A continuously refreshed feed of elite & anonymous proxies, cross-checked against TOR exit lists and known VPN ranges, enriched with ASN and org data. No scraping required — just download.
Every request on the internet carries an IP address — but that address can mean very different things. A residential home connection, a TOR exit node, a commercial VPN, and a datacenter proxy all look like "just an IP" — but they behave, and get treated, completely differently. theIPInsight classifies and verifies IPv4 addresses across these categories so you don't have to guess.
Verified working proxies that hide the origin IP. "Elite" leaks no proxy headers at all; "Anonymous" reveals it's a proxy but not the real IP behind it.
IP ranges belonging to known commercial VPN providers — cross-referenced against published VPN CIDR lists, refreshed continuously.
The last hop in a TOR circuit — the IP a destination server actually sees when traffic exits the TOR network.
Classified by ASN and org name — a consumer ISP connection behaves very differently from an IP sitting in a cloud datacenter.
As more traffic — scrapers, agents, bots, and AI crawlers — runs through proxies and VPNs, knowing what kind of IP you're looking at (or sending traffic from) matters more than ever.
Route automated browsing or data-collection jobs through verified Elite/Anonymous proxies, with ASN and ISP type so you can rotate through residential-looking exits when that matters.
Flag inbound traffic originating from known VPN ranges, TOR exits, or datacenter ASNs — useful signal for risk scoring, account abuse, and checkout fraud models.
Given an IP, quickly understand its category — TOR exit, VPN, residential, or hosting provider — as a first triage step in investigations.
Test how your app behaves from different network types and locations using a rotating pool of verified working proxies across protocols.
Identify traffic coming through Apple's iCloud Private Relay so you can apply appropriate handling — these IPs have unique privacy properties.
Keep your own firewall, WAF, or allow/deny lists current with a continuously refreshed feed of TOR exits and VPN/datacenter ranges — no need to run your own scrapers.
Every field is documented below — jump to the
schema section to see exactly what ships in each row,
or straight to downloads to grab the latest snapshot.
Each verified proxy ships with anonymity classification, ASN ownership, ISP type, and threat-list cross-references — so you can filter before you ever make a request.
New snapshot published twice a week. Free during the early access period — sign up to unlock download links.
| date | elite | anonymous | tor / vpn flags | formats |
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