
Anti-detect browsers are profile-based desktop tools designed to run many isolated browser identities side by side. Each profile keeps its own cookies, local storage, and fingerprint-related settings, which helps teams keep accounts and workflows separated and repeatable.
Proxies are a key part of that setup, but proxy management differs a lot between tools and directly affects how you import proxies, assign them to profiles, and validate connections at scale. This page compares 40+ anti-detect browsers by proxy management.
If you want to understand the difference between standard, privacy-focused, and anti-detect browsers, see Browser Types.
Anti-detect browsers: proxy management
| Browser | Platforms | Engine | Guide | Proxy protocols | IPv6 support |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dolphin Anty | Windows; macOS; Linux | Chromium | Dolphin Anty proxy guide ↓ | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5; SSH | supported |
| AdsPower | Windows; macOS; Linux | Chromium | AdsPower proxy guide ↓ | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5; SSH | supported |
| GoLogin | Windows; macOS; Linux | Chromium (Orbita custom) | GoLogin proxy guide ↓ | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5 | unknown |
| Multilogin | Windows; macOS; Linux | Chromium (Mimic) & Firefox (Stealthfox) | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5 | unknown | |
| Octo Browser | Windows; macOS; Linux | Chromium | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5; SSH | supported | |
| Incogniton | Windows; macOS | Chromium | Incogniton proxy guide ↓ | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5 | unknown |
| VMLogin | Windows | Chromium | VMLogin proxy guide ↓ | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5; SSH | supported |
| MoreLogin | Windows; macOS | Chromium | MoreLogin proxy guide ↓ | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5; SSH | supported |
| Lalicat | Windows | Chromium (emulates multiple OS) | Lalicat Browser proxy guide ↓ | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS4; SOCKS5 | unknown |
| Undetectable | Windows; macOS | Chromium | Undetectable Browser proxy guide ↓ | HTTP; SOCKS5 | unknown |
| 1Browser | Windows; macOS; Linux | Chromium | 1Browser proxy guide ↓ | HTTP, HTTPS, SOCKS5; Tor network | unknown |
| Kameleo | Windows, macOS | Chroma (Chromium) / Junglefox (Firefox) | Kameleo proxy guide ↓ | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5; SSH | unknown |
| MarketerBrowser | Windows | Chromium-based | MarketerBrowser proxy guide ↓ | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS4; SOCKS5 | unknown |
| BitBrowser | Windows, macOS | Chromium- and Firefox-based | BitBrowser proxy guide ↓ | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5; SSH | unknown |
| Ghost Browser | Windows, macOS, Linux | Chromium-based multi-session | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| Linken Sphere | Windows, macOS | unknown | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5; SSH | unknown | |
| NSTBrowser | Windows; macOS | Chromium & Firefox | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| RoxyBrowser | Windows; macOS; Linux | Chromium | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5; SSH | supported | |
| Indigo Browser | Windows; macOS; Linux | Chromium & Firefox | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5 | unknown | |
| iXBrowser | Windows; macOS | Chromium | HTTP; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| GPMLogin | Windows; macOS | Chromium | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5 | unknown | |
| Vektor T13 | Windows | Firefox | HTTP; SOCKS5; OpenVPN | unknown | |
| Wade | Windows; macOS; Linux | Chromium | HTTP; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| Camoufox | Windows; macOS; Linux | Firefox | HTTP; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| HideMyAcc | Windows | Chromium | HTTP; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| WhoLogin | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | supported | |
| 0detect | Windows | Chromium | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| ADBLogin | Windows | Chromium | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| DICloak | Windows; macOS | Chromium | HTTP; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| AntBrowser | Windows | Chromium | HTTP; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| Switch Antidetect | Windows | Chromium | HTTP; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| Accovod | Windows | Chromium | HTTP; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| Vision | Windows | Chromium | HTTP; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| MuLogin | Windows | Chromium | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| Aezakmi | Windows | Chromium | HTTP; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| GeeLark | Cloud (Android) | Android (WebView) | HTTP; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| GenLogin | Windows; macOS | Chromium | HTTP; HTTPS; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| Hidemium | Windows | Chromium | HTTP; SOCKS5 | supported | |
| LightPanda | Windows | Chromium | HTTP; SOCKS5 | unknown | |
| Antik Browser | Windows | Chromium | HTTP; SOCKS5 | unknown |
Dolphin Anty
Dolphin Anty stands out for its built-in team workflow and bulk profile actions, plus its Action Synchronizer that can mirror actions across multiple running profiles (when you need many windows to behave the same way). It also puts a lot of day-to-day profile tools in one place, like cookies and profile templates, so you can spin up, duplicate, and organize work fast.
For proxies, Dolphin Anty supports assigning a proxy per profile and also keeping proxies in a shared list for reuse. Typical options include adding proxies in bulk, testing them inside the app, and attaching a “Change IP” link for gateways where you rotate IPs on demand.
Full guide with screenshots: Dolphin Anty Proxy Settings.
AdsPower
AdsPower is known for its “workbench” feel: lots of profile management features, team roles, and automation helpers (including RPA-style tools in many editions) designed for running many isolated browser profiles from one dashboard. It also offers multiple browser-engine choices, which can matter if you need to match a specific environment.
For proxies, AdsPower usually gives you two comfortable paths: keep a centralized proxy list (with tags/labels, bulk import, and checks), or set proxies directly on each profile. Common options include batch assigning proxies to profiles and re-checking proxies periodically to catch dead endpoints early.
See the detailed setup guide: AdsPower Proxy Settings.
GoLogin
GoLogin’s big “signature” features are cloud-first profile storage and easy sharing across machines and teams, plus a mature automation story (API and common automation setups). It is also often used specifically because profiles are portable and can be launched consistently across different devices.
For proxy management, GoLogin generally supports per-profile proxy assignment and a reusable proxy list, with built-in connection testing. Many setups also use a rotation link (or gateway) approach, where you keep the same endpoint but trigger a new exit IP when needed.
Step-by-step proxy setup: GoLogin Proxy Settings.
Incogniton
Incogniton is valued for being straightforward while still offering serious profile tooling: templates, cookie tools, and workflow features that help manage lots of isolated profiles without a steep learning curve. It’s also commonly set up with automation frameworks when people want repeatable profile launch behavior.
For proxies, Incogniton typically lets you set a proxy per profile and test it immediately, and it can store proxy details for reuse across profiles. A practical pattern is keeping a small, clean proxy pool and assigning one proxy per profile, then swapping via the same profile settings when needed.
Read the full configuration guide: Incogniton Proxy Settings.
VMLogin
VMLogin tends to focus on mass profile operations: bulk creation, bulk edits, and team management features aimed at keeping many profiles organized. It also exposes enough knobs for profile configuration that advanced users can standardize how profiles are created and maintained.
On the proxy side, VMLogin commonly supports setting proxies directly in each profile, including several proxy types depending on your plan/version. Typical options include pasting credentials quickly, testing the proxy, and using a gateway-style setup for rotation (where rotation happens outside the browser, but the profile stays pointed at the same endpoint)..
Walkthrough with screenshots: VMLogin Proxy Settings.
MoreLogin
MoreLogin is often chosen for its team features and profile operations at scale, plus the availability of “phone-like” or mobile-style environments in some versions. It’s built for people who want many profiles with predictable settings, plus quick cloning and grouping.
For proxy management, MoreLogin commonly supports per-profile proxy configuration, proxy testing, and bulk workflows (for example, importing profile data with proxy fields). A practical option set is: one proxy per profile for clean separation, or a gateway endpoint per profile if you rotate IPs via the provider.
See the full instructions here: MoreLogin Proxy Settings.
Lalicat Browser
Lalicat Browser is known for having deep fingerprint controls and profile customization, plus team and bulk features for running many isolated profiles. It’s also one of the tools where you can spend time fine-tuning profile parameters if you need strict consistency across a large set.
Proxy management is usually profile-based: you attach a proxy to each profile, test it, and adjust fields like host, port, and Username/Password as needed. Many setups rely on a saved proxy list for reuse, plus quick swap-and-test when a proxy is replaced.
More details in this guide: Lalicat Browser Proxy Settings.
Undetectable Browser
Undetectable Browser is often associated with “mass operations”: bulk profile creation, templates, cookie tools, and workflow helpers meant for quickly preparing lots of isolated profiles. It also commonly includes options for synchronizing or standardizing actions across many profiles, depending on the edition.
For proxies, Undetectable typically offers both a proxy list (bulk add, test, mark as used) and direct per-profile assignment. A common option is adding a rotation or refresh link for gateways, so you can keep the same endpoint in the profile but still trigger IP changes when required.
Full article with screenshots: Undetectable Browser Proxy Settings.
1Browser
1Browser is positioned as a practical “profiles + proxy” tool, where proxy handling is not an afterthought. It’s usually kept simple: create profile, attach network settings, launch, repeat, with less time spent on complicated setup.
For proxy management, 1Browser commonly supports choosing a proxy per profile and testing it quickly. Typical options include using a provider gateway for rotation (same endpoint, rotating exit IP) or a static endpoint for stable sessions, depending on what you attach to that profile.
For a full walkthrough of the settings, see: 1Browser Proxy Settings.
Kameleo
Kameleo is strong when you want “profiles + automation” in a controlled way: it has a Local API and official integration docs for tools like Selenium, Playwright, and Puppeteer, so profiles can be started and managed programmatically when needed.
Its built-in Proxy Manager supports HTTP/HTTPS, SOCKS5, and SSH proxies, includes a proxy test function, and even supports fast entry via a standard connection-string format (useful for quick setup at scale). Proxies can also be set through the API during profile creation.
For a full breakdown of the process, see: Kameleo Proxy Settings.
MarketerBrowser
MarketerBrowser is typically described as an anti-detect browser aimed at running multiple separate profiles with fingerprint controls, built for operational work where each profile needs its own environment.
For proxies, it supports HTTP and SOCKS4/5 and follows a clear flow inside the app: go to the Proxies section, add a proxy, test it, and save it. It also supports both static-style entries and gateway-style rotating setups (with Username/Password when required).
To follow the exact click path, use this article: MarketerBrowser Proxy Settings.
BitBrowser
BitBrowser provides both an application workflow and a documented API for managing profiles at scale. Its docs describe profile creation with randomized fingerprint options and profile updates, which is useful if you standardize profile setup via scripts.
For proxy handling, BitBrowser’s API documentation explicitly lists proxy types including HTTP, HTTPS, SOCKS5 and SSH, supports proxy credentials fields, includes a proxy check endpoint, and even allows fields like a proxy rotate URL for refresh-style gateways. It also includes an IPv6 flag in the profile parameters.
Full guide with screenshots: BitBrowser Proxy Settings.