TL;DROur verdict on CoProxy, in 5 facts
- 1Budget proxy provider (CoProxy Royal Trusted Services LTD), established 2022 and operating from a UK address.
- 2Offers rotating datacenter, residential and mobile proxies over HTTP/SOCKS5 with IPv4/IPv6 support.
- 3Entry pricing is cheap — datacenter from ~$1/month and rotating plans from roughly $0.25-$2.00 per GB depending on source.
- 4Strong geo-targeting (country/state/city/ASN), IP whitelisting, sticky + rotating sessions, and crypto payments.
- 5Caveats: conflicting pool-size claims, thin official docs, ambiguous refunds and mid-tier speeds — test the free allowance first.
The verdict
Benchmark data and published specifications — here's where CoProxy lands.
- Very low entry pricing — datacenter plans from around $1/month and rotating plans billed pay-per-GB
- Broad proxy mix for a budget provider: rotating datacenter, residential and mobile, plus a free public proxy list
- Free signup allowance (commonly cited as 5GB bandwidth plus a 5,000-IP free proxy list) acts as a no-cost trial
- Granular geo-targeting advertised by country, state, city and ASN, with free country targeting
- Both sticky and rotating sessions, HTTP/SOCKS5, IPv4/IPv6, IP/password auth and whitelisting for up to 3 IPs
- Accepts crypto (Bitcoin/Coinbase) alongside Visa, Mastercard and PayPal
- Free VPN-style Chrome extension for quick manual country/city selection
- Official site could not be fetched during research (Cloudflare-fronted), so specs rely on third-party sources and should be verified directly
- Conflicting headline specs across sources — residential pool quoted as 90M+ vs. a directory's 300K+ / 40+ countries
- Ambiguous refund policy: a money-back guarantee is advertised but other reviews say used bandwidth is non-refundable
- No clear evidence of a developer proxy-management API, managed scraping/unblocker API or SERP API
- Independent testers note relatively slow speeds and higher latency, placing it in the mid-tier
- Thin documentation and low, partly promotional review volume make the brand hard to fully vet
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 CoProxy?+
What we think after testing CoProxy
Editorial review by Maya Cortez · last updated Jul 16, 2026
CoProxy (coproxy.io) is a budget-oriented proxy provider operated by CoProxy Royal Trusted Services LTD. Multiple independent listings agree it was established in 2022 — originally with Israeli roots and now operating from a UK address (128 City Road, London, EC1V 2NX). The brand positions itself as a low-cost, no-frills supplier of IPv4/IPv6 proxies for tasks like web scraping, SEO and market research, account management, e-commerce and bypassing geo-restrictions. Note that our usual primary source, the official homepage, could not be fetched during research (it is fronted by Cloudflare and blocked automated retrieval), so the specifications below are drawn from corroborating third-party reviews rather than read directly off coproxy.io. Treat the figures as advertised values to verify on the live site.
On published specifications, CoProxy spans an unusually broad set of proxy types for a provider at this price point: shared and rotating datacenter proxies, rotating residential proxies, rotating mobile proxies, and a free public proxy list. Pool size claims vary by source and by product. A detailed IPFighter review cites a 90M+ IP residential pool with "worldwide coverage," while the ProxyLook directory lists a more modest 300K+ IPs across 40+ countries — the latter most likely reflecting the datacenter side of the business. Because these numbers conflict and could not be confirmed on the official site, the true headline pool and exact country count should be treated as unverified. Connectivity is via HTTP and SOCKS5 (with SSL noted), and the network supports both IPv4 and IPv6.
Pricing is the main selling point. Datacenter subscriptions are sold per proxy on a monthly basis and start around $1/month for a 50-proxy bundle, scaling up to roughly $8/month for 500 proxies according to aggregator listings. Rotating plans are billed pay-per-GB; entry pricing is quoted as low as £0.25/GB for datacenter rotation in one review, while the ProxyLook listing records an entry point of about $2.00/GB (verified mid-2026). New users reportedly receive a free allowance on signup — commonly cited as 5GB of bandwidth plus a free 5,000-IP HTTP proxy list — which functions as a trial. Small bulk discounts (around 2-4%) and an optional prepayment discount via chat support are mentioned by reviewers. Payments include Visa, Mastercard, PayPal and crypto (Bitcoin/Coinbase).
Feature-wise, CoProxy covers the essentials. Reviewers describe both timed sticky and rotating sessions, IP/password authentication, and IP whitelisting for up to three public IPs. Geo-targeting is a relative strength: filtering by country, state, city and ASN is advertised, with country targeting offered free. A bandwidth monitor and a "custom bind to any domain" option are listed in the dashboard, and CoProxy also offers a free VPN-style Chrome extension that lets you pick a country and city — handy for quick manual use. The provider advertises a 99.9%+ uptime commitment, though this is a vendor claim and not independently confirmed here. There is no clear evidence of a developer-grade REST proxy-management API, a managed scraping/unblocker API, or a SERP API, so power users who need programmatic control or done-for-you scraping infrastructure should confirm availability directly.
Who is it for? CoProxy suits cost-sensitive users who want cheap datacenter proxies for bulk tasks, plus optional access to residential and mobile IPs without committing to a premium vendor's minimums. Independent testers position it firmly in the mid-tier: IPFighter recorded solid proxy quality scores (85-87%) and accurate geo-mapping but flagged relatively slow speeds and higher latency, recommending it mainly for social account work. ProxyLook's nightly test rig logged a 95.0% success rate with a ~1.3s average response time against a standard target panel — these are third-party measurements, not figures published by CoProxy, and we have not lab-tested the provider ourselves.
The caveats are real. Documentation and an official spec sheet are thin, and key numbers (pool size, country count) disagree across sources and could not be verified on the official site during this research. Founding and HQ details also differ between listings (most say 2022/UK; one directory says 2020/USA). The refund position is muddy: a "100% money-back guarantee" is advertised in places, yet other reviews state that bandwidth is non-refundable once used, with refunds limited to transactional or technical errors — so do not assume a clean no-questions trial. Reputation signals are limited and partly promotional: several "reviews" and YouTube clips read as affiliate content, and review-platform volume is low.
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 CoProxy scores across the five dimensions our reviewers weigh — pricing, performance, pool quality, support and ethics.
IP pool size — ranked
Where CoProxy ranks against the largest networks in the directory. Bars are scaled to 350M.
Bars rank total advertised IP pool size. CoProxy publishes 90M+ residential IPs (per third-party review; unverified on official site) — see the full breakdown in the specs above.
Pricing
From $1.00/GB. Detailed plan breakdown not yet published.
View plans on CoProxy →Proxy types offered
3 types available. Pricing varies by type and volume.
Residential $1.00/GB
90M+ residential IPs (per third-party review; unverified on official site) real-home IPs across 40 countries.
Datacenter —
High-throughput shared & dedicated DC IPs. Sub-second response on US/EU PoPs.
Mobile —
Carrier-rotated 4G/5G IPs with country + carrier targeting.
Features & integrations
What's included out of the box.
Compliance & privacy
Auditable certifications, sourcing and data-handling posture.
Company & resources
Who builds and operates this product.
Key markets covered
40+ countries served.
CoProxy vs alternatives
How CoProxy stacks up against the closest providers in our directory. Tap any column header to read that review.
| Metric | CoProxy | Youproxy | Blurpath | Floppydata Proxy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starting price (entry plan) | $1.00 | $0.07 | $0.50 | $0.60 |
| Pool size | 90M+ residential IPs (per third-party review; unverified on official site) | 500K+ IPs | 60M+ residential IPs | 65M+ IPs claimed (disputed; some sources cite ~10M residential) |
| Locations | 40+ 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 CoProxy
A 5-minute walkthrough from sign-up to your first successful request. Total setup time: ~10 minutes.
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1
Open an account & verify your inbox
Create a CoProxy account at https://coproxy.io. Self-serve access is usually available immediately.
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2
Pick a starter package
Use the dashboard to choose between Residential / Datacenter / Mobile. Start with the smallest plan to validate your workload before scaling.
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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.
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4
Set up session stickiness
Decide between rotating-on-every-request (best for SERP scraping) or sticky sessions (best for account-based workflows).
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5
Benchmark before committing
Run 100-500 test requests against your real target before paying for volume. Compare success rate to CoProxy's claimed rate before committing to an annual plan.
Stuck? Check CoProxy's documentation or email us.
User reviews
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FAQ
The questions buyers actually ask.
