KnoxProxy sells two dedicated proxy flavors on two of its four networks -- a dedicated datacenter IP from $0.02/IP and a dedicated ISP (static residential) IP from $2.90/IP, both reserved for your account alone with no other customer sharing the connection.
A dedicated proxy is an IP address reserved for one account only, so its reputation depends solely on that account’s own traffic and never degrades because of another customer’s abuse. KnoxProxy offers two dedicated options: a datacenter IP for speed and price, or an ISP (static residential) IP for higher trust on protected targets.
Both flavors are a dedicated proxy server in the strict sense -- an IP no other customer touches -- but they sit at opposite ends of the price-and-trust spectrum. Pick datacenter when the target does not look closely at where the IP lives; pick ISP when it does.
Neither flavor is objectively better -- the deciding question is whether the target inspects where an IP lives. Permissive APIs, internal QA, and infrastructure checks rarely care, so datacenter dedicated wins on price. Login walls, checkout flows, and anything reputation-sensitive check closely, and that is where the ISP flavor earns its premium.
Every dedicated proxy is dedicated instead of shared for one reason: IP reputation. A shared proxy pools many customers onto the same address, so a target site’s block list responds to everyone’s combined behavior, not just yours. Send clean, well-paced requests through a shared IP and you can still get flagged, because the last customer on that address triggered a CAPTCHA an hour earlier. A dedicated IP removes that risk entirely -- the only traffic history the target ever sees is your own.
This is exactly why teams tempted to buy shared proxy capacity for an account-management workflow usually regret it. A shared proxy buy makes sense when a single blocked request costs nothing to retry -- price checks, SERP snapshots, anything you can simply re-run on a different IP. It is a poor fit for a login you cannot afford to lose.
Whether you buy dedicated proxy access on the datacenter network or the ISP network, the purchase flow is the same three steps.
Datacenter for speed and price, ISP for residential-level trust. Section II above has the full trade-off.
Every dedicated IP is assigned from a specific country’s inventory -- match it to where your target expects traffic to come from.
Start with one IP to test, then scale -- both rate cards below apply volume pricing automatically, no sales call required.
| IPs held | Rate /IP | Saving |
|---|---|---|
| 1+ IPs | $0.02 | -- |
| IPs held | Rate /IP | Saving |
|---|---|---|
| 1-10 IPs | $2.90 | -- |
| 11-50 IPs | $2.50 | -14% |
A dedicated proxy earns its premium wherever a blocked or flagged IP costs more than the extra cents per IP -- mainly workflows built around identity, not volume. Logging into the same account every day, watching a competitor’s ad campaign from a fixed location, or racing a limited release all depend on one IP behaving the same way every time. Rotating pools solve a different problem: breadth. If a job needs hundreds of vantage points for a single sweep, a rotating residential or datacenter pool is the cheaper, better-fitting tool.
Not exactly -- though the three terms overlap so often that people use them interchangeably. “Dedicated” describes who uses the IP: one customer, no sharing. “Static” describes whether the IP changes: it does not, request after request. “Private proxy” is simply the older marketing term for the same dedicated concept. Most dedicated proxies -- including both of KnoxProxy’s flavors -- happen to be static and would traditionally be called private proxies too, but a provider could theoretically offer a dedicated pool that still rotates among a handful of exclusive IPs. The terms describe different properties of a proxy; they usually point at the same product.
Need the fixed-IP, residential-trust angle explained on its own? See ISP (static residential) proxies.
A dedicated proxy is a single IP address reserved for one KnoxProxy account, with no other customer ever sending traffic through it. You can order one on either the datacenter network, from $0.02/IP, or the ISP network, from $2.90/IP, depending on how much trust the target site requires.
Dedicated datacenter IPs start at $0.02/IP. Dedicated ISP (static residential) IPs start at $2.90/IP and slide down to $1.70/IP at 200+ IPs. Both bill flat per IP with unlimited bandwidth included -- neither is metered per GB.
Yes. "Private proxy" is the older, informal name for the same product: an IP no other customer can use. KnoxProxy calls it a dedicated proxy, but you will see both terms used interchangeably across the market.
There is no minimum. The rate card starts at a single IP, so you can reserve one to test before committing to a larger block. Most accounts start small and add IPs as new targets need their own identity.
Request a replacement from your dashboard and KnoxProxy assigns a fresh IP -- from the same subnet or a different one, your choice -- typically within 24 hours. A block does not mean losing what you already paid for the IP.
Dedicated exists to remove sharing from the equation -- but if your workload actually needs breadth (many IPs, many geos, high volume) rather than a single fixed identity, a rotating pool is the better and cheaper fit.
Real ISP-assigned IPs from consenting consumer devices across 195 countries. Buy rotating residential proxies with city- and ASN-level targeting, 2xx-only billing.
$2.10/GBDatacenter speed with residential trust -- the same static IP held for the full billing period with unlimited bandwidth. Ideal for long-lived logged-in identities and sessions that need stability.
$2.90/IPMobile proxies route through real 4G/5G carrier IPs behind CGNAT that rotate naturally -- the highest trust of any proxy type, hardest to block, from 195+ countries.
$4.50/GBFree trial, no credit card. Provision a dedicated IP in minutes and keep the same clean identity for as long as you need it.
Residential-level trust on a fixed IP you hold indefinitely.
| 51-200 IPs |
| $2.10 |
| -28% |
| 200+ IPs | $1.70 | -41% |
Both flavors bill flat per IP with unlimited bandwidth included -- you pay for identities held, not bytes moved. There is no separate subscription: dedicated IPs draw from the same pay-as-you-go balance as every other KnoxProxy product, and releasing an IP stops the charge for it.
Dedicated IPs draw from the same pay-as-you-go balance as every other KnoxProxy product. There is no separate contract: you pay a flat rate per IP for as long as you hold it, bandwidth on that IP is unlimited, and releasing an IP stops the charge for it.
Pick datacenter when the target is permissive and price decides the question -- it is roughly 145x cheaper per IP. Pick ISP when the target checks IP reputation closely, like a login-gated account or a checkout flow, where the extra cost buys real residential-level trust.
Yes. Exclusivity controls reputation, not detection. A dedicated IP cannot inherit another customer's bans, but the target site can still flag it based on your own request patterns, headers, or behavior. Dedicated buys a clean starting reputation, not immunity.
Datacenter proxies from $0.60/GB across 50+ countries. Fast, cheap IPs for QA, scraping, and high-throughput jobs -- rotating per request or static dedicated.