Session management browser focused on productivity and workspace organization.
The anti-detect core: how Ghost Browser 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 Ghost Browser site.
Ghost Browser is a Chromium-based productivity browser, and it is important to be precise about that label up front: it is not a fingerprint-spoofing antidetect browser. Its own marketing describes it as a tool for managing multiple online accounts and identities simultaneously, and nowhere on its homepage does it claim to mask or randomize your browser fingerprint. If your goal is to make many accounts look like they originate from many different devices to defeat anti-fraud systems, Ghost Browser is the wrong tool. If your goal is to stay logged into several accounts on the same site at once and keep your work organized, it is genuinely excellent.
The core mechanism is session isolation. Each “Identity” in Ghost Browser is a colored tab with its own isolated cookie jar, so you can be logged into three, five, or ten different accounts on the same website at the same time, in the same window. Add Workspaces to group related tabs and projects, and you have a browser built for people who manage a lot of accounts as part of their day job rather than as part of an anti-detection operation.
The homepage notes endorsements from Buffer, Shopify, and MakeUseOf, which is consistent with its positioning toward social media managers, web developers, customer support teams, and QA testers rather than the antidetect crowd.
Ghost Browser publishes three public tiers plus an enterprise option (annual-billing rates):
The key thing to understand is that the headline proxy feature lives on the Pro plan; Basic gives you the identity isolation but not the granular per-tab proxy routing.
Ghost Browser's proxy story is one of its standout features, and it works differently from a typical antidetect browser. Instead of one proxy per isolated profile, Ghost Proxy Control lets you attach a proxy at the level of an individual tab, an Identity, or an entire Workspace. That means you can have one window where tab A routes through a US residential IP, tab B through a UK IP, and tab C runs direct. For agencies managing client accounts across regions, this per-tab granularity is more flexible than the rigid one-proxy-per-profile model most tools use. The catch, again, is that this capability is gated to the Pro tier. You bring your own proxies; Ghost Browser does not sell bandwidth.
Ghost Browser is excellent at exactly what it claims to do — multi-session, multi-identity productivity — and it should not be judged as an antidetect browser, because it never claims to be one. For a social media agency, a support team, or a developer juggling many logins, it is one of the slickest tools available, and the per-tab proxy control on Pro is a real differentiator. But if your actual requirement is fingerprint masking to keep accounts from being linked by anti-fraud systems, you need a true antidetect browser. In that case look at BitBrowser, which provides per-profile fingerprint generation across 20 parameters, a free 10-profile tier, and paid plans from $10/month — the right category of tool for ban-sensitive multi-accounting. Choose Ghost Browser for organized productivity; choose a fingerprint-spoofing browser for evasion.
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