Budget-friendly antidetect browser with per-profile pricing, 5 free profiles, and Selenium, Puppeteer, and Playwright support.
The anti-detect core: how Roxy 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 Roxy Browser site.
Roxy Browser (styled RoxyBrowser) is an antidetect browser for multi-account management developed by LINKV TECH PTE. LTD., a company registered in Singapore. Like the rest of the category, it gives each browser profile an isolated, configurable fingerprint environment so multiple accounts on platforms such as Amazon, Facebook, TikTok, Etsy, and eBay do not get linked to one another. The vendor claims its profiles can pass well-known detection checkers including Fingerprint and CreepJS — a common marketing claim in this space that you should verify against your own workflow rather than take at face value.
Roxy Browser is a newer, lesser-known name compared with Multilogin, AdsPower, or GoLogin, and there is far less independent third-party coverage of it. What makes it worth a look anyway is its pricing model: instead of fixed plan tiers, it charges per profile per month on a sliding scale, which can work out significantly cheaper than the established players — especially at high profile counts. It also ships a permanent free plan with 5 profiles, which is more generous than AdsPower's 2.
Roxy Browser uses usage-based, per-profile pricing rather than fixed plans. The tiers, verified from the official pricing page and pricing documentation:
Subscriptions run 30, 90, 180, or 360 days, with larger discounts on longer terms. Team members are $5 each and extra workspaces $10 per team. New users get a one-time 7-day free trial with 10 profiles and all features. One caveat from the docs: once you exceed 100 profiles, the minimum purchase increment is 100 profiles. Do the per-profile math for your exact count before comparing against flat-rate competitors — at 10 profiles Roxy is roughly in line with the budget tier of the market, but at 500 or 1,000 profiles the sliding scale undercuts most established rivals.
Proxy configuration is per-profile and follows the bring-your-own-proxy model practitioners expect: you attach your own residential or mobile proxies over HTTP, HTTPS, SOCKS5, or SSH so each profile keeps a stable IP alongside its fingerprint. Unusually for the category, Roxy Browser also operates an in-app Proxy Store selling IPs directly — its own Roxy IP service plus third-party Rola-IP inventory — with purchase durations matching the subscription terms. The convenience is real, but as with any browser-vendor proxy bundle, independent proxy providers with published trial terms and IP-quality data are easier to evaluate; the store's advertised 99.99% connection success rate is a vendor claim.
Roxy Browser is a credible budget option with an unusually complete feature set for its price: dual engines, Linux support, a real automation API, team workspaces, and a 5-profile free plan. The per-profile pricing is its strongest argument — at scale it undercuts nearly every established competitor. The honest counterweight is trust: this is a young brand without the years of public scrutiny that Multilogin or AdsPower have absorbed, and its security and anti-detection claims are self-reported. The sensible approach is to treat the free plan and 7-day trial as a proper evaluation — run your actual accounts and proxies through it before migrating anything important. If you want maximum pedigree and don't mind paying for it, Multilogin remains the safer default; if you want automation depth with a bigger ecosystem, AdsPower is the closer comparison. Choose Roxy Browser when price per profile is the deciding factor and you've verified it works for your platforms.
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