GlossaryToolsIntermediate

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.

Last updated May 28, 2026

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

1

Running 50 separate e-commerce store profiles, each on its own residential IP

2

Testing how a site behaves for users in different regions and devices

Common Use Cases

Multi-account management
Affiliate and e-commerce operations
Ad account management
Privacy-focused browsing
QA testing across device profiles

Frequently Asked Questions

The browser controls the fingerprint while the proxy controls the IP and location. Together they make each profile look like a separate, genuine user.
The tools are legal; whether a specific use is permitted depends on the terms of the platforms you access and applicable laws.