Best anti-detect browser for TikTok Shop sellers in 2026
Best anti-detect browser for TikTok Shop sellers in 2026
If you’re running more than one TikTok Shop account, whether for separate brands, regional storefronts, or client accounts, you already know the problem. TikTok’s risk engine is aggressive. It links accounts by browser fingerprint, canvas hash, WebGL signature, IP, and device identifiers all at once. A single slip, like opening two shop dashboards in the same Chrome window, can trigger a review or an outright ban on both stores.
Anti-detect browsers solve this by generating isolated browser profiles, each with a distinct fingerprint that looks like a real, separate device to TikTok’s servers. I’ve been running multi-store TikTok Shop operations since the platform’s US launch in late 2023, and I’ve tested most of the major tools in this space over the past two years. This list is for operators who are serious about account separation: agency managers handling client shops, resellers running multiple storefronts, and cross-border sellers managing regional accounts for different markets.
One thing before we start: this guide is about legitimate account separation for business operations, not about bypassing TikTok’s identity verification requirements, evading bans for policy violations, or anything that violates TikTok’s Terms of Service. Running separate brand accounts is normal business practice. Faking identity documents is not, and I’m not covering that here.
how I picked
- fingerprint quality: I ran each browser through EFF’s Cover Your Tracks and BrowserLeaks to check canvas, WebGL, audio context, and font fingerprints. TikTok’s web session and the Seller Center both fingerprint aggressively on login.
- TikTok-specific stability: how long profiles held without triggering 2FA prompts or “unusual activity” warnings on the TikTok Shop Seller Center.
- team and proxy support: most operators aren’t solo. I looked at whether you can assign profiles to team members and whether the browser pairs cleanly with residential proxies.
- profile isolation: proper cookie, localStorage, and IndexedDB separation between profiles. Some cheaper tools share storage in ways that aren’t obvious until something leaks.
- pricing relative to profile count: per-profile cost matters when you’re running 20+ stores.
- update cadence: Chrome and Firefox update fingerprint surfaces constantly. Vendors that lag behind on browser core updates create detectable stale fingerprints over time.
the picks
AdsPower
AdsPower is the tool I recommend to most TikTok Shop operators starting out. it’s built from the ground up for e-commerce and social media multi-account work, and the Seller Center workflow is one of the smoother experiences I’ve tested. The browser ships two separate cores, SunBrowser (Chromium-based) and FlowerBrowser (Firefox-based), which gives you flexibility depending on what the account was originally registered on.
Profile management is clean. You can tag profiles, assign them to team members with role-based permissions, and bulk-launch them from a dashboard. The fingerprint randomization covers the standard surfaces: user agent, timezone, WebGL, canvas, fonts, and language. I’ve had profiles running TikTok Shop for over eight months without a single fingerprint-triggered flag, which is a reasonable stress test. The RPA automation feature is useful if you want to automate routine shop tasks, though I’d be careful about automating anything that interacts with listings or payments.
Pros: - purpose-built for social commerce; TikTok Seller Center works without extra configuration - two browser cores (Chromium + Firefox) in one plan - generous free tier (2 profiles) for testing before committing
Cons: - the UI has a lot of features, takes a few sessions to navigate confidently - cloud sync can be slow when switching between machines
Pricing: free plan (2 profiles); Base plan from $9/month (10 profiles); Pro plan from $50/month (100 profiles). adspower.com
Multilogin
Multilogin is the oldest serious player in this category. it’s been around since 2015 and the fingerprint engine is the most thoroughly developed I’ve tested. The Mimic (Chromium) and StealthFox (Firefox) browsers have genuine modifications at the browser source level, not just JavaScript overrides that can be detected by checking navigator properties through a different method.
For TikTok Shop specifically, Multilogin’s fingerprint consistency is its main advantage. When I profile-tested it on BrowserLeaks, every property that TikTok’s SDK checks came back with internally consistent values, meaning the reported GPU matched the reported OS, the timezone matched the locale, and so on. A lot of cheaper tools pass individual checks but fail consistency checks. The trade-off is price. Multilogin is expensive for small operators, and the profile limits on lower tiers are tight. If you’re running 5-10 shops, it’s worth it. If you’re just managing 2 shops for yourself, AdsPower or GoLogin will save you money.
Pros: - source-level browser modification, not JS patches, harder to detect - strong track record on platforms with aggressive fingerprinting (TikTok, Meta) - solid team collaboration features with audit logs
Cons: - pricing is steep for operators with fewer than 10 active profiles - no lifetime deal or one-time purchase option
Pricing: Starter plan from $29/month (10 profiles); Solo plan from $79/month; Team plan from $159/month (300 profiles). multilogin.com. see our full Multilogin review for a deeper breakdown.
GoLogin
GoLogin sits in a comfortable middle ground on price and capability. The Orbita browser is Chromium-based with fingerprint patching that covers the core surfaces TikTok checks. Setup is fast, the cloud profile sync works reliably, and there’s a web app option if you don’t want to install software on every machine your team uses.
I’ve found GoLogin’s fingerprinting solid for TikTok Shop at the $49/month tier. The main limitation I’ve run into is that profile isolation isn’t quite as thorough as Multilogin or AdsPower at the storage level. For standard shop operations (listing management, order fulfillment, messaging) it’s fine. if you’re doing anything that involves heavy session data or logged-in state persistence over weeks, test it carefully first. Their free plan (3 profiles for 7 days) is enough to verify it works with your proxy setup before paying.
Pros: - web app available, no desktop install required - one of the cleanest onboarding flows in this category - competitive pricing for 100+ profile tiers
Cons: - profile storage isolation has been less thorough than top-tier competitors in my testing - customer support response times can be slow on weekends
Pricing: Professional plan from $49/month (100 profiles); Business from $99/month (300 profiles); free trial (3 profiles, 7 days). gologin.com. also relevant for airdrop and farming workflows covered at airdropfarming.org/blog/.
Dolphin{anty}
Dolphin{anty} comes from a team with deep roots in Facebook and TikTok ads buying, and it shows. the browser was designed specifically for advertising account management, which overlaps heavily with what TikTok Shop sellers need. If you’re running paid traffic to your TikTok Shop alongside organic, Dolphin{anty} is worth serious consideration because you’re managing both the ad account and the shop account in the same tool.
The free tier is genuinely useful: 10 profiles at no cost, indefinitely. That’s enough for a small operation or for testing the fingerprint quality before scaling up. The paid tiers scale on profile count without a lot of gating on features, which I prefer over tools that lock team features behind enterprise plans. The fingerprint randomization is good, though I’ve noticed that WebGL hash variation is less granular than Multilogin or AdsPower on some hardware configurations. not a dealbreaker, but worth testing against your specific proxy setup.
Pros: - free plan with 10 profiles, no time limit - designed for TikTok/Meta ads workflows; Ads Manager and Seller Center both work well - clean API for teams that want to automate profile creation
Cons: - WebGL fingerprinting variation could be wider - documentation is inconsistent between English and Russian versions
Pricing: free (10 profiles); Base from $89/month (100 profiles); Team from $159/month (300 profiles). dolphin-anty.com
MoreLogin
MoreLogin is a newer entrant that’s been gaining ground fast in the Southeast Asian operator community, which makes sense given TikTok Shop’s strong presence in markets like Indonesia, Thailand, and Singapore. The pricing is aggressive, and the fingerprint coverage for TikTok’s web environment is genuinely good for the price point.
The interface feels closer to AdsPower than Multilogin in design, with a focus on making profile management accessible to people who aren’t deeply technical. Browser core is Chromium, fingerprint patching covers the standard set, and the proxy integration is straightforward. I’ve been using it for a secondary set of regional accounts for about four months without issues. The team features are still maturing relative to older tools, and I’d be cautious about relying on it as your sole tool if you’re managing client accounts where a disruption would be expensive. Read our MoreLogin review for a full account of our test results.
Pros: - very competitive pricing for high profile counts - strong adoption in SEA markets where TikTok Shop volume is high - frequent update cadence in 2025-2026
Cons: - team permission controls are less granular than Multilogin or AdsPower - smaller community and fewer third-party integration guides
Pricing: Starter from $9/month (10 profiles); Base from $28/month (100 profiles); Pro from $88/month (500 profiles). morelogin.com
Incogniton
Incogniton’s main appeal is the free tier: 10 profiles permanently, with solid fingerprint coverage and a Selenium/Puppeteer API that works out of the box. For solo sellers managing a small number of shops, it’s genuinely a complete free solution. The browser core is Chromium, and the fingerprint randomization covers canvas, WebGL, user agent, timezone, and language.
Where Incogniton lags is at scale. The paid tiers jump in price quickly past 50 profiles, and the team features on the Entrepreneur plan ($29.99/month) are basic. I’d recommend Incogniton specifically for operators running under 10 profiles who want to spend nothing or close to nothing, or developers who need browser automation with fingerprint spoofing and want to test before building out a paid setup. For a growing TikTok Shop agency, you’ll likely outgrow the free tier within a few months.
Pros: - 10 profiles free with no time limit, no credit card required - browser automation API works cleanly with Selenium and Puppeteer - profile sync across devices is reliable on paid plans
Cons: - paid tier pricing becomes uncompetitive past 50 profiles - fewer fingerprint customization options compared to Multilogin or AdsPower
Pricing: free (10 profiles); Entrepreneur from $29.99/month (50 profiles); Professional from $79.99/month (150 profiles). incogniton.com
Kameleo
Kameleo takes a different approach from the other tools on this list. Rather than a standalone browser, it wraps existing browsers you already have installed (Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Safari on mobile) and adds fingerprint spoofing on top. this means you’re using the real, updated browser binary, which eliminates one detection vector that some tools suffer from: using a browser binary that’s months out of date relative to the declared user agent.
For TikTok Shop, the practical impact is that Kameleo’s profiles tend to pass browser freshness checks more reliably. The downside is that the setup is more involved, and the mobile browser spoofing (via the Kameleo mobile app) adds complexity if you’re just looking for a simple desktop solution. pricing is per-seat rather than per-profile, which can work out well or poorly depending on your team structure. if you have multiple operators each managing their own set of accounts, per-seat pricing is efficient. if you have one operator managing 200 profiles, it’s a less natural fit. see our Kameleo review for a complete walkthrough of the mobile spoofing setup.
Pros: - uses real installed browser binaries, reducing stale fingerprint detection risk - mobile browser spoofing available, useful for TikTok Shop mobile session matching - no profile count limits on most plans
Cons: - more complex setup than dedicated anti-detect browsers - per-seat pricing model doesn’t suit all team structures
Pricing: Basic plan from $59/month (1 user, unlimited profiles); Advanced from $89/month; Automation from $199/month. kameleo.io
comparison table
| Tool | Starting Price | Primary Strength | Primary Weakness |
|---|---|---|---|
| AdsPower | $9/month | E-commerce focus, two browser cores | Feature-dense UI |
| Multilogin | $29/month | Source-level fingerprint modification | Expensive at low profile counts |
| GoLogin | $49/month | Clean UX, web app option | Profile isolation less thorough |
| Dolphin{anty} | Free / $89 paid | TikTok/Meta ads workflow | WebGL variation narrower |
| MoreLogin | $9/month | SEA market focus, aggressive pricing | Team controls still maturing |
| Incogniton | Free / $29.99 paid | Best free tier (10 profiles) | Uncompetitive at scale |
| Kameleo | $59/month | Real browser binaries, no profile limits | Complex setup, per-seat pricing |
how to choose
Start with your profile count and whether you’re solo or running a team. if you have under 10 accounts and you’re working alone, Incogniton’s free tier or Dolphin{anty}’s free tier covers you without spending anything. test one of those first. if you hit limitations, you’ll have a clear sense of what feature you’re missing before you pay for it.
For agencies managing client TikTok Shops, team permissions and profile sharing become the deciding factor. Multilogin and AdsPower have the most mature team controls, including role-based access and audit logs. If a team member accidentally closes a profile or changes a setting, you want to be able to trace it. GoLogin’s team features are adequate but thinner, and MoreLogin’s are still catching up.
Proxy compatibility matters more than most operators expect. The anti-detect browser is only half the stack. TikTok links accounts by IP as well as fingerprint, so each profile needs a dedicated residential or mobile proxy. make sure the browser you choose connects cleanly with your proxy provider’s format. most tools support HTTP/HTTPS/SOCKS5, but test it before buying. the multi-account operations community at multiaccountops.com/blog/ has practical guides on proxy setup that are worth reading alongside this list.
Finally, think about the device type your accounts were originally created on. TikTok tracks whether an account was first logged in on mobile or desktop. if your accounts were set up on an iPhone, a Chromium-based desktop profile fingerprint looks inconsistent. Kameleo’s mobile browser spoofing or a proper mobile farm setup would be more accurate. for most sellers starting fresh and registering accounts through the browser directly, this isn’t a concern, but if you’re migrating existing accounts into an anti-detect setup, it’s worth auditing your account history first.
verdict / top pick
For most TikTok Shop sellers, AdsPower is the right starting point. the $9/month Base plan covers 10 profiles with solid fingerprint quality, a workflow that handles TikTok Seller Center without friction, and enough features to grow into. if you’re managing 5+ client shops and need airtight fingerprint consistency and team audit logs, upgrade to Multilogin. the price jump is real but the detection track record justifies it for serious operators.
If budget is the constraint and you’re running under 10 profiles, Dolphin{anty}’s free tier is the most complete no-cost option specifically for TikTok-adjacent work. and if you’re in Southeast Asia scaling fast across regional accounts, MoreLogin is worth a close look given its pricing and growing community in that region.
Whatever you pick, pair it with dedicated residential proxies per profile, register each account from a clean session, and don’t share payment methods or phone numbers across stores. the browser is one layer; operational hygiene across the full stack is what actually keeps accounts clean over the long term. more on that in the blog index.
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.