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Best anti-detect browser for team workspaces over 5 seats in 2026

Best anti-detect browser for team workspaces over 5 seats in 2026

Running multi-account operations solo is one thing. doing it with a team of five, ten, or twenty people is a completely different coordination problem. profiles need to be shareable, permissions need to be granular enough that an intern can’t accidentally nuke an account, and the fingerprint quality needs to hold up across different machines since your teammates are not using your exact hardware. i’ve been running team-based account operations out of Singapore since 2021, and this list is specifically for buyers who are past the “one person, one browser” stage.

the picks here are for teams of five seats and above, whether you’re running affiliate marketing desks, e-commerce storefronts, social media management agencies, or airdrop farming operations (if you want a deeper look at multi-account structures for that use case, the guides at multiaccountops.com/blog cover the coordination side well). the selection criteria weight team features heavily over solo-use capabilities, because plenty of tools are fine for individuals and break down the moment you need profile locking, teammate audit logs, or role-based access.

what i’m not covering here: proxies. every tool on this list integrates with residential, datacenter, or mobile proxies but the proxy layer is a separate purchase. i’ve also excluded tools where the team pricing is so opaque that i can’t quote a real number without calling a sales rep.

how i picked

  • profile sharing and locking. can multiple team members open the same profile, or does the app enforce single-session locks to prevent fingerprint collisions? collision is a real ban vector.
  • role-based access control. at minimum i want owner, manager, and member roles. ideally i can restrict profile creation, deletion, and proxy assignment per user.
  • fingerprint engine quality. canvas, webgl, audio, fonts, timezone, webrtc leak protection. i cross-check against coveryourtracks.eff.org and manual tests on detection-focused sites. a weak engine poisons every profile on the team.
  • team pricing transparency. i only include tools where the team plan is publicly listed or was quoted to me directly. per-seat pricing versus profile-count pricing matters a lot at scale.
  • sync and cloud storage. local-only profile storage is a liability when someone’s laptop dies. cloud sync or at least cloud backup should be included or available.
  • api and automation support. teams doing any volume need selenium or playwright integration. if there’s no documented api, the tool caps your throughput.

the picks

Multilogin

Multilogin is the oldest name in the space, launched around 2015, and its team features reflect that maturity. the workspace model lets you invite members, assign roles (owner, manager, member), and share profiles or folders to specific users. profile locking is enforced, so two people cannot open the same profile simultaneously without a warning. the fingerprint engine, built on their custom Mimic (Chromium) and Stealthfox (Firefox) browsers, scores consistently well on canvas and webgl spoofing. the Multilogin documentation is thorough enough that onboarding a new team member doesn’t require you to hand-hold them.

the main friction is price. the Scale plan, which covers real team usage, starts at around $149/month for 100 profiles. larger teams on custom plans will pay more. the UI is not the slickest in 2026 and some teammates find the onboarding steep. but if fingerprint reliability is non-negotiable, Multilogin remains the benchmark the rest of the field is measured against.

pros: - profile locking prevents accidental fingerprint collisions - mature rbac with folder-level sharing - Mimic and Stealthfox engines are consistently updated

cons: - expensive at scale, custom pricing for larger seats - UI feels dated compared to newer entrants

pricing: Scale from ~$149/mo. check multilogin.com/pricing for current tiers.


AdsPower

AdsPower has grown into one of the most popular choices for agency-style operations, and i think a lot of that is down to the team UX. profiles are organized in groups, you can assign groups to members, and there’s a decent audit log showing who opened what and when. the RPA automation builder (no-code task recording) is genuinely useful for teams that don’t have a developer to write selenium scripts, which covers a lot of small agencies. AdsPower runs on Sun Browser (Chromium-based) and Firefox-based cores.

pricing is more accessible than Multilogin. team plans scale by profile count and member count separately, which can be cheaper if you have many profiles but few members. the fingerprint engine is solid but i’d rate it slightly below Multilogin on edge cases like WebGL vendor string spoofing. customer support is responsive, with a live chat that’s actually staffed during Singapore business hours.

pros: - visual RPA builder lowers automation barrier for non-devs - group-based profile management scales well - competitive pricing for high profile counts

cons: - fingerprint engine lags behind Multilogin on some advanced checks - RPA can be flaky on complex DOM flows

pricing: Team plans from roughly $30/mo base, scales with profiles and members. check adspower.com for current rates.


GoLogin

GoLogin positions itself as a more affordable Multilogin alternative and for five-to-ten seat teams it makes a credible case. the workspace feature covers profile sharing, member invites, and basic role controls. the Orbita browser core (Chromium-based) handles the main fingerprint vectors acceptably, and the cloud profile sync means your teammates can pull profiles from any machine without manual export/import cycles.

the API is documented and covers profile create, update, launch, and delete, which is enough for most selenium workflows. where GoLogin falls short for larger teams is the role granularity: you get owner and member but there’s no manager-tier that can admin profiles without billing access. for a ten-person team where you want a team lead to manage profiles without touching subscription settings, this is a real gap. see our full GoLogin review for a deeper breakdown of the fingerprint test results.

pros: - clean cloud sync included on all paid plans - documented REST API with selenium/playwright examples - price-competitive for 5-10 seat teams

cons: - role granularity is limited (owner vs member only) - Orbita engine occasionally lags behind Chromium stable releases

pricing: Professional ~$49/mo, Business ~$99/mo. check gologin.com/pricing.


Dolphin Anty

Dolphin Anty has built a following in the Russian-speaking CIS affiliate community and expanded internationally. the team collaboration features are genuinely well-designed: profile transfer between team members, profile notes visible to all assigned members, and tag-based organization that actually scales to large profile libraries. the fingerprint engine covers the standard vectors and includes a built-in proxy checker, which saves a step during team onboarding when you’re distributing proxies to members.

the Business plan is priced per team size and profile count. one thing i appreciate is the free tier, which is functional enough that you can test the team workflow before committing. the API is available on paid plans and is REST-based with reasonable documentation. the weakness is that Windows is the primary platform, Mac support exists but has historically lagged on some features. if your team is mixed mac/windows, test this on your actual machines before buying.

pros: - profile transfer and shared notes improve team coordination - built-in proxy health checker - functional free tier for evaluation

cons: - mac support historically lags behind windows - UI can feel cluttered with larger profile libraries

pricing: Business plans from ~$89/mo for teams. check dolphin.ru.com/pricing.


Incogniton

Incogniton is a solid mid-market option that doesn’t get as much coverage as Multilogin or AdsPower but deserves attention for five-to-fifteen seat teams. the synchronizer feature handles profile sharing across team members, and the selenium integration is one of the cleaner implementations i’ve tested, with a dedicated python package that wraps the local API. profile data is stored in the cloud by default on paid tiers.

pricing is straightforward: the Professional plan at around $79.99/month covers ten team members and a significant profile count. the fingerprint engine is Chromium-based and handles canvas and webgl spoofing well. the main limitation is that automation is Chromium-only, so if you need Firefox fingerprints for specific targets, Incogniton won’t cover that. see our Incogniton review for the full fingerprint test log.

pros: - clean selenium/python integration with official library - transparent flat-rate team pricing - reliable cloud sync with version history on profiles

cons: - Chromium-only, no Firefox core option - fewer RPA features than AdsPower for non-developer teams

pricing: Professional ~$79.99/mo for up to 10 members. check incogniton.com/pricing.


Kameleo

Kameleo is a Vienna-based product that takes a different architectural approach: instead of a custom browser, it patches Chromium and Firefox (and mobile via Android emulation) to modify fingerprints at a lower level. for teams doing platform testing across browser types, this flexibility matters. mobile browser profile support is a genuine differentiator, relevant if your team targets platforms that weight mobile user-agents differently.

the team plan covers multiple seats with shared profile access, and the API is comprehensive, with selenium, puppeteer, and playwright examples all documented. the fingerprint engine quality is high, particularly on the mobile emulation side where most competitors are weak. pricing sits at the higher end, and the onboarding documentation assumes some technical comfort. for purely non-technical teams, the learning curve is real. if you’re running any sort of browser automation across device types, the Kameleo documentation is worth reading before buying anything else.

pros: - genuine mobile browser fingerprint support (Android) - patches both Chromium and Firefox at low level - comprehensive automation API with multi-framework examples

cons: - steeper technical onboarding than competitors - higher price tier for full team feature access

pricing: Business tier from ~$199/mo. check kameleo.io for current team pricing.


MoreLogin

MoreLogin is a newer entrant that has been gaining traction in 2025 and 2026, particularly among e-commerce teams running Amazon and Shopify multi-store operations. the team workspace covers profile sharing, member permissions, and a cloud backup layer. what sets it apart for this use case is the profile import tooling: bulk import from other anti-detect browsers is supported, which reduces migration friction if you’re switching from an older tool.

the fingerprint engine is Chromium-based and performs well on standard detection checks. pricing is competitive and there is a free tier with limited profiles. the automation support is present but the API documentation is less mature than Multilogin or Kameleo, which matters if you’re building a custom workflow. for teams that prioritize ease of onboarding and don’t need deep API integration, MoreLogin is worth evaluating. check the MoreLogin review on this site for specifics on the fingerprint pass rates we recorded.

pros: - bulk profile import from competing tools eases migration - competitive pricing with a usable free tier - clean onboarding UI, low ramp time for new team members

cons: - API documentation less mature than established competitors - smaller community, fewer third-party guides and integrations

pricing: Team plans from around $20-40/mo base. check morelogin.com for current tiers.


comparison table

tool starting team price primary strength primary weakness
Multilogin ~$149/mo fingerprint engine maturity, profile locking expensive, dated UI
AdsPower ~$30/mo no-code RPA, group management fingerprint edge cases
GoLogin ~$49/mo cloud sync, api access limited role granularity
Dolphin Anty ~$89/mo profile transfer, proxy checker mac support lags
Incogniton ~$79.99/mo selenium integration, flat pricing Chromium-only
Kameleo ~$199/mo mobile fingerprinting, multi-browser technical onboarding
MoreLogin ~$20-40/mo migration tooling, easy onboarding immature API docs

prices listed are approximate as of May 2026 and subject to change. verify at each vendor’s pricing page before purchasing.


how to choose

the first question is what your team’s technical level actually is. if no one on the team writes code, AdsPower’s RPA builder or MoreLogin’s clean UI will save you support headaches. if you have a developer running selenium or playwright workflows, the API quality of Multilogin or Kameleo becomes the deciding factor, and it’s worth reading the actual API docs rather than trusting a feature checklist.

the second question is fingerprint target. most platforms are defeated by any of the top four tools here. but if you are specifically targeting platforms with aggressive bot detection, browser fingerprinting is not purely about canvas and webgl spoofing. the W3C fingerprinting guidance documents the full surface area, and a 2023 academic paper from the University of Illinois found over 30 distinct fingerprint signals used in the wild. Multilogin and Kameleo cover the widest set. for high-risk targets, test your specific platform before buying a team plan.

the third question is profile volume vs seat count. some tools charge primarily per profile (AdsPower), others per seat (Incogniton), others on a combined matrix. a team of six people managing 500 profiles has a very different cost curve than eight people managing 50 profiles. run the numbers against your actual usage, not the marketing headline.

finally, consider what happens when someone leaves the team. profile reassignment, access revocation, and audit trail quality matter. Multilogin and AdsPower both handle this reasonably well. GoLogin’s limited role controls mean a departing member with owner access is a real operational risk. build your offboarding process into the tool evaluation.


verdict / top pick

for most teams of five to fifteen seats, AdsPower hits the best balance of price, team features, and accessibility. the RPA builder removes the developer bottleneck, the group management scales cleanly, and the pricing is transparent enough to budget without a sales call.

if fingerprint quality is the priority and you have the budget, Multilogin remains the most battle-tested option. profile locking and the Mimic/Stealthfox engines hold up on the platforms where others slip.

for technical teams doing cross-browser or mobile fingerprint work, Kameleo is the only tool that genuinely covers those cases, and the investment in setup pays off at volume.

browse the full anti-detect browser review index for individual deep dives on each tool, and check the Multilogin review if you’re weighing whether the Multilogin premium is justified for your specific platform targets.


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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