are residential proxies good for youtube?

Norman_drey

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i want to manage multiple youtube channel and i am thinking of using residential proxies.
should i go with a static residential or a rotating residential.

is it better to buy proxies that sells per GB usage or the monthly payment kind.
 
Skip resi for YouTube, go ISP. Static, clean, way less flagged.
 
Static residential each channel with static dedicated proxy will be better. Also you may consider mobile proxy if you can it work good both options depending on the price
 
Why use a proxy at all? With YouTube, you can work with a large number of accounts without a proxy without any problems.
 
@chloegriffin depends what he’s doing - just uploading + basic management from one machine is fine raw IP, but once you start logging 10+ channels, switching brands, maybe commenting + light engagement, Google starts linking sessions fast

For YouTube I’d avoid rotating resi - session changes mid login is messy. Static ISP or static resi per channel is cleaner, 1 channel = 1 IP + stable fingerprint.

Per GB resi is pain unless you’re scraping, for account management monthly static is way more predictable on cost + less janky

Mobile works too but only if you can lock session - constant rotation while inside Studio is asking for re-verifications
 
Yes residential proxies are actually one of the best options for youtube, they use real IP addresses from internet service providers so your traffic looks like it comes from a normal home user, this makes it much harder for YouTube to detect and block your activity compared to data center proxies.

The key advantage is avoiding restrictions and captchas that often appear when youtube suspects automated traffic, residential proxies allow you to access content from different regions and manage multiple accounts more safely. Just make sure you use a reliable paid provider because free ones are often slow or compromised, keep in mind that proxies are just one piece of the puzzle, for serious multi account management you also need to pair them with anti detect browsers and clean cookies. This combination creates a much more convincing profile that mimics real human behavior.
 
Static ISP proxies are best for managing accounts because the proxy doesn't rotate so you can build a good reputation on it
 
Idk why people bother buying views when they can get them from push notification
 
for managing multiple channels go static. 1 ip per channel, keep it consistent... rotating mid session on youtube causes re-verification headaches. mobile works too but only if you can lock the session, don't let it auto rotate while you're inside studio
 
Yes, static residential proxies are a commonly used choice for managing multiple YouTube channels, while some users who need the highest trust level tend to prefer mobile IP setups.
 
For managing multiple YouTube channels, static residential is usually better than rotating. YouTube prefers consistency — keeping one stable IP per channel reduces session issues and extra verification.

Rotating residential is more suitable for scraping, not long-term logged-in management.

As for pricing:
  • Monthly plans make more sense if you have consistent usage.
  • Per GB is better only if usage is low or unpredictable.
For ongoing channel management, most people go with static + monthly for stability and predictable cost.
 
As usually it depends. Stability is usually more important than anonymity to me for YT channels, so honestly I used to use static residential for it. Consistent IP behaviour for the accounts and all that. Rotating residential IPs also work for when I have to manage multiple smaller accounts or have them on some automation tools but that's usually for other platforms. They can get frequent verification prompts when regularly changing IPs in Youtube so there's that.
I just go for monthly fixed pricing, not too keen on the per-GB ones but I'm sure others might have opinions on that.
 
residential proxies are excellent for YouTube offering high anonymity to bypass
geo-restrictions and avoid IP bans, as they appear as legitimate, user-assigned IPs.
 
The best option would be a static residential connection, it's more secure and you need a huge bandwidth for that.
 
I dont think you need to use proxies to manage multipe youtube channels.
 
Residential, isp, mobile proxies are good to go.

Just make sure they don't leak anything from your side
 
For YouTube, static or sticky residential works better - a stable IP is more natural and keeps sessions stable. Rotation often causes issues.
For pricing, monthly plans are better for regular use. Pay-per-GB only makes sense for low or occasional traffic.
 
Building on the idea of static residential connections, I've found that using a provider with a large pool of IPs from major ISPs like Comcast or AT&T can significantly reduce the risk of IP bans on YouTube. In my tests, static residential proxies from these providers resulted in a 95% success rate for uploading videos without triggering any geo-restrictions or IP blocks. Additionally, making sure to rotate user agents and browser fingerprints for each channel also helps to maintain a natural traffic pattern and avoid raising any red flags. One provider that stands out is ProxySpace, offering static residential proxies with a 30-day money-back guarantee and excellent customer support.
 
agree with Mango Proxy on sticky/static being more natural. one thing worth adding: YouTube's trust signals are session-based more than IP-based at this point. so a rotating proxy mid-session is actually worse than using a slightly known static IP consistently.

i've seen accounts on the same static ISP IP for months with zero issues because the behavior was clean. the IP type matters but session consistency and account age are what YouTube actually weights. if you're starting fresh channels, static resi or ISP proxy per channel plus clean cookies and separate browser profiles is the minimum viable setup.
 
Yes, you can use residential proxies. Just buy them from reliable and trusted provider, don't fall fpr cheap proxies
 
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