New Delhi [India], June 30: Anyone who has shopped for proxies knows the odd experience of lining up two providers and still having no clue which one is cheaper. One charges by the gigabyte. The next charges per IP per month. A third quotes a price for every thousand successful requests, and a fourth folds the whole thing into a subscription with a monthly minimum you only notice at checkout. The same job can look ten times more expensive or ten times cheaper depending on which number happens to catch your eye first.
That gap between the advertised price and the bill you actually pay is the reason ProxyPlox exists. It is a comparison platform that tracks more than ninety proxy providers and answers a single, practical question: for the work you are doing, who is genuinely the cheapest, and who only looks cheap until you read the fine print.
Why Proxy Pricing Is So Hard to Compare
The proxy market runs on at least four different pricing models at the same time. Most residential, datacenter and mobile proxies are sold per gigabyte. Static residential and dedicated datacenter IPs are usually rented per IP per month. Managed scraping and search APIs charge per thousand requests. On top of that, almost every plan layers on its own quirks. Traffic that expires at the end of the month. Minimum spends. Country or city targeting sold as a paid extra. Promo codes that quietly rewrite the math.
The result is that the lowest sticker price is rarely the lowest real cost. A clean pool at a dollar a gigabyte can beat a fifty cent pool that gets blocked half the time, because the number that actually matters is cost per successful request, not the figure printed on the pricing page. People who buy proxies for a living have been saying this for years. The trouble is that working it out by hand, across dozens of providers and hundreds of plans, is tedious enough that most buyers just guess and hope.
A Market That Got Bigger and Murkier in 2026
This would be a smaller problem if the market itself were small. It is not. Demand for web data has climbed steadily, with the web scraping software market worth roughly $568 million in 2024 and on a path that analysts at Verified Market Research expect to pass $1.6 billion by 2031. Automated traffic now makes up more than half of everything moving across the internet, according to Imperva’s bad bot reporting. Where there is that much demand, suppliers follow, and there are now dozens of them competing on increasingly identical marketing claims.
Trust got harder too. In January 2026, Google Cloud dismantled IPIDEA, at the time the largest residential proxy network in the world. The takedown wiped out millions of exit nodes and revealed that several separate proxy brands had been quietly reselling the very same pool of compromised devices. The lesson landed fast across the industry. Buying a proxy service based on its claimed pool size tells you almost nothing about what you are really getting. Add the regulatory attention now falling on how residential IPs are sourced, and it becomes clear why a buyer needs more than a vendor’s own homepage to make a sensible decision.
What ProxyPlox Actually Does
ProxyPlox starts from your usage rather than the provider’s headline. You tell it how much you need, measured in pages to scrape, in bandwidth, or in number of IPs, and it estimates the real monthly cost of every provider for that exact workload. The page math assumes an average page weight of 250 kilobytes, and the calculator folds in bundle pricing and any active promo codes so the comparison stays like for like.
Behind that estimate sits a fair amount of groundwork. The platform currently tracks 92 providers across 1,251 individual pricing plans and 74 product categories, and it has analyzed 25,029 outside reviews to fold reputation into the picture. Rankings are not built on price alone. They weigh the effective cost for your usage alongside network size, country coverage, protocol support, independent review scores, and the quality of support. The pricing data is refreshed continuously, and the rankings recompute whenever the underlying numbers move.
There Is No Single Best Proxy, and That Is the Point
Ask ProxyPlox to compare a high volume scraping workload and it does not hand back one winner. It hands back several, because the word “best” means different things to different buyers. For one sample workload the platform might surface SimplyNode as the strongest overall pick at around $11.25 a month, Proxy6 as the outright cheapest at $0.26, Proxiware as the highest rated option at $2.25, and anyIP as the most reliable at $25. Same workload, four very different answers, and a spread of nearly a hundred to one between the cheapest and the most expensive.
That spread is the whole argument for using a calculator instead of a static top ten list. A provider that is perfect for someone running a handful of stealth accounts can be a poor and pricey fit for someone crawling millions of product pages. By putting the trade off in plain sight, the tool lets you optimize for the thing you actually care about, whether that is raw price, reliability, review scores, or a free plan to test with before committing a cent.
Proxy Types, Use Cases, and Honest Rankings
Under the hood, proxies come in a few flavors, and ProxyPlox lets you compare within each one as well as across them:
- Residential proxies route through real home connections and are the hardest to detect, which makes them the default for strongly protected targets.
- ISP, or static residential, proxies pair datacenter speed with residential trust and suit logged in sessions that need a stable address.
- Mobile proxies use real cellular IPs and carry the most trust for the strictest sites.
- Datacenter proxies are fast and cheap, and remain the sensible choice for sites that do not fight back.
The site also organizes everything by the job you are trying to get done, with dedicated guides for web scraping, SEO and rank tracking, sneaker and ticket buying, social media automation, managing multiple accounts, streaming, gaming, and targeting by country. If you arrive knowing only “I need US residential IPs for Instagram,” there is a path built for exactly that.
On the question every comparison site eventually has to answer, ProxyPlox is upfront. Some of its outbound links are affiliate links that may earn it a commission. Its stated position is that the methodology is fixed and published, applied identically to every provider, and that sponsored placements are clearly labeled and never move a score. It also repeats the advice any honest reviewer should give. Prices in this market change often, so confirm the current rate on the provider’s own site before you pay for anything.
About ProxyPlox
ProxyPlox is an independent proxy comparison platform that prices more than ninety providers against your real usage rather than their advertised starting price. You can compare providers by pages, bandwidth, IP count, or free plans, run providers head to head, and read the full ranking methodology, all at ProxyPlox.
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