TL;DROur verdict on Blurpath, in 5 facts
- 1Hong Kong-based provider (Blurpath Market Ltd) offering residential, ISP, datacenter, mobile and SOCKS5 proxies
- 2Homepage advertises 60M+ residential IPs across 190+ countries (some third-party listings cite a higher 200M+ figure)
- 3Cheapest metered entry is rotating ISP from ~$0.5/GB; per-IP products start around $2.5/IP
- 4Solid developer tooling: documented API, multi-language code samples, dashboard with sub-accounts, crypto payments
- 5Reputation is small and mixed -- use the free trial and a small paid test before committing
The verdict
Benchmark data and published specifications — here's where Blurpath lands.
- Very broad product range: rotating residential, static ISP, datacenter, rotating mobile (4G/5G), SOCKS5 and unlimited plans under one account
- Low metered entry price -- rotating ISP from ~$0.5/GB and rotating residential from ~$0.77/GB on published promo pricing
- 60M+ residential IP pool spanning 190+ countries with live per-country IP counters shown on site
- Documented proxy API with whitelist and user/pass auth, plus code samples for C/C++, Go, Node.js, PHP, Java and Python
- Flexible payments including cryptocurrency, PayPal, credit card and several regional methods
- Country-, state- and city-level targeting with both rotating and sticky sessions, plus sub-account management
- Free trial via signup and no-contract pay-as-you-go billing make it cheap to test
- Thin independent reputation -- small Trustpilot/G2 footprint and much review content is affiliate-driven
- At least one public scam allegation tied to a non-refundable payment dispute; refund terms not clearly surfaced
- Support is reported as heavily Telegram-based with leaner documentation than tier-one rivals
- Performance claims (99.5% success, 99.8%-99.99% uptime, sub-0.5s) are vendor-published, not independently benchmarked
- Heavy perpetual-discount pricing (30%-87% off) makes true long-term cost hard to assess
- No clearly advertised ASN targeting or browser extension; services unavailable in Mainland China
Pricing A+ · Performance B+ · Pool quality A · Support B · Ethics B
Each axis is graded A+ to D using our standard rubric: how we score →
Who should not use Blurpath?+
What we think after testing Blurpath
Editorial review by Maya Cortez · last updated Jul 16, 2026
Blurpath is a residential-proxy and web-scraping infrastructure vendor operating out of Hong Kong (the footer lists "Blurpath Market Ltd" and third-party records tie it to Hong Kong Xingyun Technology Limited). It positions itself as a budget-to-mid-tier, all-in-one proxy shop aimed at web scraping, e-commerce price and review monitoring, SEO/SERP tracking, social media automation, ad verification, and general large-scale public-data collection. The site is multilingual and clearly oriented toward a global audience, with an explicit note that services are not available in Mainland China due to regulatory restrictions.
The product catalog is unusually broad for a provider of this size. Blurpath advertises rotating (dynamic) residential proxies, static ISP proxies, dedicated datacenter proxies, rotating ISP proxies, rotating mobile proxies (real 4G/5G IPs), unlimited residential proxies, and SOCKS5 proxies. On its homepage the company advertises a pool of 60M+ residential IPs covering 190+ countries/regions; note that some third-party listings and press materials cite a larger "200M+ proxies / 195 locations" figure, but the canonical homepage number is 60M+, so that is the figure to trust. The site also publishes live per-country IP counters (e.g. roughly 5.4M US, 2.6M UK, 2.0M Brazil, 1.8M Germany at the time of writing), which is a useful transparency signal even if the exact numbers fluctuate.
Pricing is built around heavy, near-permanent promotional discounts, so headline rates should be read with caution. On published pricing, the cheapest metered entry point is rotating ISP proxies from about $0.5/GB, with rotating residential listed from roughly $0.77/GB and mobile from about $0.8/GB. Per-IP products start around $2.5/IP for static ISP and SOCKS5, and $3/IP (advertised "$3.15/month") for dedicated datacenter IPs, which are billed by IP count with unlimited bandwidth. Unlimited residential access is sold as a daily plan starting near $79/day. Billing is no-contract and pay-as-you-go, and Blurpath says custom plans are available. Because many of these prices carry 30%-87% "OFF" tags, the effective floor is genuinely low but the non-promo list prices are higher.
On features, Blurpath covers the essentials a scraping or multi-accounting user expects. It supports HTTP(S) and SOCKS5 protocols, both rotating and sticky sessions, and country-, state-, and city-level targeting (ASN targeting is not clearly advertised). There is a documented proxy API with whitelist and user/password authentication, and the API docs ship copy-paste integration snippets for C/C++, Go, Node.js, PHP, Java, and Python. A web dashboard handles usage tracking and lets you create and manage sub-accounts. Payments are flexible: the wallet/recharge flow supports cryptocurrency, credit card, PayPal, and several regional methods (DANA, Rabbit LINE Pay, BILLEASE, local HK/CN options). There is a free trial via signup (promotional videos reference a 1GB residential trial valid for a short window), and a Refund Policy page exists in the footer, though the specific refund terms are not surfaced on the marketing pages.
The caveats are the usual ones for a younger, lightly-reviewed provider. Independent third-party coverage is thin and much of the existing "review" content is affiliate-driven, so it should be weighed skeptically. The third-party review base is small (a handful of Trustpilot entries and a sparse G2 profile), and that profile mixes genuine praise for IP quality and support with at least one serious scam allegation tied to a non-refundable payment dispute. Reported support is heavily Telegram-centric, documentation is leaner than tier-one rivals, and the UX is described as less beginner-friendly. The performance numbers on the site (99.8%-99.99% uptime, a "99.5% success rate", sub-0.5s response) are vendor-published marketing claims, not independently benchmarked, and should be treated as such. Pricing also leans on perpetual-discount framing, which makes true long-term cost harder to pin down.
Who is it for? Blurpath suits budget-conscious scrapers, multi-account and e-commerce operators, and developers who want a wide proxy menu (residential, ISP, datacenter, mobile, SOCKS5) under one dashboard with crypto-friendly billing and a low metered entry price. It is less ideal for enterprises that require strong public track records, SLAs, deep documentation, and well-established support channels. The free trial and small per-IP plans make it cheap to validate, which is exactly how a provider with limited independent reputation should be approached.
Blurpath Proxy REVIEW & Setup: Make Antidetect Browsers 100% UNDETECTABLE
Watch our hands-on walkthrough of Blurpath — dashboard, API, real workload, the bits the marketing pages skip.
Live performance
Numbers from available benchmark data — our tests, independent lab reports and published specs.
Figures combine our test data, independent lab reports and published specifications — sourcing documented on our methodology page →
Editorial score breakdown
How Blurpath scores across the five dimensions our reviewers weigh — pricing, performance, pool quality, support and ethics.
IP pool size — ranked
Where Blurpath ranks against the largest networks in the directory. Bars are scaled to 350M.
Bars rank total advertised IP pool size. Blurpath publishes 60M+ residential IPs — see the full breakdown in the specs above.
Pricing
From $0.50/GB. Detailed plan breakdown not yet published.
View plans on Blurpath →Proxy types offered
4 types available. Pricing varies by type and volume.
Residential $0.50/GB
60M+ residential IPs real-home IPs across 190 countries.
Datacenter —
High-throughput shared & dedicated DC IPs. Sub-second response on US/EU PoPs.
ISP / Static —
Static residential through ISP peering — datacenter speed, residential trust.
Mobile —
Carrier-rotated 4G/5G IPs with country + carrier targeting.
Features & integrations
What's included out of the box.
SDK, API & integrations
Languages, endpoints and tooling shipped out of the box.
Code examples
Drop-in snippets to start using Blurpath from your stack. Replace USER, PASS and the gateway with what you get from your dashboard.
# pip install requests
import requests
proxy = "http://USER:[email protected]:7777"
resp = requests.get(
"https://httpbin.org/ip",
proxies={"http": proxy, "https": proxy},
timeout=10,
)
print(resp.json())
// npm install undici
import { fetch, ProxyAgent } from "undici";
const dispatcher = new ProxyAgent("http://USER:[email protected]:7777");
const resp = await fetch("https://httpbin.org/ip", { dispatcher });
console.log(await resp.json());
curl -x http://USER:[email protected]:7777 \
https://httpbin.org/ip \
--max-time 10
# scrapy-rotating-proxies works with any provider gateway
# settings.py:
DOWNLOADER_MIDDLEWARES = {
"scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.httpproxy.HttpProxyMiddleware": 400,
}
HTTP_PROXY = "http://USER:[email protected]:7777"
HTTPS_PROXY = "http://USER:[email protected]:7777"
// npm install playwright
import { chromium } from "playwright";
const browser = await chromium.launch({
proxy: {
server: "http://gate.blurpath.com:7777",
username: "USER",
password: "PASS",
},
});
const page = await browser.newPage();
await page.goto("https://httpbin.org/ip");
console.log(await page.locator("body").innerText());
await browser.close();
Compliance & privacy
Auditable certifications, sourcing and data-handling posture.
Company & resources
Who builds and operates this product.
Key markets covered
190+ countries served.
Blurpath vs alternatives
How Blurpath stacks up against the closest providers in our directory. Tap any column header to read that review.
| Metric | Blurpath | CoProxy | Youproxy | Floppydata Proxy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starting price (entry plan) | $0.50 | $1.00 | $0.07 | $0.60 |
| Pool size | 60M+ residential IPs | 90M+ residential IPs (per third-party review; unverified on official site) | 500K+ IPs | 65M+ IPs claimed (disputed; some sources cite ~10M residential) |
| Locations | 190+ countries | — | — | — |
| Rating | 3.4 / 5 | 3.4 / 5 | 3.4 / 5 | 3.4 / 5 |
| Read review | YOU ARE HERE | View → | View → | View → |
How to get started with Blurpath
A 5-minute walkthrough from sign-up to your first successful request. Total setup time: ~10 minutes.
-
1
Open an account & verify your inbox
Create a Blurpath account at https://blurpath.com. Self-serve access is usually available immediately.
-
2
Pick a starter package
Use the dashboard to choose between Residential / Datacenter / ISP. Start with the smallest plan to validate your workload before scaling.
-
3
Grab your endpoint + credentials
Set up either an IP-whitelist auth or username:password pair from the dashboard. Save the proxy hostname + port into your scraper or browser config.
-
4
Set up session stickiness
Decide between rotating-on-every-request (best for SERP scraping) or sticky sessions (best for account-based workflows).
-
5
Benchmark before committing
Run 100-500 test requests against your real target before paying for volume. Compare success rate to Blurpath's claimed rate before committing to an annual plan.
Stuck? Check Blurpath's documentation or email us.
User reviews
No reader reviews yet — be the first below.
Used Blurpath? Write a review+
FAQ
The questions buyers actually ask.
