Anti-Detect Browser
An anti-detect browser lets you run many isolated browser profiles, each with its own fingerprint, cookies and proxy, so sites see them as separate, genuine users.
Definition
An anti-detect browser (or antidetect browser) is a specialized browser built to manage multiple online identities. Each profile gets its own browser fingerprint, cookies, local storage and proxy, fully isolated from the others — so websites perceive each profile as a distinct, real device.
How it works
Instead of one shared environment, the tool spoofs or substitutes the attributes used in fingerprinting (user agent, canvas, WebGL, fonts, time zone) on a per-profile basis and binds each profile to a dedicated proxy IP. This prevents sites from linking accounts that should appear unrelated.
Examples
Running 50 separate e-commerce store profiles, each on its own residential IP
Testing how a site behaves for users in different regions and devices
Common Use Cases
Frequently Asked Questions
Keep Learning
All termsBrowser Fingerprinting
Browser fingerprinting identifies and tracks a device by combining dozens of browser and system attributes — like fonts, canvas rendering and user agent — into a near-unique signature.
Read definitionWeb Scraping
Web scraping is the automated extraction of data from websites — fetching pages programmatically and parsing their content into structured data.
Read definitionMobile Proxy
A mobile proxy routes traffic through real 3G/4G/5G cellular connections, using carrier-assigned IPs that are the hardest of all proxy types to detect or block.
Read definitionHeadless Browser
A headless browser is a real browser that runs without a visible interface, controlled by code — the workhorse for scraping JavaScript-heavy sites and automation.
Read definition