Antidetect browser rating

Compare the best antidetect browsers for multi-accounting and privacy-conscious workflows.

Top antidetect browsers

AdsPower

#2

(1,247)

7.5

$9/mo

A mass-market antidetect browser with a large user base and unusually strong no-code automation. The entry barrier is low and the infrastructure around it is mature, but in the parts of the product that actually define the category — fingerprint isolation and the network stack — it sits noticeably behind the top tier. It works fine for routine multi-accounting; it deserves a closer look in scenarios where fingerprint quality, network-level anonymity, or work with financial platforms really matter.

  • No-code RPA automation
  • REST API and Local API
  • Multi-Window Synchronizer
  • Team access with roles

Multilogin

#3

(892)

7.5

$99/mo

One of the oldest names in antidetect (since 2015), with its own Chromium engine Mimic and a Firefox engine Stealthfox — a combination that's still rare in the category. The maturity of the stack and the brand recognition make it a natural pick for agencies and teams that already have their processes locked in. The flip side is that the product visibly lags on usability, mobile coverage and the network layer, and the price tag doesn't always line up with what younger, more actively developed competitors put on the table.

  • Mimic — Chromium engine
  • Stealthfox — Firefox engine
  • Audit log and role-based access
  • Linux build

Octo Browser

#4

(738)

7.5

€10/mo

An antidetect browser with a reputation as one of the cleanest engineering jobs in the category. Fingerprint spoofing happens at the Chromium kernel level, and the team pushes engine updates fast enough that profiles stay close to real Chrome sessions. A clean security history, well-thought-out team controls, and a built-in Proxy Shop are the clear strengths. The weaknesses are functional: no mobile emulation, no native TOR or built-in IP reputation check, pricing climbs steeply at scale, and the starter tier is hobbled by a one-proxy-for-ten-profiles limit. A solid pick for professional audiences with desktop-only workloads; for mobile projects or teams expecting their budget to grow, it's worth comparing alternatives.

  • Chromium kernel-level spoofing
  • Fast engine updates
  • Per-profile passwords
  • Proxy Shop — built-in proxy marketplace

GoLogin

#5

(654)

7.4

$29/mo

An antidetect browser built on its own Orbita engine, with an unusually strong cloud angle — you can launch profiles straight from a browser tab, no desktop client required, which is rare in this category. The entry experience is clean and inexpensive, but the convenience hides a narrow feature set: no real mobile emulation, no built-in tools to make fingerprints more unique, and team workflows that only kick in on the higher tiers. A reasonable starting point for the category, and a fit for jobs where simplicity matters more than depth.

  • Cloud profiles with web access
  • TOR support
  • REST API and scripting
  • Action Synchronizer

MoreLogin

#6

(692)

7.2

$9/mo

An antidetect browser from the Chinese ecosystem (connected to AdsPower) with one feature that's genuinely rare in the category: Cloud Phone — not an emulator, but actual ARM-based Android devices hosted in the cloud and accessible through a remote session and ADB. For projects targeting TikTok, Instagram, and mobile social audiences, that's a real argument. The product also has solid entry pricing ($9 for 10 profiles with two team seats), an Action Synchronizer, and a Cookie Robot. The downsides — Chinese jurisdiction with data handled on Chinese servers, no iOS or Safari, a thin network stack with no TOR / SSH / IPQS, and consistent reports of rough edges in the Western localization. A fit for teams who want real mobile devices at reasonable prices and aren't bothered by jurisdiction concerns; for serious anonymity and iOS workflows, the product is limited.

  • Cloud Phone — real Android devices in the cloud
  • Action Synchronizer across windows
  • Cookie Robot — background cookie collection
  • Low entry pricing

Dolphin Anty

#7

(1,108)

7

$15/mo

An antidetect browser with strong roots in Facebook Ads and traffic arbitrage. Where it shines is the automation ecosystem: a Synchronizer that mirrors actions across windows, a no-code Scenario Builder, a Cookie Robot, and built-in auto-login for FB, Google, and TikTok. The downsides are in the foundations — no mobile emulation at all, several fingerprint parameters that simply aren't covered, and a 2022 data leak that affected a portion of users. Outside the arbitrage niche the product feels narrow, and pricing for teams climbs quickly because of per-seat surcharges.

  • Facebook Ads automation
  • Synchronizer — mirror actions across windows
  • No-code Scenario Builder
  • Cookie Robot — automated cookie collection

Kameleo

#8

(423)

7

€59/mo

A technically ambitious antidetect browser aimed at developers and web scraping teams. Where it excels is engineering: a proprietary Intelligent Canvas Spoofing, two custom engines (Chroma and Junglefox, including native Firefox and desktop Safari), a multikernel mode that runs different engine versions in parallel, Chrome kernel updates within five days of release, Docker support, and SDKs for Python, JavaScript, and C#. The trade-offs are about audience and price: pricing is built on concurrent browsers (a model most operational users find unintuitive), mobile emulation is locked behind the €299 tier, the product runs on Windows only, and the interface is English-only. A narrow-focus tool — for development and automation it's one of the strongest options in the category; for operational marketing teams it's overkill.

  • Intelligent Canvas Spoofing
  • Multikernel — run several engines side by side
  • Junglefox — Firefox and desktop Safari
  • Docker-ready automation

Undetectable

#9

(587)

6.8

Free / $49/mo

An antidetect browser built with a noticeable focus on the CIS audience: Russian-language interface, Russian documentation, and support for local payment methods. The real strengths are unlimited local profiles on any paid plan, a built-in Cookie Bot with a geo-targeted website generator, and an Action Synchronizer that mirrors actions across windows. The weaker side is the pricing model — browser configurations (real-device presets) are billed separately, which creates hidden costs as your fingerprint pool grows. There's also no mobile emulation, the network stack is thin (no TOR, no IPQS, no live IP change), and team seats are charged per user on top of the plan. A fit for teams who value local profile storage and built-in warm-up tooling; for mobile projects and serious network-level anonymity, the product is limited.

  • Unlimited local profiles
  • Cookie Bot — automated profile warm-up
  • Action Synchronizer across windows
  • Browser Configurations — real device presets

Incogniton

#10

(512)

6

Free / $19.99/mo

An antidetect browser most often described as an entry point to the category. Its main draw is a generous free plan — 10 profiles for two months, then 3 forever — alongside Dutch jurisdiction with GDPR-compliant hosting. Past that, the picture gets thinner. Independent reviews consistently note that profiles fail basic fingerprint checkers, and updates to the Chromium engine come slowly, which itself becomes a detection risk. There's no mobile emulation, no 2FA, no audit log; team features unlock only on the higher tiers and apply only to new profiles, not existing ones. A reasonable way to try the category and run low-stakes work; for serious operations, the gaps add up.

  • Generous free plan
  • Human typing emulation
  • Action Synchronizer (Windows)
  • GDPR-compliant hosting in the Netherlands

What is an antidetect browser?

Antidetect browsers isolate device fingerprints so each profile looks like a separate user—useful for teams that run many accounts without unwanted linking. They complement VPNs: a VPN changes your network path, while antidetect tools focus on how the browser itself appears to websites.

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