Multilogin, founded in 2015 in Tallinn, Estonia, holds a specific and consistently cited distinction in the anti-detect browser market: it was the first to commercialize the concept, has operated continuously for nearly a decade, and is widely regarded as the technical benchmark against which all other anti-detect browsers are measured. Its two proprietary browser engines — Mimic (Chromium-based) and Stealthfox (Firefox-based) — are not reskins of open-source browsers but purpose-built environments engineered specifically to produce unique, undetectable digital fingerprints. The team's practice of daily testing on 50+ platforms including Facebook, Google, Amazon, TikTok, and major ad networks, combined with ten years of accumulated fingerprinting R&D, gives Multilogin a reliability track record that newer entrants cannot replicate on timeline alone. The 24/7 multilingual support team and documented willingness to conduct TeamViewer remote sessions for complex issues round out a service experience consistently rated above most competitors.
For agencies and larger teams, the Business plans deliver meaningful structural value: unlimited team seats, advanced profile sharing with granular permission controls, and Cloud Phone profiles for Android fingerprint emulation cover the full collaboration stack. The affiliate program's dual-model structure — 50% CPS or 15% recurring revenue share — is one of the more thoughtfully designed in the niche.
The weaknesses, however, are substantial enough to drive real buyer decisions in 2026. Multilogin is the most expensive anti-detect browser in the category by a meaningful margin: Solo at €29/month for just 10 profiles competes against AdsPower's permanent free plan (5 profiles) and Dolphin{anty}'s free plan, making it hard to justify for individual users or small operations. Mandatory KYC at signup is a hard barrier for privacy-sensitive users. The absence of action logs, profile folders, and robust mass-action capabilities puts it behind competitors like AdsPower and Dolphin{anty} for teams managing large volumes of accounts. The ongoing retirement of Multilogin 6 in favor of Multilogin X introduces migration complexity for existing users, and the 2026 transition period has generated some uncertainty in community forums.
Best for: serious individual media buyers and agencies who prioritize fingerprint quality and reliability above all else, enterprises needing advanced team collaboration, long-term operators who cannot afford detection risk on high-value accounts.
Not ideal for: budget users, teams needing free entry-level access, or operators requiring action logs and bulk profile management tools.
