TL;DROur verdict on Proxy-N-VPN, in 5 facts
- Datacenter-focused provider selling private (dedicated) and shared (semi-dedicated) HTTP/HTTPS proxies since 2012
- Entry pricing is low ($2.58/month for a private proxy) with unlimited bandwidth on a subscription model
- Best suited to stable dedicated-IP tasks; not for SOCKS5, rotation, or residential-grade stealth
- 24/7 support is a strength, but no free trial and a short 72-hour refund window limit risk-free testing
- Coverage is concentrated in the US and Europe; no official total pool size or country count published
The verdict
Independent nightly benchmarks since March 2024 — here's where Proxy-N-VPN lands.
- Long-established provider operating since 2012
- Low entry pricing (private proxies from $2.58/month)
- Unlimited bandwidth on all plans
- Dedicated (private) HTTP/HTTPS proxies for exclusive use
- 24/7/365 support via email and online chat
- US and European coverage with multiple cities and subnets on higher tiers
- Flexible billing terms (monthly, quarterly, semi-annual, annual)
- Datacenter-only — no residential, mobile, or ISP proxies
- No SOCKS5 support (HTTP/HTTPS only)
- No true rotating proxies (only monthly IP randomization on higher tiers)
- No free trial and a restrictive 3-day/72-hour refund window
- No documented API or browser extension on the official site
- Total IP pool size and exact country count not disclosed officially
Pricing A · Performance B · Pool quality C · Support B+ · Ethics B
Each axis is graded A+ to D using our standard rubric: how we score →
Who should not use Proxy-N-VPN?+
What we think after testing Proxy-N-VPN
Editorial review by Maya Cortez · last tested Jul 9, 2026
Proxy-N-VPN is one of the older names in the datacenter proxy market, with the company stating on its site that it was founded in 2012. Based on its published specifications, it is a purpose-built datacenter proxy provider rather than a modern residential/rotating network, and understanding that distinction is essential to evaluating it fairly. The provider does not advertise residential, mobile, or ISP proxies anywhere on its official pages; instead it sells private (dedicated) and shared (semi-dedicated) datacenter proxies, sub-branded into use-case bundles such as social media, gaming, ticketing, shopping, SEO, and classified-ad proxies. Functionally these are the same underlying datacenter IP product tuned and marketed for different tasks.
On protocols, every product page reviewed lists HTTP / HTTPS support, and there is no mention of SOCKS5 anywhere on the official site. This is a meaningful limitation for users who need SOCKS5 for non-HTTP traffic or certain automation tooling. Similarly, the proxies are static/dedicated rather than rotating: the official pages describe a "Monthly Randomize" option on mid-and-higher tiers (the entry PP-1 and IG-1 plans explicitly lack it), which swaps IPs on a monthly cadence rather than offering on-request or timed rotation. Anyone expecting a rotating pool or sticky-session gateway will not find that model here; the value proposition is stable, dedicated IPs you keep for the billing period.
Pricing is a clear strength on paper. The entry private-proxy plan (PP-1) is listed at $2.58/month, and packages scale up to very large dedicated allocations (the site lists a PP-2000 tier at $2,800/month). Shared proxies start at $11.00/month for a 10-proxy pack, and social-media proxies are advertised from $2.80/month. Billing is subscription-based with monthly, quarterly, semi-annual, and annual options, and all plans advertise unlimited bandwidth, which is attractive for high-volume, bandwidth-heavy tasks compared to per-GB residential pricing. On paper the speed and uptime claims are aggressive: the site advertises 1000 Mbps servers and 99.99% uptime, though these are vendor marketing figures and were not independently benchmarked for this review.
Geographic coverage, as published, is concentrated in the United States and Europe. The site lists roughly two dozen US cities and around nine European locations (London, Stockholm, Paris, Milan, Madrid, Warsaw, Frankfurt, Manchester, Amsterdam), plus a few additional countries such as Israel, Japan, Brazil, and Canada. The company emphasizes "hundreds of subnets" and non-sequential IPs as an anti-blocking measure, and higher tiers expose multiple cities and subnets. However, the official pages do not disclose a concrete total IP pool size or an exact country count, so buyers relying on precise location coverage should confirm specifics with support before purchasing.
Support is a bright spot: the site repeatedly advertises 24/7/365 assistance via email and online chat, which suits a self-serve dedicated-proxy business. The refund position is more restrictive. The stated policy is a "3 Days Money Back Guarantee" clarified as returning proxies "within 72 hours after your payment, if they are unsuitable" — a short window with conditions, and third-party reviewers frequently flag the refund process as less than user-friendly. There is no free trial offered, so the short refund window is effectively the only way to test the service.
Two gaps stand out for technical buyers. First, the official site does not document an API or a browser extension, which limits programmatic provisioning and rotation compared to modern providers. Second, there is no proxy-manager dashboard feature advertised beyond standard account controls. On payments, the official product pages reviewed did not enumerate accepted methods; third-party sources report cards, PayPal, and Bitcoin (via Blockonomics) among others, but because that is not confirmed on the official pages it should be verified directly. Company location is likewise not stated on the pages reviewed. Overall, on published specifications Proxy-N-VPN reads as a dependable, affordable, unlimited-bandwidth datacenter proxy shop with strong support and a long track record, held back by no SOCKS5, no true rotation, no residential option, no API, and a tight refund window.
Pricing
From $2.58/GB. Detailed plan breakdown not yet published.
View plans on Proxy-N-VPN →Proxy types offered
One core type. Pricing varies by type and volume.
Datacenter —
High-throughput shared & dedicated DC IPs. Sub-second response on US/EU PoPs.
Features & integrations
What's included out of the box.
Network & infrastructure
How the pool is built, refreshed and addressed.
Support & account
How they pick up the phone — and who answers.
Company & resources
Who builds and operates this product.
Key markets covered
Global coverage.
Proxy-N-VPN vs alternatives
How Proxy-N-VPN stacks up against the closest providers in our directory. Tap any column header to read that review.
| Metric | Proxy-N-VPN | Proxyscrape | Proxy Luxe | Proxymania |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starting price (entry plan) | $2.58 | $19.00 | $0.80 | — |
| Pool size | — | 120M+ residential IPs (plus ~40,000 datacenter IPs) | Millions of IP addresses (vendor claim) | 15M+ residential IPs (vendor claim) |
| Locations | — | — | — | — |
| Rating | 3.1 / 5 | 3.1 / 5 | 3.1 / 5 | 3.1 / 5 |
| Read review | YOU ARE HERE | View → | View → | View → |
How to get started with Proxy-N-VPN
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 Proxy-N-VPN account at https://proxy-n-vpn.com. Self-serve access is usually available immediately.
-
2
Pick a starter package
Use the dashboard to choose between Datacenter. 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 Proxy-N-VPN's claimed rate before committing to an annual plan.
Stuck? Check Proxy-N-VPN's documentation or email us.
User reviews
No reader reviews yet — be the first below.
Used Proxy-N-VPN? Write a review+
FAQ
The questions buyers actually ask.
