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Best anti-detect browser for Amazon multi-seller in 2026

Best anti-detect browser for Amazon multi-seller in 2026

Running multiple Amazon seller accounts without getting them linked is one of the more technically demanding parts of operating at scale. Amazon’s detection systems look at a lot more than just your IP address , they correlate browser fingerprints, cookies, localStorage, device metadata, and behavioral signals across sessions. I’ve been managing multi-store setups in Southeast Asia for a few years now, and the number of sellers I’ve seen lose accounts because they just used incognito mode or a basic VPN is too high to count.

This list is for sellers running two or more Amazon storefronts , whether that’s separate brands, different marketplace regions (US, UK, DE, JP), or accounts held by different legal entities in the same household or office. It’s not for people trying to game Amazon’s review system or violate terms in ways that harm buyers. Amazon’s own policy on operating multiple accounts does permit multiple accounts under specific conditions (separate businesses, Amazon approval), so the goal here is to stay within that framework while keeping the accounts technically isolated from each other.

My selection criteria focused on what actually matters for Amazon operations specifically: fingerprint quality, proxy integration, team access for VAs, and how well the browser holds up against Amazon’s detection over time. I tested or used most of these tools in production; a few I’ve evaluated based on community feedback from operators in the same circles I run in.

how I picked

  • Fingerprint depth. Does it spoof Canvas, WebGL, WebRTC, AudioContext, fonts, and timezone independently per profile? Amazon correlates multiple signals simultaneously, so surface-level spoofing fails. I verified outputs using Cover Your Tracks by EFF and BrowserLeaks.
  • Browser engine realism. Tools built on real Chromium or Firefox forks behave more like real browsers than tools that inject JS overrides into a vanilla Chrome install. Amazon increasingly uses behavioral fingerprinting that catches the latter.
  • Proxy management. Can you assign a dedicated proxy per profile and lock it? Accidental IP leakage is one of the most common reasons accounts get flagged as linked.
  • Team workflows. Most serious multi-seller ops involve VAs or listing assistants. Profile sharing, permission levels, and activity logs matter.
  • Automation compatibility. Some sellers use tools like ScraperAPI, Jungle Scout, or custom Selenium scripts. Anti-detect browsers that expose Puppeteer or Playwright APIs are useful here.
  • Pricing relative to profile count. Some tools price per browser profile, which gets expensive fast if you’re running 20+ stores.

the picks

Multilogin X

Multilogin is the benchmark most other tools get compared to. It runs on a custom browser engine (Mimic for Chromium-based, Stealthfox for Firefox-based) that’s built from source rather than patched on top of Chrome, which means fingerprint parameters are set at the engine level rather than injected via JavaScript. That matters a lot for Amazon detection because JS-injected overrides can be detected by examining the consistency between reported and observable browser behavior.

For Amazon multi-seller specifically, Multilogin’s profile isolation is thorough , each profile has its own cookie store, localStorage, IndexedDB, and cached fingerprint. The Quick Browser feature for fast session spin-up is useful when you’re managing a high volume of storefronts. Team collaboration is solid: you can assign profiles to team members with role-based access. The downside is cost. The Solo plan starts at around $99/month for 100 profiles, and the Scale plan for larger teams runs north of $399/month. If you’re running fewer than five accounts, this may be overkill. You can find my full write-up at /reviews/multilogin/.

Pros: - Engine-level fingerprinting, not JS injection , harder to detect - Mimic and Stealthfox cover both Chromium and Firefox profiles - Strong team access controls with audit logs

Cons: - Most expensive option on this list - Cloud-only profile storage on lower plans limits offline use

Pricing: from ~$99/month (Solo, 100 profiles) to ~$399/month (Scale). Check multilogin.com for current rates.


AdsPower

AdsPower is the most widely used anti-detect browser in the Chinese cross-border e-commerce community, which heavily overlaps with Amazon third-party selling. It runs on a Chromium fork (SunBrowser) and a Firefox fork (FlowerBird), and it’s been iterated quickly enough that its fingerprinting coverage is genuinely competitive with Multilogin at a much lower price point.

What sets AdsPower apart for Amazon operations is the RPA (robotic process automation) built directly into the browser. You can script repetitive tasks , login flows, listing updates, feedback checks , without leaving the interface. That’s useful if you don’t want to set up external automation. The free plan allows two profiles, which is enough for initial testing. Paid plans start at about $9/month for 10 profiles. At the Pro tier (~$50/month for 100 profiles), AdsPower is significantly cheaper than Multilogin for comparable profile counts. Team features are strong at all paid tiers.

Pros: - Built-in RPA reduces need for external automation tools - Very competitive pricing for high profile counts - Large user base means community knowledge and extensions are widely available

Cons: - Company is China-based, which some operators have data residency concerns about - Fingerprint quality, while good, occasionally lags behind Multilogin on newer browser versions

Pricing: Free (2 profiles), from ~$9/month. See adspower.com for full tiers.


GoLogin

GoLogin is a solid mid-tier option that’s improved substantially over the past two years. It uses a custom Chromium fork called Orbita and has a reasonable fingerprint database. For Amazon sellers new to anti-detect browsers, GoLogin’s onboarding is the most approachable of the group , the UI is clean, proxy assignment is straightforward, and the documentation covers common Amazon use cases explicitly.

GoLogin has a free plan with limited profiles (3 cloud, unlimited local). The Professional plan at around $49/month covers 100 profiles, which is a good entry point. One thing I like specifically for Amazon: GoLogin has proxy auto-rotation and proxy health checks built in, so you’re less likely to accidentally run a session on a dead proxy and get flagged. Selenium and Playwright integration is available on paid plans. See /reviews/gologin/ for more detail on how it compares against Multilogin.

Pros: - Best onboarding experience for anti-detect browser newcomers - Built-in proxy health checking reduces accidental IP leakage - Reasonable pricing at the Professional tier

Cons: - Orbita browser engine updates sometimes lag behind Chrome releases - Team collaboration features less mature than AdsPower or Multilogin

Pricing: Free (3 cloud profiles), from ~$49/month (Professional, 100 profiles). See gologin.com.


Dolphin{anty}

Dolphin{anty} has become a go-to for operators running large numbers of profiles , think 50 to 500 storefronts. The free tier allows 10 profiles with no time limit, which is genuinely useful for smaller multi-seller setups. The interface is fast, and the fingerprint customization options are extensive enough that you can dial in hardware profiles (GPU, CPU cores, RAM) that match the residential proxies you’re pairing each account with, which improves consistency.

For Amazon sellers specifically, Dolphin’s team features and API are where it shines at scale. You can sync profiles across team members, set up automation via the API, and manage proxy assignments programmatically. The paid tiers start at around $89/month for 100 profiles, which is pricier than AdsPower but the API quality and team features at scale justify it for shops with dedicated ops staff. The multiaccountops.com community has a useful breakdown of Dolphin workflows for e-commerce if you want peer operator perspectives beyond this review.

Pros: - Generous free tier (10 profiles, no expiry) for smaller setups - API-first architecture works well with external automation and listing tools - Strong at high profile counts with team workflows

Cons: - Interface can feel dense for operators used to simpler tools - Paid tiers become expensive relative to AdsPower at similar profile counts

Pricing: Free (10 profiles), from ~$89/month (Base, 100 profiles). See dolphin-anty.com.


Incogniton

Incogniton is worth considering if you’re running a small operation , three to fifteen seller accounts , and want a capable tool without paying Multilogin prices. It’s Chromium-based, has a clean profile manager, and the free plan allows 10 profiles with full feature access, including proxy assignment and fingerprint customization. That’s a meaningful difference from most tools that cripple free plans to push upgrades.

Fingerprint quality is adequate for Amazon’s current detection but doesn’t match Multilogin or Dolphin at the edges. The Selenium integration works, though it’s less well-documented than GoLogin’s. Team collaboration is available from the Entrepreneur plan (~$79.99/month). For a solo operator running five to ten storefronts, the Starter plan at ~$29.99/month is one of the better value propositions on this list. See /reviews/incogniton/ for benchmarks against other tools.

Pros: - Best free tier for solo operators , full features, 10 profiles, no time limit - Very competitive Starter plan pricing for small account counts - Clean, accessible interface

Cons: - Fingerprint coverage less comprehensive than Multilogin or Dolphin at the advanced level - Smaller development team means slower updates when Chrome releases new APIs

Pricing: Free (10 profiles), from ~$29.99/month (Starter). See incogniton.com.


Kameleo

Kameleo takes a different architectural approach than most tools on this list: it installs locally and modifies real Chrome, Firefox, Safari (on Mac), and Edge builds at the profile level using a native application layer rather than a custom browser fork. The argument is that this produces browser behavior that’s indistinguishable from a real browser because it is a real browser, with only the fingerprint parameters adjusted.

For Amazon sellers, this has a practical upside: Kameleo profiles pass basic bot-detection tests that sometimes catch fork-based browsers. The downside is the local-first architecture. Profile sync across machines requires setup, and the team collaboration features are weaker than cloud-first tools. Kameleo suits operators who run everything from a single machine or small office setup with direct machine access. The Basic plan starts at around $59/month. Mobile profile emulation (Android/iOS) is a unique feature not found on most competitors , useful if you’re testing mobile-specific Amazon flows.

Pros: - Uses real browser builds, not forks , strong behavioral authenticity - Mobile profile emulation for Android/iOS - No custom browser engine means fewer update lag issues

Cons: - Local-first architecture limits multi-machine and remote team use - Weaker cloud sync and team features than AdsPower or Dolphin

Pricing: from ~$59/month (Basic). See kameleo.io.


MoreLogin

MoreLogin is the newest tool on this list, having gained meaningful traction over the past 18 months in the Southeast Asian cross-border seller community. The free plan is two profiles, and paid plans start at around $9/month , competitive with AdsPower at the entry level. The browser engine is Chromium-based with fingerprint parameters set at the profile level. Feature parity with AdsPower isn’t quite there yet, but for sellers who need a budget option and don’t need advanced automation, MoreLogin covers the basics well.

Team features are available, though profile permission granularity is less detailed than AdsPower or Dolphin. The interface is clean and fast. Where MoreLogin has genuinely differentiated is in mobile fingerprint profiles , it emulates mobile device parameters more realistically than most desktop-first tools, which matters if you’re managing Amazon seller apps or mobile-specific promotions. Worth trying at the free tier before committing.

Pros: - Very competitive pricing at entry tiers - Mobile fingerprint emulation is above average for the price - Fast, clean interface with low learning curve

Cons: - Newer codebase means less community knowledge and fewer third-party integrations - Advanced automation features lag behind AdsPower and Dolphin

Pricing: Free (2 profiles), from ~$9/month. See morelogin.com.


comparison table

Tool Starting Price Primary Strength Primary Weakness
Multilogin X ~$99/mo Engine-level fingerprinting, team audit logs Most expensive, cloud-dependent
AdsPower ~$9/mo Built-in RPA, strong team features China-based data concerns
GoLogin ~$49/mo Best onboarding, proxy health checks Engine update lag
Dolphin{anty} ~$89/mo (paid) API-first, scales to 500+ profiles Dense interface, pricey vs AdsPower
Incogniton ~$29.99/mo Best value free tier for solo ops Slower fingerprint updates
Kameleo ~$59/mo Real browser builds, mobile emulation Weak team/cloud sync
MoreLogin ~$9/mo Budget mobile fingerprinting Newer, fewer integrations

how to choose

The biggest factor is team size and profile count. If you’re a solo operator with five to ten Amazon accounts, Incogniton’s free tier or GoLogin’s Professional plan is probably enough. The fingerprinting is adequate for Amazon’s current detection, the pricing is reasonable, and you won’t be paying for team features you don’t use. If you’re running twenty or more storefronts with virtual assistants handling daily operations, the collaboration features in AdsPower or Dolphin{anty} are worth the upgrade cost.

The second factor is how much you’re relying on automation. Amazon sellers who use browser-based automation for tasks like keyword tracking, listing optimization, or feedback management need a tool with solid Selenium or Playwright integration. Dolphin and AdsPower lead here. GoLogin and Multilogin are also capable, but AdsPower’s built-in RPA means you may not need an external automation stack at all, which simplifies your setup.

Third: consider your proxy setup. Anti-detect browsers are only as good as the proxies paired with each profile. Running a residential proxy from the same region as each store’s fulfillment location significantly reduces account linkage risk. The browser handles fingerprint isolation; the proxy handles IP isolation; the combination is what keeps accounts genuinely separate. Check /blog/ for proxy pairing guides that go alongside these tools. If you haven’t worked out your proxy stack yet, the proxyscraping.org blog covers residential proxy sourcing and rotation strategies in depth.

Finally, test before you commit. Every tool on this list has either a free tier or a trial period. Run your actual Amazon seller workflow through the candidate tool , logging in, checking orders, adjusting listings , and verify fingerprint output at sites like BrowserLeaks before going live with real accounts. What works fine for one type of operation may show inconsistencies for another.

verdict / top pick

For most Amazon multi-seller operators, AdsPower offers the best balance of fingerprint quality, team features, and price. The built-in RPA reduces dependence on external tools, and the pricing scales reasonably as your account count grows. If you’re running a premium brand operation with strict compliance requirements and a larger team, Multilogin X is worth the higher cost for its engine-level fingerprinting and audit trail. Solo operators just getting started should test Incogniton first , the free tier is genuinely capable, and the Starter plan is easy to justify once you’ve validated the setup works for your accounts.

Whichever tool you choose, pair it with dedicated residential proxies per account, use separate payment methods per storefront, and don’t store any cross-account data in shared cloud services. The browser is one layer of a multi-layer isolation strategy, not the whole answer.

Written by Xavier Fok

disclosure: this article may contain affiliate links. if you buy through them we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. verdicts are independent of payouts. last reviewed by Xavier Fok on 2026-05-19.

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