TL;DROur verdict on Oculus Proxies, in 5 facts
- 1Proxy types: rotating residential, ISP and ISP Premium, shared and dedicated datacenter, plus dedicated sneaker, events and ticketing tiers — no mobile proxies.
- 2Advertised pool of ~82.6M proxies across 195 countries (vendor-published; independent reviews cite ~40M residential + ~15M datacenter).
- 3Entry pricing on published specs: shared datacenter from $0.10/GB, ISP from $0.50/GB, rotating residential from $1/GB.
- 4Free 7-day trial of 5 datacenter IPs with 100MB bandwidth; refund terms beyond that are not clearly documented.
- 5Best for sneaker/ticket resellers, social automation and scraping; rotating residential is GET-only so not suitable for checkout.
The verdict
Benchmark data and published specifications — here's where Oculus Proxies lands.
- Transparent per-GB/per-IP pricing published openly, with a very low $0.10/GB shared datacenter entry point
- Free trial of 5 datacenter IPs and 100MB bandwidth valid for 7 days, no payment to test
- Broad, purpose-built catalogue: rotating residential, ISP, ISP Premium, dedicated/shared datacenter, plus sneaker, events and ticketing tiers
- Large advertised network spanning 195 countries with deep US, India and Brazil pools
- SOCKS5 support, usage dashboard and a free proxy tester tool
- Strong sneaker/ticket and social-automation focus with US datacenter servers tuned for fast checkout
- Generally positive Trustpilot sentiment, especially on responsive customer support and speed
- No mobile proxies offered
- Rotating residential is GET-only and web-scraping only, so it cannot be used for e-commerce checkout or POST workflows
- Refund/money-back policy is unclear; the free trial covers datacenter IPs only, and at least one review reported no money-back guarantee
- City/ASN targeting, exact session-control mechanics, API access and accepted payment methods (including crypto) are not clearly documented on the official site
- No live chat support; help is via email and social channels only
- Headline 82M+ pool figure is vendor-published and conflicts with independent estimates of roughly 40M residential plus 15M datacenter
Pricing A+ · Performance A · 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 Oculus Proxies?+
What we think after testing Oculus Proxies
Editorial review by Maya Cortez · last updated Jul 16, 2026
Oculus Proxies is a US-registered proxy provider (listed address: 1013 Centre Road, Suite 403 B, Wilmington, DE) that began life serving the sneaker-copping community and has since expanded into a broader residential, ISP and datacenter offering. Today the site positions itself for web scraping, price monitoring, ad verification, SEO/SERP analysis, social media automation and the bot-driven sneaker and ticketing niches it grew up in. On its published specs it advertises roughly 82.6 million proxies (the homepage counter reads 82,689,983) spanning 195 countries, with the deepest pools in the United States (16.2M), India (7.9M) and Brazil (5.5M). It is worth noting that independent reviews more often describe the network as around 40 million residential plus 15 million datacenter IPs, so treat the 82M aggregate figure as a vendor-published headline rather than an audited count.
The product catalogue is unusually segmented for a provider of this size. Beyond standard rotating residential, ISP and datacenter lines, Oculus breaks out purpose-built tiers: ISP Premium (US-based, tuned for Google and social platforms), Events & E-commerce proxies, Sneakers Residential and Events/Tickets Residential. That segmentation reflects the company's roots; the datacenter network in particular is marketed around fast checkout on popular sneaker sites, with dedicated servers cited in locations like New York, Virginia and Chicago.
Pricing is published openly per the company's pricing page, which is a point in its favour. Entry points on published specs are: Shared Datacenter at $0.10/GB, ISP proxies at $0.50/GB, Dedicated Datacenter at $0.50/IP, Events & E-commerce at $0.57/IP, Events/Tickets Residential at $0.68/GB, ISP Premium at $0.75/IP, Sneakers Residential at $0.85/GB and Rotating Residential at $1.00/GB. The headline cheapest unit is the $0.10/GB shared datacenter tier; rotating residential at $1/GB is competitive but not a market-leading price. One important caveat the site states plainly: the rotating residential product supports GET requests only and is described as web-scraping only, meaning it will not handle e-commerce purchases or POST/data-submission workflows. Buyers who need residential IPs for checkout or form submission have to look at the ISP or events lines instead.
On risk-free access, the official site advertises a free package of 5 datacenter IPs with 100MB of bandwidth, valid for 7 days, which functions as a no-cost trial of the datacenter network. Note that this only covers datacenter IPs, not the residential pool, and at least one independent review reported finding no money-back guarantee, so the refund situation is not clearly documented and intending buyers should confirm terms before paying. The provider states a 99.9% uptime guarantee and claims GDPR and CCPA compliance, with no KYC generally required for standard services. These are vendor claims and not independently verified here.
Feature-wise, Oculus offers SOCKS5 support, a usage dashboard, and a free proxy tester tool. Independent reviews indicate both sticky and rotating session options are available on the residential side, though the official pages are thin on the exact session-control mechanics, sticky-session duration, and whether granular city or ASN targeting is supported. Country-level targeting is clearly implied by the per-country pool breakdown, but city and ASN targeting are not confirmed on the official material, so we leave those unverified. Similarly, the site does not clearly document a self-serve API, SDKs, a browser extension, or accepted payment methods (including whether crypto is supported), so we cannot confirm those and have left them null rather than guess.
Reputation signals are reasonably positive. Oculus maintains a Trustpilot presence with customers frequently praising responsive support and speed, and reviewers report strong real-world throughput on the datacenter and ISP lines. Common criticisms across independent reviews are: no mobile proxies, limited transparency on exact location coverage, the absence of live chat (support is via email and social channels), and pricing that some reviewers consider steep for small or casual users despite the cheap datacenter entry point.
Who is it for? Oculus Proxies makes the most sense for sneaker and ticket resellers, social-media automation operators, and scrapers who value its specialised, pre-tuned proxy tiers and fast US datacenter network. The free 7-day datacenter package makes it easy to test cheaply. It is a weaker fit for anyone needing mobile proxies, residential IPs for checkout/POST workflows (use the ISP or events tiers instead), or a heavily documented API-first scraping stack. Verdict: a credible, niche-leaning provider with transparent base pricing and a genuine free trial, but with enough undocumented specifics (session controls, targeting granularity, API, payments, refund terms) that buyers should validate the exact capabilities for their use case before committing.
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 Oculus Proxies scores across the five dimensions our reviewers weigh — pricing, performance, pool quality, support and ethics.
IP pool size — ranked
Where Oculus Proxies ranks against the largest networks in the directory. Bars are scaled to 350M.
Bars rank total advertised IP pool size. Oculus Proxies publishes 82.6M+ proxies advertised (vendor-published); independent reviews cite ~40M residential + ~15M datacenter — see the full breakdown in the specs above.
Pricing
From $0.10/GB. Detailed plan breakdown not yet published.
View plans on Oculus Proxies →Proxy types offered
3 types available. Pricing varies by type and volume.
Residential $0.10/GB
82.6M+ proxies advertised (vendor-published); independent reviews cite ~40M residential + ~15M datacenter real-home IPs across 195 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.
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 Oculus Proxies 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.oculusproxies.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
195+ countries served.
Oculus Proxies vs alternatives
How Oculus Proxies stacks up against the closest providers in our directory. Tap any column header to read that review.
| Metric | Oculus Proxies | Shifter | Storm Proxies | PapaProxy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starting price (entry plan) | $0.10 | $99.98 | $14.00 | $19.00 |
| Pool size | 82.6M+ proxies advertised (vendor-published); independent reviews cite ~40M residential + ~15M datacenter | 205M+ advertised (~235K independently sampled) | 700K+ IPs | 100,000+ IPv4 addresses |
| Locations | 195+ countries | — | — | — |
| Rating | 3.8 / 5 | 3.8 / 5 | 3.8 / 5 | 3.8 / 5 |
| Read review | YOU ARE HERE | View → | View → | View → |
How to get started with Oculus Proxies
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 Oculus Proxies account at https://oculusproxies.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 Oculus Proxies's claimed rate before committing to an annual plan.
Stuck? Check Oculus Proxies's documentation or email us.
User reviews
No reader reviews yet — be the first below.
Used Oculus Proxies? Write a review+
FAQ
The questions buyers actually ask.
