Netnut is an Israel-based proxy and web data company listed on NASDAQ under the ticker ALAR. I created an account, worked through the full registration flow, explored the dashboard, tested the checkout process, and contacted support with real questions.
What I found was a provider that takes its infrastructure and compliance credentials seriously, with a product range that extends well beyond proxies into AI data infrastructure and professional datasets.
NetNut Pros and Cons
- 85M+ rotating residential IPs across 195 countries
- 1M+ static residential IPs with 24/7 availability
- 5M+ mobile IPs across 100 countries with 3G/4G/5G/LTE support
- 150K+ datacenter IPs with 99.99% uptime
- 99% success rate on residential proxies, 100% on mobile
- HTTP, HTTPS, and SOCKS5 protocol support
- Unlimited concurrency on residential plans
- ISO certified infrastructure with patented proxy technology
- GDPR compliant
- Dedicated account manager assigned on signup
- Multiple contact channels including email, Skype, WhatsApp, Telegram, and calendar booking
- Cryptocurrency payments accepted alongside all major card methods
- Live chat routes through a qualification bot before reaching a human agent
- Pricing for ISP and mobile proxies sits at a higher entry point than some competitors
NetNut’s B2B-sourced IPs and AI-ready data infrastructure make it one of the few providers built for teams that need both scale and compliance. Head over to Netnut to explore the full product range and speak with an account manager before you commit.
Rating Breakdown
To evaluate NetNut, I applied our proxy review methodology, a structured framework used across all reviews in this series to ensure scores are consistent, fair, and based on real first-hand experience rather than marketing claims.
Here is how NetNut scored across every key parameter.
| Parameter | Score | Why This Score |
|---|---|---|
| Prices | 8.2/10 | Rotating residential proxies start from $1.59/GB, which is competitive at volume. ISP and mobile proxies sit higher at $3.82/GB+. Long-term plans bring costs down further. |
| Proxy Pool & Coverage | 9.2/10 | 85M+ residential IPs across 195 countries, 5M+ mobile IPs, and 1M+ static IPs. The B2B sourcing model for residential IPs is a genuine compliance differentiator. |
| Performance & Reliability | 9.0/10 | Published 99% success rate on residential, 100% on mobile, and 99.99% uptime on the datacenter. Patented technology and ISO certification back these figures. |
| Ease of Use | 9.4/10 | Registration is fast and flexible. The dashboard is clean, well-organized, and gets straight to the point. The proxy generator on active accounts is one of the most practical tools I have seen in this space. |
| Support | 7.0/10 | Multiple contact channels available, including WhatsApp, Telegram, Skype, email, and live chat. The live chat routes through a qualification bot that collects detailed information before escalating to a human. |
| Overall | 8.6/10 | NetNut is a serious, well-credentialed proxy provider with a broad product range, strong compliance positioning, and a genuinely polished dashboard experience. |
NetNut Prices & Plans
NetNut offers a broad product catalog spanning proxies, scraping solutions, and data products.
Here is a full overview of what is available and what it costs.
Proxy Products
| Features | Starter | Advanced | Production | Semi-Pro | Professional | Master |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price per GB | $3/GB | $2.93/GB | $2.82/GB | $2.43/GB | $2.12/GB | $1.59/GB |
| Space | 28GB | 72GB | 150GB | 350GB | 800GB | 2TB |
| Price Monthly | $84 | $210 | $423 | $850 | $1696 | $3180 |
Scraping Solutions
| Features | Starter | Advanced | Production | Semi-Pro | Professional | Master |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price per result | $1.28 | $1.07 | $1.02 | $0.85 | $0.76 | $0.70 |
| Requests | 66K | 184K | 415K | 999K | 2.2M | 4.5M |
| Price Monthly | $85 | $199 | $425 | $849 | $1699 | $3200 |
SERP Scraper API Pricing
| Features | Starter | Advanced | Production | Semi-Pro | Professional | Master |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price per result | $0.64 | $0.54 | $0.52 | $0.42 | $0.38 | $0.35 |
| Requests | 132K | 366K | 804K | 1.9M | 4.4M | 9.1M |
| Price Monthly | $85 | $199 | $425 | $849 | $1699 | $3200 |
Rotating Residential Proxies: Plan Breakdown
Inside the dashboard, rotating residential proxy plans are structured as follows:
| Features | Starter | Advanced | Production | Semi-Pro | Professional | Master |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price per GB | $3/GB | $2.93/GB | $2.82/GB | $2.43/GB | $2.12/GB | $1.59/GB |
| Space | 28GB | 72GB | 150GB | 350GB | 800GB | 2TB |
| Price Monthly | $84 | $210 | $423 | $850 | $1696 | $3180 |
A Standard and Enterprise toggle is available inside the pricing view. The per-unit costs drop meaningfully at higher volumes.
Long-Term Plans
NetNut offers 3, 6, and 12-month commitment plans, which reduce the per-GB cost further.
These are available by contacting the sales team directly.
Payment Methods
NetNut accepts:
- Visa, Mastercard, and American Express
- PayPal
- Bank wire transfer
- Cryptocurrency (including Bitcoin)
The inclusion of crypto and bank wire makes NetNut accessible to enterprise buyers and international teams who cannot use standard card payments. At checkout, billing can be set up as either Business or Individual.
NetNut Features
- City and state-level targeting on residential proxies
- HTTP, HTTPS, and SOCKS5 protocol support
- Unlimited concurrent requests on residential plans
- Utilizes a “one-hop” ISP proxy network
- AI Data Infrastructure designed for training and inference pipelines
- Real-time proxy management via built-in proxy generator
- System Usage dashboard with request counts, success rates, response times, and data totals
- Offers an API for proxy management, a Chrome extension, and compatibility with most scraping tools and browsers.
Performance
The figures NetNut publishes are specific rather than vague, and they come with a credibility layer that most smaller providers cannot match.
Published Performance Metrics
| Metric | NetNut Figure |
|---|---|
| Residential proxy success rate | 99% |
| Mobile proxy success rate | 100% |
| Datacenter proxy uptime | 99.99% |
| Residential IP pool | 85M+ IPs |
| Country coverage (residential) | 195 countries |
| Mobile IP pool | 5M+ IPs |
| Static IP pool | 1M+ IPs |
| Datacenter IP count | 150K+ |
The 100% success rate claim on mobile proxies is a strong one. In the proxy industry, mobile IPs command a premium precisely because they are harder to detect and block.
If that figure holds up under real-world scraping conditions, it represents genuine value for teams targeting platforms that aggressively filter datacenter and residential traffic.
The 99.99% uptime on datacenter proxies is also notable for users running availability-sensitive operations where consistent access matters more than anonymity.
Ease of Use
I evaluated three things: the registration and signup flow, the dashboard layout after login, and how the product selection and checkout process works.
1. The Homepage and Registration
The NetNut homepage leads with “Limitless Web Data Extraction”. Clicking Register opens a two-step flow.

Step 1: Create an Account
The first screen asks for:
- Email address
- Password

Alternatively, you can continue with Microsoft or Google, which skip the manual entry entirely. After entering credentials and clicking Continue, NetNut immediately sends a six-digit OTP code to your registered email. The OTP input is shown as a clean six-box prompt.
This is faster than a link-based email verification, since you just type the code rather than switching tabs to click a link.
Step 2: Complete Your Account
Once the OTP is verified, you are taken to a second screen asking for:
- First name and last name
- Social channel (with WhatsApp as the default option)
- Phone number with country code selector
- Product interests (multi-select from available proxy types)
- Optional marketing email consent

This second step asks for more personal information than most proxy providers require at registration. The phone number and social channel fields, in particular, stand out.
NetNut uses these to route you toward your account manager quickly, which explains why they are collected upfront.
Google and Microsoft Sign-In keep things fast for those who prefer it. From first click to a confirmed account took me around four minutes in total.
2. The Dashboard
After completing registration, you are taken directly into the dashboard without any intermediate purchase step.
The screen greets you with a personalized message and shows a grid of six product cards:
- Rotating Residential Proxies (starting at $1.87/GB)
- Web Unblocker (starting at $4.8/GB)
- SERP API Scraper (starting at $0.4/1K Req)
- ISP Proxies (starting at $4.5/GB)
- Datacenter Proxies (starting at $0.5/GB)
- Mobile Proxies (starting at $4.5/GB)

Each card has a “Get started” button that takes you directly to the plan selection and purchase screen for that product.
The left sidebar handles all navigation:
- Dashboard: The main product card view
- Proxies: Expandable to show all proxy product types
- Scrapers: Expandable to show scraping solutions
- Datasets: Professional profile and company data
- Integration Examples: Code samples and setup guides
- Help Center: FAQ and Documentation links
- Settings: Account and configuration options
- Contact Us: Expands to show four contact icons (email, Telegram, WhatsApp, and calendar booking)
The Contact Us section at the bottom of the sidebar is a detail worth calling out.
Having four distinct outreach channels accessible directly from the sidebar navigation, without having to leave the dashboard, is a genuinely useful touch for users who need help mid-setup.

After purchase, the dashboard changes significantly. An active account shows an entirely different view, including:
- An Active Plan panel with a usage gauge showing your current consumption as a percentage and the GB allocation remaining
- A Proxy Generator panel where you select proxy type, target location, language, and enter a target URL to generate ready-to-use proxy credentials. This is the tool you will use most as a daily user, and it is surfaced prominently on the main screen where it belongs.
- A System Usage table tracking Total Requests, Successes, Success percentage, Average Response Time, and Total Data used

This two-state dashboard design (product discovery before purchase, operational tools after purchase) is sensible.
The post-purchase view gives you exactly what you need for day-to-day proxy management without clutter.
3. Selecting a Product and Going to Checkout
Clicking through to Rotating Residential Proxies opens the plan page with Standard and Enterprise tabs.
The Standard plans show three tiers with per-GB rate, monthly total, and data allocation displayed clearly side by side.

Clicking Get Started on a plan opens a Package Details modal inside the same page. The modal shows:
- Package name and specs
- Payment type (Subscription)
- Plan period and duration
- Tax status (listed as TBD)
- Total in USD

Below the order summary, a Billing Information section offers a Business or Individual toggle, then asks for billing name, country, and billing email.
The Payment Method section presents two options: Credit Card or Crypto. No PayPal or bank wire appears at this checkout stage, though the FAQ confirms those are available through the sales team.
The modal closes with a Confirm button that locks in the selection.
4. Proxy Management
After working through the dashboard and checkout, I wanted to see what actually using NetNut proxies day to day looks like. This is where the polish starts to crack.
How the connection works:
All proxy types share a single gateway address. You control the product type, location, and session behavior by embedding parameters directly into the username string.
It is clean in theory, but it puts more configuration work on the user than a separate-endpoint approach would.
Finding your settings:
Before connecting to anything, I needed to set up credentials or whitelist my IP. Both are tucked inside the Settings section rather than surfaced anywhere obvious.

The IP whitelisting tab is labeled “Unauthenticated IPs,” which is accurate but not what anyone searches for. It took me longer to find than it should have.
The Proxy Generator widget:
The main setup tool lets you pick a programming language, proxy type, country, and target URL, then generates a code snippet.
The idea is right. The execution has problems I noticed immediately:
- The location dropdown shows more countries than NetNut’s static residential proxies actually support, with no indication of which ones apply to which product
- There is no option to configure sticky sessions or generate a proxy list
- City-level targeting is supported by NetNut but missing from the widget entirely
- The widget cannot pull your credentials automatically. You have to type your password in manually every time
- For some programming languages, the generated code includes an outdated user-agent header referencing Chrome 55 and Windows 8. Other languages do not have this. For scraping work where fingerprinting matters, that is not a minor detail

To fill in what the widget does not cover, I had to go digging through documentation. The setup is fragmented across three separate pages: the generator on one, credential management on another, IP whitelisting on a third.
Usage statistics:
This is where NetNut genuinely stands out compared to most providers. The reporting covers:
- Request count, success rate, average response time, and total data used
- Filtering by country, domain, and connection error type
- Custom date ranges rather than fixed presets

That level of configurability is more than most platforms offer. But I ran into three problems that undercut it:
- There are no charts or graphs anywhere, just tables of numbers
- The date filter did not work correctly during my testing
- The base report showed over 600,000 requests at a 93% success rate. When I switched to the domain-filtered view, the total jumped to nearly a million requests at close to 100% success. Those are not different slices of the same data. I could not find a clean explanation for the discrepancy.
Usage statistics are configurable in scope, but let down by missing visualizations and data I could not reconcile across views.
For an enterprise-positioned platform, the proxy management experience needs the same attention that has clearly gone into the rest of the product.
Overall Ease of Use Verdict
NetNut delivers a polished, well-thought-out user experience from the homepage through to an active account. Registration is fast, the dashboard is clean and logically organized, and the proxy generator gives you everything you need to start working in seconds.
The two-step signup asks for slightly more profile detail than some competitors, but this is a minor point in an otherwise smooth experience.
For anyone who knows what they need, the journey from signup to first proxy request is close to frictionless.
Level of Support
NetNut makes several support channels available across the dashboard and website.
From the Contact Us section in the sidebar, four contact methods are visible directly:
- Telegram
- Calendar booking (to schedule a call)

The website also lists Skype (netnut.sales) and a direct sales email (sales@netnut.io). This is a broader multi-channel presence than most proxy providers offer, and the inclusion of WhatsApp and Telegram reflects the kind of direct-line communication that business buyers in international markets often prefer.
For my test, I used the live chat widget in the bottom-right corner of the dashboard.
The Chat Experience
The widget opened with “Hello! How can I help you?” and a free-text field. I went straight in with the technical question:
“If I make two simultaneous requests using the same sticky session ID, will both requests go through the same IP, or will one of them get assigned a different one?”

The AI responded immediately with a technically accurate and structured answer:
- Both simultaneous requests should go through the same IP, provided the IP is still available, the session has not ended, and the same proxy type and SID format are used
- All proxy types define SID the same way: the session ID keeps the same IP for subsequent queries, otherwise a new IP is assigned
- The documentation also states that SID does not guarantee the same IP will be used across different sessions
- The key distinction: within the same active session, both requests use the same IP. Across different sessions, it is not guaranteed.

It then asked a precise follow-up: “Do you want to test behavior for residential, static, mobile, or datacenter?”
That is a strong AI response. It answered the question accurately, cited the relevant documentation distinction, and asked exactly the right follow-up to narrow things further.
For most technical queries, this level of response would be sufficient on its own.
Escalating to a Human
I asked: “Can I please speak with a human support agent?”
Rather than connecting me to a live agent, the widget presented another qualification form with six fields:
- First name
- Account email
- Company name
- Team size
- Role
- Challenge you are looking to solve
I filled in the form and used the final field to submit my second question: “Are there any websites or use cases that are restricted on your network?”

The response: “Perfect! Our team will reach out within 24-48 hours to assist you. Please note that our support team is available 24/7, just email to: support@netnut.io.”
No human joined. The restricted websites question was not answered.
My Verdict on Support
Key observations:
- The AI gave a technically accurate and well-structured answer to the concurrent sticky session question, including the important caveat about cross-session guarantees
- The follow-up question about proxy type shows the AI is trained on product specifics rather than giving a generic one-size answer
- Escalating to a human required completing a six-field qualification form, after already having gone through the initial chat flow
- The response window quoted after submitting the form was 24 to 48 hours, not the 10 minutes stated elsewhere in NetNut’s materials
- The restricted websites question was redirected to email with no immediate answer
- Email at support@netnut.io is positioned as the 24/7 channel, but that is a different experience from the live chat the widget implies
The support score is 7.0/10. The AI layer is one of the better-trained reviewed, but the human escalation path involves layered friction and ends in an email queue with a 24 to 48-hour window rather than a live conversation.
Conclusion: Do We Recommend NetNut?
Yes, for business users running serious data operations.
NetNut is a well-credentialed, compliance-conscious proxy provider with a genuinely broad product range. The combination of a 85M+ residential pool, B2B-sourced IPs, patented technology, ISO certification, and NASDAQ public accountability puts it in a category that most proxy providers simply cannot match on paper.
Here is where NetNut stands out:
- The B2B sourcing model for residential IPs is a genuine differentiator for compliance-conscious teams
- The pricing at volume is competitive, with a meaningful advantage over unnamed competitors at 72GB and above
- The product range extends into datasets and AI infrastructure, making it a viable single-vendor option for teams with broader data needs
- The proxy generator on an active account is one of the more practical dashboard tools I have seen in this space
Where NetNut falls short for some users:
- The registration process asks for more personal information than most providers, which may feel intrusive for individual users
- The support bot-first experience adds friction for quick technical questions
- No free trial on proxy products means you are committing spend before validating performance for your specific targets
- ISP and mobile pricing starts higher than the residential entry point
For developers, data engineers, and business teams building scraping pipelines, training AI models, or running market intelligence operations at scale, NetNut is a platform that earns serious consideration.

