefit of historical comparison (at the expense of brevity – but you can click on data labels to hide).

Four providers can now connect successfully over 99% of the time. This is impressive and shows that infrastructure is no longer a major bottleneck (maybe except for major usage spikes like sneaker releases).

IPRoyal and NetNut performed the worst, but even then the success rate remained around 90% throughout three weeks. Something went horribly wrong with GeoSurf’s unfiltered proxy endpoint – the country pools did much better.

Response times have also improved – for some. Smartproxy and Oxylabs have become undisputed speed demons, breaking away from Bright Data. We can also see that SOAX, Shifter, and PacketStream have all made notable optimizations to their infrastructure.

At the same time, providers like NetNut and IPRoyal have actually become slower. NetNut has reduced its reliance on ISP proxies compared to 2022, which may have been the culprit.

Success rate comparison:

Unfiltered US UK DE FR IN AU
Bright Data 99.17% 98.87% 99.27% 99.32% 99.43% 99.29% 99.37%
GeoSurf 57.77% 96.77% 92.04% 92.68% 92.88% 90.71% 93.36%
Infatica 95.95% 97.96% 97.60% 98.76% 98.07% 96.62% 98.31%
IPRoyal 89.56% 95.18% 92.77% 96.99% 97.37% 93.24% 64.15%
NetNut 93.52% 96.65% 79.10% 79.50% 77.87% 58.36% 97.51%
Oxylabs 99.61% 99.80% 99.66% 99.60% 99.69% 98.80% 99.78%
PacketStream 97.77% 96.94% 97.67% 98.79% 98.30% 97.93% 98.25%
Rayobyte 98.34% 98.43% 98.93% 98.77% 98.46% 98.46% 98.94%
Shifter 98.43% 98.45% 98.53% 98.52% 99.10% 98.83% 99.04%
Smartproxy 99.43% 99.71% 99.63% 99.60% 99.66% 98.72% 99.71%
SOAX 99.03% 98.29% 99.53% 99.44% 99.55% 98.58% 99.30%
Average 93.51% 97.91% 95.88% 96.54% 96.40% 93.59% 95.25%

Response time comparison:

Unfiltered US UK DE FR IN AU
Bright Data 1.02 1.12 0.55 0.59 0.60 1.60 1.53
GeoSurf 5.18 1.48 2.73 2.68 2.69 3.21 2.79
Infatica 1.20 0.90 0.41 0.46 0.48 1.22 1.64
IPRoyal 3.73 2.50 1.70 1.57 1.52 2.58 4.10
NetNut 2.13 1.93 2.07 1.73 2.48 2.15 3.12
Oxylabs 0.57 0.72 0.40 0.42 0.38 1.47 1.19
PacketStream 1.15 0.85 0.91 0.92 0.88 1.47 1.49
Rayobyte 2.30 2.02 2.21 2.44 2.28 3.09 2.63
Shifter 0.88 1.00 0.80 0.49 0.44 1.06 1.44
Smartproxy 0.57 0.76 0.41 0.39 0.38 1.51 1.16
SOAX 1.05 0.95 0.55 0.64 0.55 1.81 1.65
Average 1.80 1.30 1.16 1.12 1.15 1.92 2.07

Testing conditions: ~2,600 connection requests to each target, made from Germany, using the provider’s US proxies, fast rotation settings, and a custom non-headless script.

The line depicting success rate averages is much wavier than we expected it to be. Quite a few providers had trouble with the social media network and especially Google. Unfortunately, Bright Data and Oxylabs block the search engine, so we couldn’t see how these market leaders compare to the rest.

All things considered, SOAX and Infatica had the best showing. GeoSurf couldn’t handle Google at all, while IPRoyal displayed mediocre performance across the board.

Success rate Errors Blocks Response time
SOAX 99.06% 0.82% 0.11% 3.76
Infatica 98.00% 1.71% 0.29% 3.53
Smartproxy 97.43% 0.77% 1.80% 3.27
GeoSurf 95.81% 3.27% 0.91% 4.25
Bright Data 95.49% 2.70% 1.81% 3.95
Oxylabs 94.33% 0.67% 5.00% 3.31
Shifter 89.61% 3.33% 7.06% 3.59
NetNut 92.74% 3.06% 4.20% 4.37
PacketStream 89.08% 5.38% 5.54% 3.60
Rayobyte 85.66% 6.03% 8.31% 4.63
IPRoyal 85.45% 9.64% 4.91% 5.22
Average 93.06% 3.46% 3.49% 4.00
Success rate Errors Blocks Response time
SOAX 98.15% 1.85% 0.00% 1.88
Infatica 95.21% 4.79% 0.00% 1.65
Rayobyte 85.11% 14.89% 0.00% 3.43
Shifter 83.23% 16.77% 0.00% 1.79
PacketStream 78.71% 21.29% 0.00% 1.72
Smartproxy 77.68% 22.32% 0.00% 1.85
NetNut 70.37% 29.63% 0.00% 2.68
IPRoyal 62.77% 37.20% 0.04% 3.39
GeoSurf 19.40% 80.60% 0.00% 2.61
Bright Data Blocked
Oxylabs Blocked
Average 76.25% 23.75% 0.00% 2.35
Success rate Errors Blocks Response time
SOAX 99.55% 0.45% 0.00% 1.67
Smartproxy 99.08% 0.92% 0.00% 1.90
Oxylabs 98.98% 1.02% 0.00% 1.50
Bright Data 98.04% 1.96% 0.00% 1.98
NetNut 97.71% 2.29% 0.00% 2.28
Infatica 96.24% 3.76% 0.00% 1.45
PacketStream 85.38% 14.62% 0.00% 1.49
Shifter 81.81% 18.19% 0.00% 1.68
Rayobyte 76.21% 23.79% 0.00% 2.85
GeoSurf 75.06% 24.94% 0.00% 2.77
IPRoyal 73.43% 26.57% 0.00% 3.39
Average 89.22% 10.78% 0.00% 2.09
Success rate Errors Blocks Response time
SOAX 99.51% 0.49% 0.00% 2.39
Smartproxy 99.41% 0.59% 0.00% 1.98
Oxylabs 99.37% 0.63% 0.00% 1.88
Infatica 98.76% 1.24% 0.00% 2.14
Shifter 98.73% 1.27% 0.00% 2.18
NetNut 97.37% 2.63% 0.00% 3.29
Rayobyte 97.16% 2.84% 0.00% 3.89
Bright Data 96.97% 3.03% 0.00% 2.47
GeoSurf 95.96% 4.04% 0.00% 3.20
PacketStream 93.28% 6.72% 0.00% 2.18
IPRoyal 83.07% 16.93% 0.00% 4.90
Average 94.84% 5.16% 0.00% 2.78

Everyone supports country filtering nowadays (though Shifter still charges for it!). While rarer, city targeting is also widely available, at least for enterprise clients. On the other hand, it’s still hard to access ISP-level filtering without conditions being imposed on you.

SOCKS5 is another feature residential proxy services aren’t keen on. The protocol has a lot of potential for abuse, and proxy sellers rarely offer it in full (for example, with UDP support or non-HTTP(S) ports).

* – extra cost, ** – select/enterprise clients. Scroll to see all columns.

Location targeting Rotation SOCKS5 support Authentication methods Unlimited threads?
Country City ASN ZIP code Every request Sessions Custom duration
Bright Data ✅* ✅* ✅* With Proxy Manager 2
GeoSurf ✅* ✅** 1, 10, 30 mins 2
Infatica 5-60 mins 2
IPRoyal ✅** 1 sec - 24 hrs 2
NetNut ✅* 2*
Oxylabs ✅** 1-30 mins 2
PacketStream Credentials
Rayobyte 2
Shifter ✅* 5-60 mins IP whitelist
Smartproxy 1, 10, 30 mins 2
SOAX 90-600 sec, custom 2

A side-by-side comparison reveals that Bright Data’s residential proxies are feature-richest overall, while Infatica and SOAX offer the most out of the box.

On the other end, there’re Shifter, NetNut, and PacketStream, which have fallen behind in terms of features.

As usual, most providers base their pricing on traffic as the main metric. Shifter is the only exception. This pricing structure reflects the broader market, though, in reality, it’s not that hard to find providers with different pricing formats.

Compared to 2022, more participants now offer the ability to use proxies without commitment, and we expect this trend to continue. It’s also relatively simple to try out the service without risk, though free trials are mostly paid or available for companies. In any case, this has reduced the barrier to entry significantly.

One more thing: notice how the graph with pay as you go doesn’t align perfectly with the entry price below $50? That’s because PacketStream requires depositing at least $50 – and there are more tricks to come.

Pricing structure Subscription Pay as you go Modifiers/ upsells Self-service Starting price Trial
Bright Data Traffic City/ASN/ZIP targeting, exclusive proxies $15 7 days for companies
GeoSurf City, ASN targeting $300
Infatica $96 100 MB for $1.99
IPRoyal $7
NetNut City targeting, IP whitelist $100 7 days for companies
Oxylabs $15 7 days for companies
PacketStream $50
Rayobyte $15 50 MB no KYC
Shifter Ports Country, state targeting $100 3-day refund
Smartproxy Traffic $12.5 3-day refund
SOAX Traffic + ports $99 100 MB for $1.99

Cost per gigabyte for different amounts of traffic (with pay as you go or a monthly subscription):

5 GB 20 GB 50 GB 100 GB 250 GB 500 GB 1,000 GB
Bright Data $15 $15 $11.48 $10.13 $9.45 $9.45 Custom
Bright Data (+city/ASN) $30 $30 $22.96 $20.26 $18.90 $18.90 Custom
GeoSurf - $12 $8 $7 Custom Custom Custom
Infatica - $12 $9 $7 $7 $6 $3.5
IPRoyal $5.95 $5.25 $4.90 $4.55 $4.20 $3.50 $3.15
NetNut $20 $15 $12 $8 $6.5 $5 $4
Oxylabs $15 $15 $12 $8 $7 $6 $4
PacketStream - - $1 $1 $1 $1 $1
Rayobyte $15 $12.50 $7 $6 $5 $4 $3
Smartproxy $12.5 $10 $8 $7 $6 $5 $4
SOAX - $12 $11 $7 $7 $5 $4
Average (excl. Bright Data's premium) $13.90 $11.75 $8.34 $6.57 $5.91 $4.99 $3.33

Residential proxies are pretty expensive at the beginning, but they tend to scale well. At one terabyte, you’ll be paying a quarter of the price per unit.

Compared to the year before, we can see several changes. First, Bright Data has significantly reduced its prices at the entry level. IPRoyal, on the other hand, more than doubled its rates along the full pricing range.

5 GB 20 GB 50 GB 100 GB 250 GB 500 GB 1,000 GB
Bright Data -40% -40% -8.16% +1.30% -5.5%
IPRoyal +105% +95% +95% +117% +95% +133% +163%
NetNut +11%
Oxylabs -11% -20%
Smartproxy -16.7%
SOAX +22%

Despite the huge price hike, IPRoyal remains among the cheapest options until enterprise-level scale, and Bright Data costs the most. PacketStream is the undisputed price leader on paper, but there’s a huge catch: during our tests, its system overcounted traffic use by 8 to 10 times. This is not only deceptive but also pricey!

Here’s our evaluation based on the covered aspects. Hover on provider names to highlight, click to filter.

Mobile Proxies

Mobile proxies are less popular than residential addresses – especially networks that are based on peer-to-peer infrastructure and not mobile device farms. They have a specialist role for mobile-related uses or fringe cases where even residential proxies can’t cut it. 6 out of 12 participants sell mobile proxy servers publicly, and GeoSurf does custom setups for enterprise clients.

Bright Data GeoSurf Infatica IPRoyal NetNut Oxylabs
Device farm, not tested
PacketStream Rayobyte Shifter Smartproxy SOAX Webshare

This section follows the same structure as the residential part, only on a smaller scale.

Oxylabs has by far the biggest advertised proxy network. NetNut and Smartproxy launched their product within a year, but the latter provider already boasts 10 million IPs. Otherwise, the numbers haven’t changed since 2022.

Testing conditions: 280,000 requests over 14 days, made from Germany, using the provider’s unfiltered proxy pool, to the nearest server of a global CDN (in relation to the proxy IP).

Surprisingly, SOAX had more unique IPs than its larger competitors. Even more surprisingly, NetNut beat everyone with its smallest proxy network on paper. However, let’s suspend our judgements until we see country-specific results and the pool’s composition.

GeoSurf failed to make the graph because it gave us only US IPs.

Testing conditions: 280,000 requests over 14 days (or 140,000 over 7 days in Australia), made from Germany, using the provider’s country gateways, to the nearest server of a global CDN (in relation to the proxy IP).

The test with country gateways paints a different picture. Oxylabs and Smartproxy dominate with large and balanced proxy networks. SOAX too manages to impress.

NetNut’s proxies were predominantly concentrated in the UK. The provider didn’t want us to test its US pool. On the other hand, American IPs were all that GeoSurf had. They obviously came from dedicated devices and didn’t even rotate. This is a strange decision – last year Rayobyte showed us that a limited number of devices can generate a lot of IPs over longer periods.

Bright Data, unfortunately, disappointed. Its EarnApp and BrightVPN bandwidth-sharing apps weren’t on app stores at the time of testing, which could’ve affected the numbers. In any case, we can easily see the network overloaded by demand.

Percentage of proxies that the IP2Location database recognized as mobile (ISP/MOB and MOB categories).

Unfiltered US UK DE FR IN AU Provider average
Rayobyte 96.87% 99.87% 99.87% 100% 98.37% 99.63% 100% 99.23%
Smartproxy 96.33% 97.45% 98.86% 99.01% 98.34% 99.29% 94.53% 97.69%
Oxylabs 95.68% 99.73% 99.80% 99.69% 97.02% 99.85% 88.96% 97.25%
Bright Data 97.67% 94.61% 98.58% 96.41% 94.96% 99.63% 94.19% 96.58%
SOAX 98.02% 99.70% 99.72% 99.11% 98.06% 99.91% 81.07% 96.51%
NetNut 26.87% - 62.52% 50.45% 66.54% 91.93% 34.11% 55.40%
GeoSurf - 99.61% - - - - - 99.61%
Category average 85.24% 98.50% 93.23% 90.78% 92.22% 98.37% 82.14%

Compared to residential IPs, the mobile proxy networks were either very truthful to their claims, or not at all. Thankfully, most participants didn’t lie about the nature of their IPs.

The one provider that did was NetNut. Three in four of its proxies in the unfiltered pool weren’t actually mobile, and India turned out to be the only accurately represented locations. Not great.

Testing conditions: same as the pool test.

Once again, we had the benefit of testing most participants for several years in a row. Let’s graph their results, beginning with infrastructure success rate:

There’s not much to comment: all providers maintained a success rate of over 95%, which is good. Rayobyte has made the biggest improvements year over year, but its starting point wasn’t exactly impressive.

What the graph fails to show is that some providers had huge deviations in particular locations: Bright Data in the US and Rayobyte in Australia. You’ll find performance tables in the country-coded tabs next to this one.

The response time graph is more interesting. All participants managed to significantly decrease it – SOAX effectively doubled in speed! Once again, Rayobyte has made the biggest improvement, but it remains much slower than the fastest competitors.

Unfiltered US UK DE FR IN AU
Bright Data 98.06% 54.62% 94.17% 91.80% 98.88% 97.95% 97.33%
GeoSurf - 96.89% - - - - -
NetNut 95.68% - 81.44% 80.88% 80.43% 95.69% 98.10%
Oxylabs 97.88% 98.31% 97.89% 97.95% 97.72% 97.30% 97.91%
Rayobyte 97.47% 97.82% 97.97% 98.24% 96.55% 96.75% 21.83%
Smartproxy 97.37% 98.28% 97.80% 99.05% 98.73% 98.47% 97.32%
SOAX 98.22% 98.50% 98.31% 98.16% 98.13% 96.98% 98.73%
Average 97.45% 90.73% 94.60% 94.35% 95.07% 97.19% 85.20%
Unfiltered US UK DE FR IN AU
Bright Data 1.81 4.79 1.34 2.05 1.19 2.46 2.21
GeoSurf - 1.28 - - - - -
NetNut 2.27 - 1.80 1.68 1.89 2.48 3.39
Oxylabs 1.10 1.47 0.92 0.83 0.88 2.08 2.08
Rayobyte 2.83 2.38 3.05 2.11 2.18 3.63 3.16
Smartproxy 1.12 1.69 0.93 0.85 0.87 2.13 2.14
SOAX 1.72 1.60 1.40 1.33 1.37 2.33 2.02
Average 1.81 2.20 1.57 1.47 1.40 2.52 2.50

Testing conditions: ~2,600 connection requests to each target, made from Germany, using the provider’s US proxies, fast rotation settings, and a custom non-headless script.

The target benchmarks didn’t cause many issues. One exception was Google – NetNut’s proxies failed to open it a quarter of the time. Other than that, most providers performed well.

Bright Data was an unfortunate exception. It’s not like the proxies were bad – quite the opposite. However, the infrastructure couldn’t assign them half of the time because there simply weren’t any free IPs left. The majority of the error codes were 502, or no peers.

Success rate Errors Blocks Response time
GeoSurf 97.30% 2.70% 0.00% 4.78
SOAX 97.15% 2.85% 0.00% 4.50
Smartproxy 96.27% 3.73% 0.00% 4.42
Rayobyte 92.19% 5.07% 2.74% 6.55
NetNut 90.68% 2.88% 6.44% 4.38
Oxylabs 89.09% 4.51% 6.40% 4.45
Bright Data 45.89% 54.11% 0.00% 4.88
Average 86.94% 10.83% 2.23% 4.85
Success rate Errors Blocks Response time
SOAX 95.78% 4.22% 0.00% 2.67
Smartproxy 94.95% 5.05% 0.00% 2.66
Rayobyte 92.19% 5.07% 2.74% 6.55
GeoSurf 89.39% 10.61% 0.00% 2.27
NetNut 72.65% 27.35% 0.00% 2.72
Bright Data Blocked
Oxylabs Blocked
Average 87.17% 12.83% 0.00% 2.44
Success rate Errors Blocks Response time
GeoSurf 98.39% 1.61% 0.00% 1.97
NetNut 98.25% 1.75% 0.00% 2.29
SOAX 98.11% 1.89% 0.00% 2.40
Smartproxy 97.57% 2.43% 0.00% 2.38
Oxylabs 97.02% 2.98% 0.00% 2.32
Rayobyte 96.09% 3.91% 0.00% 4.51
Bright Data 46.99% 53.01% 0.00% 4.53
Average 90.35% 9.65% 0.00% 2.92
Success rate Errors Blocks Response time
SOAX 98.44% 1.56% 0.00% 3.26
GeoSurf 97.69% 2.31% 0.00% 2.97
NetNut 97.58% 2.42% 0.00% 3.57
Rayobyte 95.92% 4.08% 0.00% 6.04
Oxylabs 95.52% 4.48% 0.00% 3.02
Smartproxy 92.28% 7.72% 0.00% 3.14
Bright Data 33.05% 66.95% 0.00% 5.54
Average 85.41% 14.59% 0.00% 4.07

Mobile proxies are often used for work with localized content and social media management, so they need to have flexible filtering options. Over half of the participants allow selecting a city or ASN. Only Bright Data offers ZIP-level targeting with mobile proxies for now, which is a novel feature among major providers.

Everyone supports quick IP rotation, which is a distinguishing feature of peer-to-peer mobile proxies. Alternatively, there’s a way to establish sticky sessions, but they won’t be as durable or predictable as when using a mobile device farm.

That said, very few providers have SOCKS5 as an option. That may be due to traffic limitations and the sensitive nature of sourcing mobile addresses.

* – extra cost. Scroll to see all columns.

Location targeting