Social Media Proxies that don't get blocked.
Social platforms tie trust to device and network, so multiple accounts on one residential or datacenter IP get flagged. Run and verify multiple profiles with mobile carrier IPs and one identity per sticky session — the highest-trust setup for social.
Without proxies, social media management stalls fast.
Social platforms tie trust to device and network, so multiple accounts on one residential or datacenter IP get flagged.
A clean IP per account
Give each profile its own sticky mobile IP so platforms can't link your accounts or ban them in one sweep.
Be local to each audience
Post and engage from the city that matches each account — a Berlin brand from a Berlin IP, not a datacenter in Virginia.
Look like a real phone
Mobile IPs are shared by thousands of real users behind carrier NAT, so platforms see ordinary mobile traffic, not automation.
Scale without footprints
Run 20+ client accounts in parallel, each isolated, so one flagged profile never drags down the rest.
The right proxy type for social media management.
Mobile carrier IPs carry the trust social platforms reward; residential and datacenter get flagged.
For managing and automating accounts.
From $4.25/GB at scale
- IG, TikTok, Facebook, X account actions
- One sticky mobile IP per profile
- Carrier NAT — near unblockable
- Run 20+ accounts in parallel
For read-only scraping of public posts.
From $2.25/GB at scale
- Public profile & hashtag scraping
- No login, no account actions
- Cheaper per GB
- Gets flagged the moment you log in
Banned the instant you log in.
Not sold by us
- Platforms block datacenter ASNs on sight
- Instant account suspension
- Links and burns every account
- Never use for social
Social agency · 22 client accounts · 0 bans.
Running 22 brand accounts across 8 cities on dedicated mobile IPs.
A social media agency gives every client account its own sticky mobile IP in the client's city. Schedulers post, engage, and run ads from each, with zero linked-account bans in over a year — the kind of stability that lets them take on accounts competitors keep getting locked out of.
Four mistakes that get social accounts banned.
Platforms are ruthless about IP signals. These are the failures we see most.
Sharing one IP across accounts
Two profiles on one IP get linked; when one is actioned, the platform takes the whole cluster.
Fix: one sticky mobile IP per account — never shared.
Rotating IP mid-session
Logging in on IP A then acting on IP B looks like a hijacked account and triggers a lock.
Fix: keep a stable sticky session per account for its whole lifetime.
Using datacenter IPs
Social platforms block datacenter ASNs instantly — the account is suspended before it does anything.
Fix: use mobile (carrier) IPs; they're the traffic platforms expect.
Wrong-city IP
A 'local' brand posting from another country's IP looks fake and limits reach.
Fix: match the IP city to the account — set -city-berlin etc.
Social Media Management pricing.
Pay per GB from $4.25/GB at scale, with loyalty discounts on top. No use-case surcharge; the same product serves every workflow.
Mobile from $5/GB at the starter tier, dropping to $4.25/GB at scale.
Account management is light on bandwidth — most agencies sit in the 20-80 GB/month range across all accounts, which is $4.25-$4.75/GB effective, with loyalty discount on top once you cross $100/month.
Common social media questions.
Mobile proxies. Mobile carrier IPs carry the trust social platforms reward; residential and datacenter get flagged.
Social platforms tie trust to device and network, so multiple accounts on one residential or datacenter IP get flagged.
Point your client at our gateway over HTTP/HTTPS/SOCKS5, authenticate with username:password or a whitelisted IP, and choose mobile IPs. No SDK or agent.
Pay-as-you-go from $4.25/GB at scale, loyalty discounts on top, bandwidth never expires.
Yes — buy 1 GB, run your workflow, and check the success rate before committing volume.
Start social media management on the right IPs.
Buy 1 GB, run social media management on your real target, and watch the success rate. Bandwidth never expires.