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Best anti-detect browser for e-commerce dropshipping accounts in 2026

Best anti-detect browser for e-commerce dropshipping accounts in 2026

If you run multiple Shopify stores, operate several Amazon seller accounts, or manage eBay and Etsy shops across different supplier relationships, you already know the problem. Platforms fingerprint your browser to detect duplicate accounts, and a single canvas hash or WebGL signature shared between two profiles is enough to trigger a review or permanent suspension. Anti-detect browsers solve this by generating isolated, believable browser environments, each with its own fingerprint, cookies, local storage, and proxy binding.

This list is for operators who are doing this legitimately: sourcing from different suppliers, running stores for different clients, testing ad accounts, or managing regional storefronts. I’m not here to help anyone commit identity fraud or bypass KYC checks. If that’s your goal, stop reading. For everyone else, this is a practical comparison based on how these tools actually behave when you’re toggling between a US Amazon seller account and an EU Shopify store forty times a day.

I’ve been running multi-account setups in Singapore for several years, and I’ve put these through real workloads, not just browser fingerprint checker sites. The criteria below reflect what actually matters when you’re scaling past five profiles and need consistency.


how I picked

  • fingerprint quality: does the generated fingerprint pass EFF’s Cover Your Tracks and BrowserLeaks without obvious inconsistencies between navigator properties, canvas, and WebGL?
  • proxy integration: can you bind a residential or mobile proxy directly to the profile, and does the tool handle IP-timezone mismatch automatically?
  • profile stability: do cookie sessions survive across closes? does the browser version stay current with real Chrome/Firefox release tracks?
  • team and automation support: can you share profiles with a VA, and does the tool expose a local API or Selenium/Puppeteer integration for order automation?
  • pricing vs. profile count: cost per profile at the scale most dropshippers actually operate (10-200 profiles)
  • platform track record: how long has the vendor been running, and are there credible reports of fingerprints being detected on Shopify, Amazon, or eBay?

the picks

Multilogin

Multilogin is the oldest serious player in this space, launched in 2015, and still the benchmark a lot of operators compare everything else against. It ships two browser cores: Mimic (Chromium-based) and Stealthfox (Firefox-based). The fingerprint customization goes deeper than most competitors, with granular control over canvas noise, AudioContext, WebGL renderer strings, font lists, and navigator properties. For Amazon seller accounts specifically, where the fraud detection is aggressive, Mimic’s consistency has held up well in my experience.

The main friction is price. The Starter plan is €99/month for 100 profiles, and the team plans scale steeply. The desktop client is polished and the Selenium/Puppeteer API is solid, which matters if you’re automating order fulfillment or bulk listing updates. Multilogin also publishes reasonably detailed fingerprinting documentation, which tells you they’re thinking about it seriously rather than just slapping a random UA string on a Chromium fork. Check the full Multilogin review for a deeper teardown.

pros: - two browser cores covering both Chrome and Firefox detection surfaces - most mature API for automation (order scripts, listing bots) - long track record on Amazon and Shopify without widespread detection reports

cons: - expensive, especially for solo operators under 50 profiles - cloud sync required, no fully offline option

pricing: from €99/month (100 profiles, Starter). team plans from €199/month. link: multilogin.com


AdsPower

AdsPower has become the go-to for budget-conscious dropshippers managing mid-sized profile counts, and for good reason. The free tier gives you 5 profiles, which is enough to test the tool before committing. Paid plans start around $5.40/month for 10 profiles and scale reasonably. It supports both SunBrowser (Chromium) and FlowerBrowser (Firefox), similar to Multilogin’s dual-core approach.

What I like about AdsPower for e-commerce specifically is the built-in automation templates. There are pre-built flows for common platform tasks, which is useful if your VA isn’t comfortable writing Selenium scripts. The RPA recorder is basic but functional. Proxy binding works well with residential providers, and the UI has improved a lot over the past two years. The one concern I’d flag is that AdsPower is China-headquartered, which some operators care about from a data handling perspective. Read the AdsPower review for the full picture.

pros: - most affordable paid plans in this category - built-in RPA automation without needing external scripts - free tier for testing before committing

cons: - China-based company, worth considering for data sensitivity - automation templates are shallow compared to writing your own scripts

pricing: free (5 profiles). Solo from $5.40/month. Team plans scale from there. link: adspower.com


Dolphin Anty

Dolphin Anty came out of the affiliate and arbitrage community in Russia and has picked up a strong following among dropshippers running Facebook ad accounts alongside their store accounts. The free plan covers 10 profiles permanently, which is genuinely useful. Paid starts at $89/month for 100 profiles.

The interface is clean and the profile sync across devices works reliably. Where Dolphin stands out is in the team permission system, which lets you grant granular access by profile group. If you’re running a small team where different people manage different supplier relationships, that granularity is useful. Fingerprint quality is good, and they update their Chromium base frequently enough that you’re not running a detectably stale browser version. The API documentation is serviceable but not as thorough as Multilogin’s.

pros: - generous free tier (10 profiles, no time limit) - team permission system with group-level access control - active development with frequent Chromium updates

cons: - paid plans jump sharply from free; mid-tier pricing is less competitive - API docs need work for complex automation use cases

pricing: free (10 profiles). From $89/month (100 profiles). link: dolphin-anty.com


GoLogin

GoLogin is priced to compete with AdsPower and has carved out a niche with operators who want a browser-based interface rather than a desktop app. You can run profiles from a web dashboard without installing anything locally, which matters if you’re managing accounts across multiple machines or passing work to remote VAs. Cloud profiles start at $49/month for 100 profiles.

The Orbita browser core (Chromium-based) handles most platform fingerprinting checks without obvious leaks. GoLogin also has a free tier (3 profiles) and a 7-day trial on paid plans. For dropshippers, the main selling point is the quick setup, the API is REST-based and well-documented, and the timezone/language/proxy auto-matching is on by default. See the GoLogin review for a thorough look at how it handles Amazon’s detection.

pros: - web-based interface, no mandatory desktop install - clean REST API with good documentation - auto timezone and language matching on proxy assignment

cons: - only one browser core (Chromium-only, no Firefox option) - cloud storage for profiles raises questions for security-conscious operators

pricing: free (3 profiles). From $49/month (100 profiles, cloud). link: gologin.com


Incogniton

Incogniton is underrated for solo operators and small teams running 10-50 profiles. The free plan gives you 10 profiles with no expiry, matching Dolphin Anty. The Starter paid plan at $29.99/month for 50 profiles is the most competitive per-profile pricing in this list for that scale. It uses a Chromium base, and the fingerprint spoofing covers the standard surfaces: canvas, WebGL, fonts, navigator, screen resolution.

Where Incogniton is weaker is automation. The Selenium integration exists but is less documented than Multilogin or GoLogin. If you’re doing mostly manual account work, VA handoffs, and occasional scripts, it’s fine. If you’re running heavy order automation or bulk listing, you’ll hit limitations. That said, for a solo dropshipper managing 20-30 store accounts across Shopify and Etsy without heavy automation needs, Incogniton is worth the price difference.

pros: - best per-profile pricing at 10-50 profile scale - permanent free tier (10 profiles) - simple, clean UI with low learning curve

cons: - weaker automation and API support than top-tier options - smaller community, fewer third-party integration guides

pricing: free (10 profiles). Starter from $29.99/month (50 profiles). link: incogniton.com


Kameleo

Kameleo is the European option in this list and the only one with meaningful mobile browser emulation built into the core product. It can emulate Chrome on Android and Safari on iOS, which matters if you’re managing accounts on platforms that also check mobile session history or if you want to warm up accounts through simulated mobile activity. Desktop fingerprinting covers Canvas, WebGL, AudioContext, and timezone.

Pricing starts at €59/month for unlimited profiles with some feature restrictions, going up to €199/month for the full package including mobile and automation API. For e-commerce dropshippers in particular, Kameleo’s value depends on whether you need mobile emulation. If you’re purely doing desktop browser multi-account work, it’s harder to justify the price over GoLogin or Incogniton. If you’re warming up TikTok Shop accounts or running Instagram-adjacent dropshipping, the mobile layer becomes relevant. The folks at multiaccountops.com/blog/ have written about mobile fingerprinting in e-commerce contexts if you want a deeper read on that angle.

pros: - genuine mobile browser emulation (Android/iOS), not just UA spoofing - GDPR-compliant, EU-based company - unlimited profiles on paid plans

cons: - full automation API only on highest-tier plan - overkill and overpriced for purely desktop workflows

pricing: from €59/month. Full plan €199/month. link: kameleo.io


Octo Browser

Octo Browser is the newest entrant on this list and has grown quickly in the CIS affiliate and e-commerce space. It’s Chromium-based, updates the core browser regularly, and has pushed fingerprint quality hard as a differentiator. The UI is polished. Team features, including profile sharing and audit logs, are included at reasonable price points.

The Starter plan is $29/month for 10 profiles, and pricing scales to $79/month for 100 profiles. That’s competitive. The API is documented and covers profile creation, cookie import/export, and proxy management. For a newer tool, the detection track record is solid so far, though it hasn’t had the years of adversarial testing that Multilogin or AdsPower have. Worth watching, and worth using if the pricing fits your scale. Browser fingerprinting guidance from W3C gives useful background on what platforms can technically detect if you want to understand the threat model.

pros: - competitive pricing with generous profile counts per tier - actively updated Chromium base - team audit logs included at all tiers

cons: - newer company with shorter track record in adversarial detection environments - smaller community means fewer guides for platform-specific setups

pricing: from $29/month (10 profiles). $79/month (100 profiles). link: octobrowser.net


comparison table

tool price (entry paid) primary strength primary weakness
Multilogin €99/month (100 profiles) deepest fingerprint control, best automation API expensive, steep for solo ops
AdsPower $5.40/month (10 profiles) most affordable, built-in RPA China-based, shallow automation templates
Dolphin Anty $89/month (100 profiles) free 10-profile tier, strong team permissions price jump from free to paid
GoLogin $49/month (100 profiles) web-based, good REST API no Firefox core, cloud storage
Incogniton $29.99/month (50 profiles) best per-profile price at small scale weak API and automation support
Kameleo €59/month (unlimited) mobile browser emulation overpriced for desktop-only workflows
Octo Browser $29/month (10 profiles) polished UI, competitive pricing short track record

how to choose

The first thing to get clear on is your profile count and automation needs, because those two variables eliminate most of the list before you even get to fingerprint quality. If you’re running under 20 profiles with minimal automation, Incogniton or AdsPower’s free/low tiers let you get going without overcommitting. If you’re above 100 profiles and running scripts for order automation or bulk listing, Multilogin’s API and stability justify the cost.

Fingerprint quality matters, but it’s worth being realistic about what you’re up against. Shopify’s fraud detection, Amazon’s account linking systems, and eBay’s VeRO enforcement each use different signals. Canvas and WebGL fingerprinting are well-understood, and every tool on this list handles them. What separates the good from the bad is consistency, whether your navigator.platform matches your reported OS, whether your timezone matches your proxy exit IP, whether your browser version looks like something a real person would run. Test any tool you’re considering against BrowserLeaks and EFF’s Cover Your Tracks before going live with real accounts.

Proxy setup is often where operators make mistakes, and the tool itself gets blamed. A good anti-detect browser can’t save you if you’re binding a Singapore residential proxy to an account that was registered in Ohio with a US payment method. Residential proxies matched by city and ISP to account registration history are table stakes. Most tools on this list support per-profile proxy binding. The ones with auto timezone and language matching (GoLogin does this well) reduce one class of configuration errors. The proxyscraping.org/blog/ covers proxy selection for multi-account setups in more depth.

If you’re handing profiles to VAs, look hard at the team permission model. Multilogin and Dolphin Anty both let you control which profiles each team member can open and modify. This matters operationally when you have one person managing supplier communication on one set of accounts and another handling customer service on different storefronts. Giving a VA full access to all profiles when they only need three is a mistake you want to avoid.


verdict / top pick

For most e-commerce dropshippers, AdsPower at the budget end and Multilogin at the professional end cover the range. If you’re just starting with multi-account operations, AdsPower’s free or low-cost entry lets you test the workflow without significant upfront cost. If you’re running a real operation at scale with automation scripts and a small team, Multilogin’s depth is worth paying for.

My personal day-to-day for mid-scale dropshipping (30-80 profiles, mixed Shopify and Amazon) is GoLogin. The web-based interface means I can hand a profile to a VA without walking them through software installation, the REST API integrates cleanly with the scripts I already have, and the pricing at that profile count is reasonable. Dolphin Anty is a close second if you need stronger team permissions or want to avoid monthly spend on a permanent 10-profile setup.

If you’re starting out and want to read more about the category before committing to any tool, the anti-detect browser reviews on this blog cover most of the major options with hands-on testing notes.


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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