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Best anti-detect browser for Mac users in 2026

Best anti-detect browser for Mac users in 2026

If you run multiple accounts for affiliate marketing, e-commerce, airdrop farming, or ad verification, you already know the core problem: platforms fingerprint your browser and link accounts together even when you use different proxies or VPNs. Anti-detect browsers solve this by spoofing or isolating the fingerprint attributes, canvas readings, WebGL signatures, and timezone data that sites use to identify you. The problem for Mac users specifically is that not every anti-detect browser is built with macOS in mind. Some are Windows-first products that were ported over as an afterthought, ship with outdated Chromium builds, or just crash constantly on Apple Silicon.

I’ve been running multi-account operations out of Singapore for several years, primarily on a MacBook Pro M2. I’ve tested most of the tools on this list in production environments, farming airdrops, managing ad accounts, and doing affiliate work across multiple platforms. I’m not interested in tools that look good on a landing page but fail in practice. This list is for operators who need something that actually works on macOS, stays updated, and won’t blow up their accounts because of a lazy fingerprint implementation.

The picks below cover a range of budgets and use cases. Whether you’re a solo operator who needs 10 profiles or a team running hundreds of accounts, there’s something here. For a broader breakdown of what these tools are and how fingerprint spoofing works, check the blog index.

How I picked

  • macOS native build or well-maintained Mac client. Tools that ship a proper .dmg installer and support Apple Silicon (M1/M2/M3) without Rosetta workarounds got priority.
  • Fingerprint quality. I tested each against EFF’s Cover Your Tracks and manual checks on BrowserLeaks. Unique-fingerprint warnings on a fresh profile is a red flag.
  • Browser engine freshness. The underlying Chromium or Firefox build needs to be within a few versions of current, otherwise sites flag the outdated user agent immediately.
  • Proxy integration. Native proxy assignment per profile, supporting HTTP, SOCKS5, and SSH tunnels at minimum.
  • Team features and automation. API access and Selenium/Playwright/Puppeteer compatibility matter for anyone scaling beyond manual clicks.
  • Honest pricing. Free plans that hobble you with 2 profiles are marketing, not products. I looked at what you actually get at each paid tier.

The picks

Multilogin

Multilogin is the tool I point most operators toward when they ask what actually works in production. It ships two proprietary browser engines: Mimic (Chromium-based) and Stealthfox (Firefox-based), both maintained in-house rather than relying on open Chromium forks. The macOS client is solid, including M-series chip support, and the fingerprint spoofing covers the attributes that matter most: WebRTC, canvas, WebGL, fonts, screen resolution, and timezone. The W3C’s fingerprinting guidance documentation outlines the surface area platforms can use, and Multilogin addresses most of it.

The main friction is price. At $99/month for the Solo plan (100 profiles), it’s one of the more expensive options here. Team plans scale to $199 and $399/month. For high-stakes accounts where a ban costs more than the subscription, this is easy to justify. For someone farming 10 airdrop wallets on a budget, it may not be.

  • Good fingerprint isolation with proprietary Mimic/Stealthfox engines
  • Solid Mac client with Apple Silicon support
  • REST API for automation with Selenium and Playwright

  • Expensive relative to competitors at similar profile counts

  • No meaningful free tier, only a 14-day trial

Pricing: from $99/month (Solo, 100 profiles). multilogin.com


AdsPower

AdsPower has become one of the more popular choices among affiliate operators and e-commerce sellers, partly because it has a functional free plan and partly because the paid tiers are reasonable. The Mac client works well, and the built-in browser automation tool (RPA) is useful for teams that don’t want to write Selenium scripts. Profile templates, bulk import, and a decent proxy manager round out the feature set. See the full AdsPower review for a deeper breakdown.

The fingerprint quality is good but not exceptional. In my testing, some profiles triggered “unique fingerprint” warnings on Cover Your Tracks, which suggests the canvas spoofing has gaps under certain configurations. That said, for most use cases such as managing Facebook ad accounts or running e-commerce seller profiles, it performs well. The free tier gives you 5 profiles, which is actually usable for testing.

  • Free plan with 5 profiles is genuinely functional
  • Built-in RPA automation without needing external Selenium setup
  • Clean Mac UI with team sharing features

  • Canvas fingerprint spoofing has occasional inconsistencies

  • Customer support response times can be slow

Pricing: free (5 profiles), paid from $9/month (10 profiles). adspower.com


GoLogin

GoLogin is built on Orbita, their in-house Chromium fork, and has maintained a consistent update cadence which matters more than most users realize. Running an old Chromium build is one of the fastest ways to get flagged: sites check your browser version against expected user agent strings, and a six-month-old Chrome version on a profile claiming to be a fresh user is an obvious signal. GoLogin’s Mac client has worked reliably on my M2 without issues.

The free plan gives you 3 profiles, which is mostly useful for evaluation. The Professional plan at $49/month gets you 100 profiles, which is the sweet spot for solo operators. They also have a web app that lets you run profiles from a browser without installing anything locally, which is convenient if you’re occasionally working from a machine that isn’t your main setup. Read the full GoLogin review for more detail on the automation API.

  • Orbita browser engine keeps Chromium versions current
  • Web app option for running profiles without local installation
  • Competitive pricing at the 100-profile tier

  • Fingerprint depth not quite at Multilogin’s level

  • Free plan limited to 3 profiles

Pricing: free (3 profiles), paid from $49/month (Professional, 100 profiles). gologin.com


Dolphin Anty

Dolphin Anty has a loyal following among crypto and airdrop operators. If you spend time on airdrop farming communities, you’ll see it recommended frequently for managing multiple wallet-connected browser profiles. The free plan is generous at 10 profiles, and the interface is cleaner than most competitors. The Mac client has been stable in my testing, and profile configuration is straightforward.

The main limitation is that scaling gets expensive fast. The Base plan at $89/month for 100 profiles is more than GoLogin or Incogniton at the same profile count. You’re partly paying for the product’s popularity in crypto circles, which means there’s a large community of people sharing configs and proxy recommendations. For airdrop farming specifically, that community knowledge is worth something. For general multi-account work, you can get similar quality for less.

  • Generous 10-profile free plan
  • Strong community in crypto and airdrop circles with shared configs
  • Clean interface that’s easy to learn

  • Paid plans are expensive relative to profile count

  • Fingerprint engine occasionally needs manual tuning for niche platforms

Pricing: free (10 profiles), paid from $89/month (Base, 100 profiles). dolphin.ru.com


Incogniton

Incogniton punches above its weight at the price point. The free Starter plan gives 10 profiles, and the Entrepreneur plan at $29.99/month gets you 50 profiles with team features. For a solo operator who doesn’t need hundreds of profiles, this is one of the better value options on the list. The Mac client is functional, and the Selenium/Puppeteer API works cleanly for automation. I’ve used it for managing mid-volume affiliate accounts without issues.

The fingerprint engine is competent but the underlying Chromium build has occasionally lagged behind competitor updates. It’s worth checking the current browser version in any Incogniton profile against the latest Chrome release before deploying sensitive accounts. The UI is a bit dated compared to GoLogin or AdsPower, but that’s cosmetic. For operators who care more about what the tool does than how it looks, Incogniton is worth serious consideration. For a deeper look, check the full Incogniton review.

  • Best price-to-profile ratio on the list at the $29.99/month tier
  • 10-profile free plan with no major feature restrictions
  • Clean Selenium and Puppeteer API

  • UI is dated compared to newer competitors

  • Chromium version updates can lag

Pricing: free (10 profiles), paid from $29.99/month (Entrepreneur, 50 profiles). incogniton.com


Octo Browser

Octo Browser is a European product that’s built a reputation for fingerprint quality. The Starter plan at $29/month is entry-level, but you’re only getting 10 profiles. The Base plan at $79/month gets you 100 profiles, which is more reasonable for anyone doing serious work. The Mac client is well-maintained, and fingerprint customization is more granular than most tools on this list. You can manually adjust individual fingerprint parameters rather than relying entirely on auto-generated profiles, which matters when you’re trying to match specific device types or geographies.

The pricing model is a bit awkward because the Starter plan profile limit is so low. Most real use cases immediately outgrow 10 profiles, which means you’re effectively starting at $79/month. That said, if fingerprint quality is the primary concern and you’re running fewer, higher-value accounts where each ban is costly, Octo is a reasonable choice. The team collaboration features are also solid, with role-based access controls that matter for agencies managing client accounts.

  • High fingerprint customization with manual parameter controls
  • Good Mac client stability including M-series chips
  • Role-based access control for team and agency use

  • Starter plan (10 profiles) is too limited for most real workflows

  • Effective entry price is $79/month once you need real profile volume

Pricing: from $29/month (Starter, 10 profiles), $79/month (Base, 100 profiles). octobrowser.net


Hidemyacc

Hidemyacc is a Vietnamese product that’s worth including specifically for Mac users on tighter budgets. The free plan covers 5 profiles, and paid plans start at $15/month. The Mac client works on Apple Silicon and the fingerprint engine covers the main bases. It’s not going to compete with Multilogin on fingerprint depth, and the automation API is less mature than GoLogin or Incogniton. But for operators who are getting started, testing a workflow before committing to a more expensive tool, or managing a small set of accounts where the stakes aren’t critical, it’s a functional option.

One thing Hidemyacc does well is its cookie import and profile management flow. If you’re managing social media accounts at low volume, the ability to import cookies and quickly set up profiles with saved sessions is smoother than some pricier competitors. For multi-account operations at scale, the multiaccountops.com blog has guides on proxy configuration and profile organization that apply regardless of which tool you use.

  • Affordable entry point at $15/month
  • Good cookie import and session management workflow
  • Functional Mac client with Apple Silicon support

  • Automation API is less mature than competitors

  • Fingerprint depth limited compared to Multilogin or Octo Browser

Pricing: free (5 profiles), paid from $15/month. hidemyacc.com


Comparison table

Tool Starting price Primary strength Primary weakness
Multilogin $99/month Fingerprint depth, proprietary engines Price
AdsPower Free / $9/month Free tier, built-in RPA automation Occasional canvas spoofing gaps
GoLogin Free / $49/month Current Chromium builds, web app Fingerprint depth vs. Multilogin
Dolphin Anty Free / $89/month Crypto community adoption, clean UI Expensive per profile
Incogniton Free / $29.99/month Value per profile at paid tier Dated UI, occasional Chromium lag
Octo Browser $29/month Fingerprint customization depth Effective price starts at $79/month
Hidemyacc Free / $15/month Affordable entry, cookie management Limited automation API

How to choose

The first question is what kind of accounts you’re managing and what the cost of a ban looks like. If you’re farming 50 airdrop wallets where the expected value per wallet is $20, losing a batch to a detection event costs you $1,000. At that loss rate, paying $99/month for Multilogin is rational. If you’re testing affiliate landing pages across different geo-specific browser profiles for research purposes, Incogniton at $29.99/month does the job without overpaying.

The second question is team size. Solo operators can use almost any tool on this list. Once you add team members who need shared access to profiles, you care about role-based permissions, profile locking to prevent concurrent access, and audit logs. Octo Browser and Multilogin handle this better than AdsPower or Hidemyacc at similar team sizes. GoLogin’s team plan is solid and more affordable than either if you’re a small team.

Third: automation. If you’re clicking profiles manually, UI quality matters more. If you’re running Selenium or Playwright scripts against profiles, what matters is whether the automation API is stable and well-documented. GoLogin and Multilogin both have solid API documentation. Incogniton works but the docs are thinner. Hidemyacc’s API is the least mature of the seven.

Finally, consider Apple Silicon specifically. Most tools on this list work on M-series chips now, but check before you buy. Tools running Chromium should work natively given that Chromium itself has M-series support. The edge cases are tools with custom components that haven’t been compiled for ARM. If you’re on an M3 MacBook and a tool’s last Mac update was in 2023, run the trial before committing to a paid plan.

Verdict / top pick

For most Mac operators, GoLogin is the practical starting point. The $49/month Professional plan gives you 100 profiles, the Orbita browser engine stays current, the web app option is genuinely useful, and the API is solid for automation. If fingerprint depth becomes a concern as your operation scales or you’re managing higher-value accounts, upgrade to Multilogin. The price jump is real but the fingerprint quality difference is also real.

For budget-conscious solo operators, Incogniton at $29.99/month for 50 profiles is the best value on the list. For teams that care about granular fingerprint control over profile volume, Octo Browser is worth the effective $79/month starting price.

Whatever tool you choose, pair it with clean residential proxies, assign one proxy per profile, and test fingerprints on a fresh profile before deploying to live accounts. The anti-detect browser is one layer. The proxy quality, the account warmup behavior, and the consistency of usage patterns across sessions matter just as much.

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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