Reviews

LokiProxy Review 2026: A Smaller, Cheaper Residential Pool Tested

LokiProxy is a Hong Kong residential proxy provider with a 35M+ pool, an app, and low pricing. Here is an honest look at its products, coverage and caveats.

By ProxyRadar Editorial Team

Also in: Русский

Reviewed July 2026. LokiProxy (lokiproxy.com) is an actively operating residential proxy provider. This review separates its verifiable structure and operator from the pool-size and success-rate figures it advertises.

LokiProxy is a smaller, value-focused residential proxy network. It does not compete on raw pool size with the largest providers; instead it markets competitive pricing (it claims roughly 30% below market average), fast response times and a straightforward product lineup, including a downloadable app.

Who runs LokiProxy

LokiProxy is developed by Mindy Network Technology Research Institute Group Limited, a Hong Kong company, with support at support@lokiproxy.com and an address in the Ming Sang Industrial Building, Kwun Tong, Kowloon, Hong Kong. Third-party trackers list it as founded around 2021. Documentation lives at docs.lokiproxy.com. As with peers in this tier, corporate transparency is limited — enough to identify the operator, not to audit its supply chain.

What LokiProxy sells

  • Rotating residential proxies — the core product, with automatic rotation for scraping and data extraction, priced per IP or per GB.
  • Unlimited residential — a dynamic global pool with unlimited traffic, supporting sticky and rotating sessions, sold as day/week plans.
  • Short-term residential IPs — pay per IP, with non-expiring credits and username/password or IP-whitelist authentication.
  • Static residential / ISP — long-lived addresses for e-commerce, social media and persistent sessions.
  • Mobile proxies are also listed.

Protocols are HTTP and SOCKS5, with city and ASN-level targeting, unlimited concurrent threads (per its marketing), an API for integration, and integrations with common antidetect browsers.

Pool and performance claims

LokiProxy advertises 35 million+ real residential IPs across 190+ countries, a 99.9% connection success rate, an IP purity rate around 99.8% and sub-0.5-second average response times. Notably, its own "About" page also states "over 10 million real residential IPs" in one passage, so even the operator's figures are inconsistent — a good reason to treat all of these as vendor claims rather than audited numbers and to test against your own targets.

Pricing

  • Rotating residential from about $0.02 per IP, or from roughly $0.7/GB per its documentation, with volume discounts.
  • Unlimited residential sold as short-duration plans (a week plan has been listed around $96/day-equivalent tiers — confirm the current structure).
  • Static residential is quote-based.

Pricing structure can be complex across per-IP, per-GB and unlimited models, so read the live plan details carefully before buying.

Strengths

  • Low entry pricing and a claimed ~30% discount versus market average.
  • Fast response times (<0.5s claimed) and unlimited threads for parallel work.
  • Broad product lineup for a small brand — rotating, unlimited, short-term, static ISP and mobile.
  • App plus API, with antidetect-browser integrations.

Weaknesses and honest caveats

  • Inconsistent self-reported metrics. The operator quotes both "35M+" and "10M+" pool figures; none are independently audited.
  • Smaller pool than 711Proxy, Swiftproxy or the enterprise networks, which can matter for high-rotation, geo-specific work.
  • Complex pricing across multiple billing models.
  • Limited independent review coverage, and some of what exists is affiliate content.
  • Sourcing transparency. Confirm how residential IPs are obtained and how consent works before scaling.

Who it's for

LokiProxy suits budget-conscious users who want cheap rotating residential IPs and fast responses for market research, competitor analysis and general scraping, and who don't need a massive pool or enterprise guarantees. If your workload demands very large geo-distributed rotation or datacenter/mobile-first coverage, weigh a larger provider.

Buying LokiProxy more cheaply

LokiProxy is resold through ProxyUniverse, where it is listed per IP (from around $0.60 per IP at the time of writing). Depending on the live offer, the reseller route can be competitive and lets you benchmark it against other pools in one dashboard.

Disclosure: ProxyUniverse is a commercial partner of this publication. That relationship does not change the assessment above and is not proof of any provider's sourcing practices. Confirm current pricing, inventory and terms, and test a small workload first.

How to test before you scale

  1. Buy the smallest per-IP or per-GB package and authenticate over HTTP and SOCKS5.
  2. Check country/city and ASN accuracy on your real targets, not just an IP-lookup page.
  3. Because the pool is smaller, test rotation density in the exact geos you need.
  4. Measure success rate, latency and session stability for 24–48 hours.
  5. Scale only once the numbers hold on your own sites.

FAQ

How big is the LokiProxy pool?

LokiProxy advertises 35M+ residential IPs across 190+ countries, though its own About page also cites 10M+ in one place. Treat these as vendor claims, not audited figures.

Does LokiProxy have an app?

Yes, an app is available alongside its API and dashboard.

Is LokiProxy cheap?

Yes. Rotating residential from around $0.02/IP or ~$0.7/GB places it in the budget tier, with a claimed ~30% discount versus market average.

Can I buy LokiProxy through ProxyUniverse?

Yes, it is listed on ProxyUniverse, typically priced per IP; compare the live offer with a direct purchase.

Sources

Related guides

LokiProxy Review 2026: Pricing, Pool Size, Pros and Cons | ProxyRadar