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BartProxies Review

Performant and affordable ISP proxies.

Bart’s proxy servers cost less than most and won’t leave you waiting; but they may not always be residential, and the service still very much reflects the Wild West days of sneaker reselling. 

Rating 7.9 / 10
4/5

Use the code PROXYWAY to get 50% off ISP & residential proxies.

BartProxies prides itself on selling quality ISP proxies; according to the provider, they come from clean ranges that sometimes have sat unused for decades. It also sweetens the pot by being one of the more affordable providers of specialized proxy servers. 

Is that really the case? And if so, what benefits does it bring over other vendors of dedicated ISP proxies? Now’s the perfect time to find out!

General Information

  • Country: US
  • Founded: 2020
  • Employees (LinkedIn): 1-5
  • Proxy networks: ISP, residential
  • Other services: Cloud & bare metal servers
  • Supporting tools: Proxy checker, browser extension
  • Price range: Entry/mid-market
  • Starting price: $50 (but there are often discounts)
  • Payment methods: Credit card, cryptocurrencies
  • Trial: $5 for one hour access

BartProxies was launched in 2020, as a US-based company. It began by selling ISP, residential, and CAPTCHA proxies, and continues doing so to this day.  

Before the sneaker market crashed, the provider’s main audience was scalpers. Bart has since expanded its supported uses cases to web scraping, account management, and more. But like most providers in this niche, it continues catering to a large audience flipping Pokemon cards and other limited edition items

BartProxies is pretty good at its job: the provider claims to have served over 115k customers with its network of 500k ISP proxies. A lively Discord server with nearly 3k members online confirms its popularity. However, not all signals can be trusted: at the time of writing, the company’s Trustpilot had been disabled for fake reviews

One of Bart’s strengths is competitive rates for dedicated ISP proxies. The second is creative sourcing methods. It consistently manages to grab IP ranges which belong to educational institutions or which allegedly haven’t been used for decades. BartProxies is also one of the few providers that continue selling AT&T IPs after this ISP has stopped leasing IP space. 

Although BartProxies primarily serves smaller customers, it can procure as many as 100,000 IPs for enterprises with large needs. Amusingly enough, the main point of contact for such deals remains the company’s Discord server. 

News about BartProxies

BartProxies joins the ranks of our reviewed providers.

BartProxies Proxy Networks

BartProxies sells several kinds of proxy servers: 

  • ISP proxies in smaller packages or full /24 subnets (255 IPs). This is the main product.
  • Residential proxies with downright extortionate starting rates of $20/GB. 
  • CAPTCHA proxies which are presumably lower-quality ISP or dedicated datacenter IPs marketed for the task. This is never clearly explained. 
bartproxies proxy networks
The available proxy networks.

For this review, we’ll be focusing on Bart’s ISP proxy service. 

🌎 Pool Size & Coverage

  • Pool size: Based on purchased IPs (500,000 in total)
  • Locations (July 2026): US (T-Mobile, AT&T, RCN, Comcast), Canada (Telus), UK (DTAG), France (Orange)
  • Selection: Country and ASN
  • IP distribution: Depends on the package
  • Replacement policy: Once per month (paid: once per week), handled manually

Bart’s ISP proxy network is large in scale: based on marketing materials, it spans over 500,000 unique IPs. However, you won’t be getting your hands on all of them at once – the product is packaged as lists of proxies. They’ll be dedicated for your exclusive use during the subscription period. 

The network covers four locations, primarily the US. You choose one country and one ASN per package: AT&T in the US, Telus in Canada, and so on.

The descriptions of some plans are hard to understand: for example, why is the T-Mobile package called Legacy, why are AT&T and RCN called Fresh, and why are there tiny links pointing to separate Native Comcast and AT&T plans? 

bartproxies pricing plans
If you squint hard enough, you'll notice the links to Native plans.

From what we understood, Native means that the IPs were sourced directly from the internet service provider, leading to consistent information in IP databases. If so, this is highly desirable and hard to achieve. 

We also found out that the Fresh AT&T plans aren’t actually AT&T: they’re really associated with either Windstream, Charter, or RCN. It’s hard not to call such marketing misleading.  

An IP list is delivered instantly after completing the payment. You can replace the ISP proxies once per month, but the process involves contacting Bart’s customer support. Otherwise, the same IPs persist as long as you continue subscribing. 

📋 Features

  • Connection method: Direct (IP:Port)
  • Rotation:
  • Protocols: HTTP, SOCKS5, UDP
  • Traffic: Unlimited
  • Concurrency: Unlimited
  • Authentication: Credentials, IP whitelisting
  • Other: 100 Gbps network speed

The product is typical for static proxies: you get a list of IPs and ports which you then simply paste into your software or script. There are no caps on traffic use or concurrent connections. In short, these proxies are pretty much unlimited

In addition to HTTP, Bart’s ISP proxies support SOCKS5 and even routing through UDP. We couldn’t find how restricted the latter was. Normally, providers enable non-HTTP traffic only after jumping through extra hoops. 

These servers stand out with how fat their pipes are: 100 Gbps ports should make Bart’s proxies blaze through even bandwidth-intensive tasks. 

💵 Pricing Plans

  • Model: Subscription
  • Format: Per pay IP
  • Modifiers:
  • Starting price: $50 for 25 T-Mobile IPs ($2/IP) or $75 for 25 other IPs ($3/IP)
  • Trial: Paid ($5) for one hour access
  • Other: Price match guarantee

BartProxies uses a subscription model – one cycle lasts a month. You pay for IP addresses, and that’s it. 

The buy-in is pretty steep: Bart’s plans start from $50 for 25 IPs. In most cases, though, you’ll be paying at least $75. If 25 proxies aren’t enough, you can scale to 50, 100, or go ahead and get a full subnet. The price per unit decreases nominally – we’re talking about $0.10/IP increments. 

Don’t be intimidated, though: like most specialized providers, BartProxies constantly runs discounts that can reach 50%. You’ll be very unlikely to pay the full price. In addition (and this is very hard to discover without joining the Discord server), the provider offers a price match guarantee where it undertakes to beat any competitor’s price by 10% – or it’s free.”

With a discount in place, Bart costs less than most competitors, including HypeProxies and Byteful. This makes us wonder how the heck it’s able to source IPs this cheaply and still make money. Some customers on Trustpilot assert that they’re actually shared, but we have no means to verify the claim. 

📊 Performance Benchmarks

We last tested Bart’s ISP proxies in June 2026. We received 115 IPs: six packages with 15 US IPs in each, and one package with 15 Canadian IPs. 

Note that BartProxies picked these IPs for us, so they may not necessarily represent the usual self-service experience. 

IP analysis

Package /24 subnets ASN Location (MaxMind / IP2Location)  Usage type (IP2Location)
15 IPs 1 Astound US (- / Pharr) Educational
15 IPs 2 AT&T Business US (Cambridge / Boston) Resi/mobile
15 IPs 1 Comcast Cable US (- / New York City) Commercial
15 IPs 10 Frontier US (Peralta / Albuquerque) Governmental
15 IPs 2 Spectrum US (- / New York City) Datacenter
15 IPs 1 Telus CA (- / Vancouver) Resi/mobile
15 IPs 11 Windstream US (- / Virginia Beach) Residential

Our packages were very diverse in aggregate, sometimes less so in isolation. Around a half included proxies from just one subnet. That’s not ideal but to be expected with packages of this size. 

The proxies came from major US (and Canadian) ASNs. They were geolocated correctly, and IP2Location was even able to map them to a city. 

The IP usage types, however, were like a pack of Skittles – all different colored. Only three ranges were properly residential; the rest had links to educational, commercial organizations, and even the City of Albuquerque! The good news is that only one range included hosting IP addresses.

IP quality

Scamalytics score
(Avg. / Median)
Matching ASN & ISPMatching ASN & ISP country
17.97 / 128.57%85%

The ISP proxies were pretty good when it came to quality. Four fifths had no risk score on Scamalytics – while we advise not to trust IP checkers blindly, it was still a good sign. 

The Telus and AT&T IP ranges matched the ASN and the ISP, meaning that they came directly from these internet service providers. It’s a feat that’s very hard to pull off with ISP proxies. Most of the other ranges at least had the same country, letting you avoid situations where the network is American while the IP’s owner is based in Ukraine. 

Infrastructure success rate

Target: Nearest server of a global CDN
Requests: 70,000 over 7 days

Avg. success rate
99.64%

The proxies were stable throughout the testing period, though not quite perfect. The infrastructure failed to establish roughly 250 connection requests out of 70,000. 

Infrastructure response time

Target: Nearest server of a global CDN
Requests: 6 KB page – 70,000, 2 MB page – 5,000
Our server location: Ashburn

 6 KB page2 MB page
Average0.14 s0.24 s
Median0.07 s0.17 s
P950.17 s0.42 s

Because both our server and the ISP proxies were hosted in Ashburn, the latency was very low. Still, it wasn’t quite the best result we’ve seen – HypeProxies managed to pull off 0.06 seconds on average.

Even then, the slowest connections still completed extremely quickly, and increasing the page size made little difference. These are some fast proxies. 

We also tried connecting from the West Coast – doing so consistently added around 300 ms of latency, which is still very good. 

Download speed

Target: Hetzner’s 100 MB Ashburn benchmark
Proxies tested: 10

Avg. without proxiesAverageMedianSlowest IP
363.70 MB/s80.09 MB/s83.80 MB/s17.50 MB/s

Bart’s ISP proxies had enough download speed to stream even 4k content without stuttering. Outside of torrenting at scale, the servers should handle any task with ease

Performance with popular targets

Requests: ~2,600 per target
Location: US (both the gateway and our server)

  Avg. success rate Avg. response time
Amazon 93.11% 1.68 s
Google 67.20% 0.57 s
Total 80.16% 1.13 s

The ISP proxies also did well in our test with real targets. They were able to open Amazon with few errors; Google’s results were worse, but the culprit may have been our web scraping script. 

How to Use BartProxies

This section covers the BartProxies dashboard, management tools, and customer service.

Registration

To register, you’ll need to enter your full name, email address, and password. There’s no need to confirm the registration over email – after entering said details, you’ll be able to enter the dashboard. 

Alternatively, you can register using a Discord or Gmail account

KYC & Usage Policies

As far as we know, BartProxies has no KYC process. The usage policies are outlined in a separate doc. Basically, you’re not allowed to DDoS, send email spam, access illegal content, and more. Nothing out of the ordinary.

The provider writes that it collects usage logs for abuse prevention, but it gives no list or examples of specific prohibited domains. We tried opening several governmental, financial websites, and login pages – everything worked. 

Dashboard

BartProxies has a dashboard for managing your interactions with the service. It lets you buy and track subscriptions, export proxy lists, and download supplementary apps.  The dashboard is available only in English. 

The dashboard’s main page shows your active plans, with tabs pointing to different products. It’s also the place where you can set up proxies and download proxy lists.  

You could probably get by with this page alone, but the dashboard’s navigation is packed. However, take away the reselling-oriented stuff, the optional tools, and we’re basically back to two screens. 

If you need help, there’s a chat bubble at the bottom right side of the screen. The help center button didn’t seem to do anything when we tried it. 

bart proxies dashboard main
The dashboard's main page. Much of the navigation is dedicated to reselling and promoting.

BartProxies supports payments via Stripe or one of several cryptocurrency gateways. In addition, there’s wallet functionality, so you can add money in advance and use its balance instead. 

The plans you’ve bought appear in the Proxy Management page, as well as a dedicated overview page. Finally, invoices have their own separate space, where you can also save company details. 

The dashboar’s access management tools include setting up 2FA, changing the password, viewing and logging out active sessions. They’re actually pretty elaborate for an otherwise simple dashboard experience.

The proxy setup takes place on the main page. In the case of ISP proxies, it provides a named list of all active packages. You can authenticate, view the remaining subscription time, and copy the IP list. 

There’s a separate button for exporting one or multiple lists at once. The output formats include copying to clipboard, downloading a plain text or CSV file. For some reason, selecting Socks as the authentication method generates different credentials compared to regular username and password authentication.

When it comes to the ISP proxies, there is none. The closest things to observability include:

  • a pie chart showing how much time remaining a subscription has, and
  • a small indicator at the website’s footer showing if “all proxies are functional”

API Access

A management API is available only to resellers who spend at least $500. Its features include managing and listing plans, changing authentication, and retrieving proxy lists. 

bart proxies reseller api
The reseller API isn't available to everyone.

Supporting Tools

BartProxies offers a proxy tester and a browser extension as free add-ons. 

The first is a downloadable app for Windows, Mac, and Linux computers. It allows importing a proxy list, selecting a target, checking the latency, and then exporting only the proxies that perform.  

The browser extension is available for Chrome and Firefox. It’s pretty basic as far as such tools go: you can import a proxy list and change your user agent. The extension obviously hasn’t been updated for a while, as some of the user agents go back to Chrome 63 (2018) on Windows 10. 

Documentation

The provider’s documentation consists of an FAQ and a user guide. Each resource answers up to 15 basic questions about the service, focusing on ISP proxies. Some of the questions overlap and no setup tutorials or code samples are given. Things could be improved here. 

Hands-On Support

BartProxies can help you over live chat, Discord, or Telegram. The working hours aren’t stated anywhere, but the provider’s website states that help is always available

We tried using the live chat during daytime in Europe. A reply came within a minute and answered our questions clearly. 

bart proxies live chat
Our questions received responses fast.

Conclusion

We found Bart’s ISP proxy servers to work really well. In addition, they were associated with some tough-to-recruit ISPs, even if the proxy usage type wasn’t always residential. All this came in wallet-friendly packages sweetened by constant promotions and the price match guarantee.

On the other hand, the location variety is skimpy compared to alternatives. We also missed some creature comforts, like being able to track our usage or replace IPs without contacting a person. 

Overall, we feel like there’s a disconnect: Bart’s inventory has grown to an impressive scale, but it continues attending business meetings in baggy b-boy clothes. On the other hand, if you don’t need fancy features, BartProxies may be the provider for you

BartProxies Alternatives

iproyal-logo
Rating 8.5 / 10
4.3/5

IPRoyal’s dedicated ISP proxies cover more countries, support state/city-level targeting, and have short-term plans. They’re more expensive, though.

proxyseller logo
Rating 8.5 / 10
4.3/5

Proxy-Seller also has many more locations to choose from, letting you buy as few as one IP. The performance may not be as good.

Webshare
Rating 8.8 / 10
4.4/5

Webshare can offer you better protocol support, optional rotation, SOCKS5, and super cheap shared ISP IPs for web scraping.

Recommended for:

Anyone looking for affordable ISP proxies for limited releases.

bart proxies 400x150 logo
Rating 7.9 / 10
4/5

Use the code PROXYWAY to get 50% off ISP & residential proxies.

Picture of Adam Dubois
Adam Dubois
Proxy geek and developer.