TL;DROur verdict on IPRocket, in 5 facts
- Residential proxy provider with pay-as-you-go pricing from $0.9/GB and non-expiring traffic
- Advertised pool of 60M+ IPs (90M+ on Premium) across 195 countries with city and ASN targeting
- Supports HTTP(S) and SOCKS5 with both rotating and sticky sessions and unlimited concurrency
- A free trial is advertised, lowering the barrier to evaluation
- Corporate details, API, refund, and support specifics are unconfirmed and should be verified directly
The verdict
Independent nightly benchmarks since March 2024 — here's where IPRocket lands.
- Low pay-as-you-go entry price starting at $0.9 per GB
- Large advertised IP pool (60M+ standard, 90M+ Premium tier)
- Broad coverage across 195 countries/regions
- Non-expiring purchased traffic with no monthly minimums
- Unlimited concurrent sessions advertised
- Both rotating and sticky (fixed-IP) session options
- Fine-grained targeting: continent, country/region, state, city, and ASN (ISP)
- Residential-only focus; no confirmed dedicated ISP or datacenter proxy product
- Thin corporate transparency (no confirmed founding year, HQ, or payment methods)
- Performance claims (99.86% success, 99.05% uptime, 0.3s response) are vendor-stated and unverified
- No clearly documented first-party API for programmatic proxy generation
- Refund policy, crypto acceptance, and 24/7 support not confirmed on official pages
- Potential brand confusion with the unrelated 'IPRockets' (iprockets.net)
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 IPRocket?+
What we think after testing IPRocket
Editorial review by Maya Cortez · last tested Jul 9, 2026
On published specifications, IPRocket presents itself as a lean, residential-first proxy provider that competes primarily on price and pool breadth rather than a sprawling product catalog. Its official pages describe two closely related products: a standard residential proxy backed by an advertised pool of over 60 million IPs, and a Premium residential tier the site says draws on 90 million-plus IPs (its marketing headline elsewhere rounds this to '80M+'). Both are pitched at the same core audience — web scraping, market research, ad verification, social media management, and e-commerce data collection — and both are addressable across what the company states is 195 countries and regions. That geographic figure, combined with granularity that reaches continent, country/region, state, city, and ASN (ISP) targeting, positions IPRocket as broadly comparable to mainstream residential vendors on paper.
The commercial model is where IPRocket is clearest and, on its own terms, most appealing. The published pricing is pay-as-you-go, starting at $0.9 per GB, with the company emphasizing that purchased traffic does not expire, that there are no monthly minimums, and that failed requests are not billed. For buyers with uneven or bursty workloads, non-expiring bandwidth is a genuine differentiator against subscription-locked competitors, and an advertised free trial lowers the barrier to a first evaluation. The site also states that concurrent sessions are unlimited — a meaningful claim for anyone running parallelized scraping jobs, since per-thread surcharges are a common hidden cost elsewhere. Higher-volume tiers are described as reducing the per-GB rate, which is standard for the category.
Technically, the specifications cover the fundamentals a scraping team expects. IPRocket documents both HTTP(S) and SOCKS5 protocols, and its dashboard workflow — choose a country, pick rotating or sticky, select hostname (DNS or IP), and set a TTL for fixed IPs — mirrors the backconnect gateway pattern used across the industry. Sticky sessions can be pinned with configurable intervals in seconds, minutes, or hours, which is adequate for account-management and checkout-style flows that need session persistence. A single backconnect endpoint fronts the rotating pool, the standard approach to rotating exit IPs while keeping integration simple. The company publishes a set of integration guides for antidetect browsers (ixBrowser, Nstbrowser, BitBrowser, Dolphin Anty, Hidemyacc, and others), which suggests the service is oriented toward multi-accounting and browser-automation users in addition to raw data extraction.
Several vendor performance claims appear prominently but should be read as marketing rather than independently verified metrics: IPRocket advertises a 99.86% success rate, 99.05% uptime 'backed by patented solutions,' and a 0.3-second response time. These are the kind of figures every provider in the space cites, and no third-party benchmark corroborates them here; they are noted only as claims and are not treated as confirmed results.
The more important caveats are about coverage and transparency. Despite ASN/ISP-level targeting, there is no confirmed dedicated ISP (static residential) product or standalone datacenter proxy line on the official pages reviewed — the offering is residential-centric, so buyers needing static ISP IPs or cheap datacenter bandwidth may not find a fit. Corporate transparency is thin: the site does not clearly publish a founding year, a headquarters location, or a detailed list of accepted payment methods, and there is no confirmed statement on crypto acceptance, a formal money-back/refund window, or explicitly staffed 24/7 support. A first-party API for programmatic proxy generation is not clearly documented on the pages examined — the setup material centers on dashboard-driven configuration and manual credentials — so teams that require API-based provisioning should confirm availability directly before committing. There is also a real risk of brand confusion with the similarly named but unrelated 'IPRockets' (iprockets.net), which buyers should be careful to distinguish.
On balance, IPRocket reads as a value-oriented residential proxy that leans on aggressive per-GB pricing, non-expiring traffic, unlimited sessions, and a large advertised pool to win price-sensitive scraping and multi-accounting customers. The specifications are competitive, and the pay-as-you-go structure is buyer-friendly. But the sparse company disclosures, unverified performance claims, single-product-line focus, and unconfirmed API, refund, and support details mean it should be trialed carefully and validated against your own workload before any large commitment. For teams that only need rotating residential IPs at a low entry price and value the free trial, it merits a look; for those needing ISP/datacenter breadth, guaranteed support SLAs, or documented API access, the published information leaves too many gaps to recommend without direct verification.
IP pool size — ranked
Where IPRocket ranks against the largest networks in the directory. Bars are scaled to 350M.
Bars rank total advertised IP pool size. IPRocket publishes 60M+ residential IPs (90M+ on Premium tier; marketed as 80M+) — see the full breakdown in the specs above.
Pricing
From $0.90/GB. Detailed plan breakdown not yet published.
View plans on IPRocket →Proxy types offered
One core type. Pricing varies by type and volume.
Residential $0.90/GB
60M+ residential IPs (90M+ on Premium tier; marketed as 80M+) real-home IPs across 195 countries.
Features & integrations
What's included out of the box.
Network & infrastructure
How the pool is built, refreshed and addressed.
Company & resources
Who builds and operates this product.
Key markets covered
195+ countries served.
IPRocket vs alternatives
How IPRocket stacks up against the closest providers in our directory. Tap any column header to read that review.
| Metric | IPRocket | ProxyElite | DynaProx | Proxy4Free |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starting price (entry plan) | $0.90 | $0.07 | $10.00 | — |
| Pool size | 60M+ residential IPs (90M+ on Premium tier; marketed as 80M+) | 100,000+ IPs | — | 90M+ residential IPs |
| Locations | 195+ countries | — | — | — |
| Rating | 3.2 / 5 | 3.2 / 5 | 3.2 / 5 | 3.2 / 5 |
| Read review | YOU ARE HERE | View → | View → | View → |
How to get started with IPRocket
A 5-minute walkthrough from sign-up to your first successful request. Total setup time: ~10 minutes.
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1
Register for a self-serve account
Create a IPRocket account at https://iprocket.io. Self-serve access is usually available immediately.
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2
Select the right plan for your workload
Use the dashboard to choose between Residential. Start with the smallest plan to validate your workload before scaling.
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3
Configure user:pass or IP whitelist
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
Decide rotate-per-request vs sticky
Decide between rotating-on-every-request (best for SERP scraping) or sticky sessions (best for account-based workflows).
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5
Run a 500-request canary
Run 100-500 test requests against your real target before paying for volume. Compare success rate to IPRocket's claimed rate before committing to an annual plan.
Stuck? Check IPRocket's documentation or email us.
User reviews
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FAQ
The questions buyers actually ask.
