Cloud Android devices for mobile app management and social media automation.
The anti-detect core: how GeeLark masks each browser fingerprint vector. Verified against the official site — “—” means not publicly documented.
Drive profiles programmatically for scraping and multi-account workflows.
Written by the ProxyLook editorial team. Pricing and feature facts verified against the official GeeLark site.
GeeLark (geelark.com) is not an antidetect browser in the usual sense — it's a cloud-phone infrastructure platform, and it should be evaluated as one. It describes itself as the first cloud phone infrastructure platform designed for scaling social media, providing real ARM-based Android devices running natively in the cloud rather than browser profiles or desktop emulation. Each cloud phone is a separate device instance you access from anywhere through a web login. The crucial distinction GeeLark draws is that it is not an Android emulator: emulators carry static device signatures that platforms learn to flag, whereas GeeLark runs genuine cloud phones, each pre-configured with a unique device fingerprint. For operators whose accounts live inside mobile apps — TikTok, Instagram, and the like — this is a fundamentally different and often more durable approach than spoofing a desktop browser.
GeeLark's capabilities are built around mobile-native, app-based multi-accounting:
Supported apps explicitly include TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter (X), Reddit, Pinterest, Gmail, Telegram, and Tinder. Typical use cases span social media and affiliate marketing, e-commerce and dropshipping, crypto airdrop farming, cloud gaming, ad verification, and online reputation management.
GeeLark's pricing model is distinctive because it combines subscription tiers with metered cloud-phone usage. The most important verified figure is the usage rate: cloud phone time costs $0.007 per minute by default. That metered component is the real driver of cost — your monthly bill depends heavily on how many minutes your phones actually run, not just on the plan you pick.
The Base and Pro tiers are configured by profile count, with bonus minutes scaling alongside, so the published numbers vary by how many profiles you provision. At the time of review GeeLark advertised a promotion of up to 35% off subscriptions plus an extra 5% off time add-ons through July 9, 2026. Because the dollar figures for Base and Pro depend on the profile count you select, treat the free plan and the $0.007/minute usage rate as the firm anchors when budgeting.
GeeLark includes built-in proxy management even on the free plan, which is essential to its model: each cloud phone needs its own IP to match the device-level isolation, and the proxy is what ties a phone's network identity to its simulated GPS and SIM location. You assign proxies per cloud phone, and the platform is designed to pair them with the per-device fingerprint so the whole identity — device, location, carrier, and IP — stays coherent. As with most platforms in this space, you bring your own residential or mobile proxies; mobile proxies in particular are the natural fit here, since GeeLark's whole premise is presenting as a genuine mobile device. There is no first-party proxy marketplace described, so plan to source proxies from an external provider.
GeeLark occupies a different category from the desktop antidetect browsers it's often listed beside, and that's its strength: if your accounts live inside mobile apps, a real cloud phone with a unique device fingerprint, GPS/SIM simulation, and per-device proxying is a far more authentic footprint than any desktop browser can produce. The catch is the metered pricing — at $0.007/minute, continuously running phones add up — and the Android-only, mobile-only scope. If your work is browser-based multi-accounting on the desktop web, a true antidetect browser like Octo Browser (which also offers Android-style mobile fingerprints and an in-app proxy shop) will be cheaper and more appropriate. But for mobile-app-first operations at scale, GeeLark is a genuinely different and compelling tool.
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