How it works
GetProxy4G runs a farm of physical 4G and 5G devices — real SIM cards on real carriers — and rents out either a dedicated port, exclusive to one buyer, or a shared port that round-robins with other users. The dashboard exposes HTTP/S and SOCKS5 endpoints and the control a buyer is paying for: on-click IP rotation on dedicated ports, or scheduled rotation from 1 to 60 minutes. Shared ports cycle IPs automatically every five minutes.
The homepage advertises 18 countries and 43 carriers, naming majors like AT&T, Vodafone, Orange and T-Mobile USA. The United Kingdom starts at $15 per month, Germany at $16, France at $17, the United States at $24. There is no free trial and no refund language on the front page — the billing model is month-to-month prepaid, provisioned on payment confirmation.
KYC & privacy
Signup is collapsed into the first checkout. The homepage puts it plainly: an account is created automatically when a buyer places the first order. The only identifier requested is an email address, which receives the proxy credentials. Payments are crypto only — BTC, ETH, SOL and USDT on ERC-20 — no fiat rail, no card, no bank transfer. Monero is not accepted; Lightning is not accepted.
Operator transparency is thin. The homepage does not publish a jurisdiction, a founding year, a team page, or a no-logs audit. A Terms of Service and a contact page are linked, but no independent security review has been surfaced in public search. What a buyer can verify from outside is limited to the delivery mechanism: credentials by email, dashboard access over plain web, and no onion mirror.
Strengths and limits
The product pitch holds up on the surface. Real carrier IPs on dedicated hardware are the hardest kind to fingerprint, and CGNAT sharing is the reason mobile IPs carry the trust reputation they do. The crypto-only, email-only signup removes the billing paper trail that most proxy shops still require, and instant delivery is the operator's strongest claim for a buyer who would rather not wait for a provisioning ticket.
The limits are where the record thins. There is no public review history, no community thread surfaced in search, no GitHub presence, no published audit, no transparency report, no stated jurisdiction, no onion mirror. Monero and Lightning — the two rails most privacy-minded buyers default to — are absent. A commitment to no logs is not written on the homepage in any form strong enough to cite. The service may well operate cleanly; a reader has no way to confirm it from outside the checkout flow.
Verdict
GetProxy4G's checkout is unusually privacy-respecting for the proxy market: crypto, an email address, a SOCKS5 string by return message. The operator side is what a buyer has to take on faith — jurisdiction, logging, age of the business are all undocumented. Treat it as a useful tool for a reader who can tolerate that gap, not as a battle-tested default. Grade: C (6.5/10). Trust: TRUSTED.
GetProxy4G's checkout flow is unusually privacy-respecting for the proxy market: crypto, an email address, and a SOCKS5 string by return message. The operator side is what a buyer has to take on faith — the jurisdiction, the logging posture, and the age of the business are all undocumented. Useful tool for a reader who can tolerate that gap, not a battle-tested default. Grade: C (6.5/10). Trust: TRUSTED.

