AdsPower for airdrop farming: 2026 review and verdict
AdsPower for airdrop farming: 2026 review and verdict
AdsPower is a Guangzhou-based anti-detect browser that launched around 2019 and has since picked up a sizeable following among e-commerce sellers, social media managers, and, increasingly, airdrop farmers who need to run many separate wallet identities in parallel. The core product is a Chromium-based browser where every profile gets its own spoofed hardware fingerprint, so from the outside each tab looks like a completely different device sitting in a different part of the world. It competes directly with Multilogin, GoLogin, and Dolphin Anty, and it positions itself as the more affordable option for operators who are not yet running industrial-scale infrastructure.
My verdict upfront: AdsPower does what it promises at the fingerprint level. The coverage is solid, the interface is accessible without being dumbed-down, and the pricing floor is low enough that you can validate an airdrop strategy before committing real money. That said, there are friction points around profile limits, support latency, and Linux compatibility that matter depending on how you run your stack. I’ll cover each of those in detail below.
For a broader comparison of the anti-detect browser market before reading this review, the team at antidetectreview.org maintains a running comparison table that’s worth bookmarking alongside this piece. And if you want context on how I structure my airdrop tooling, the airdropfarming.org blog index has my earlier writeups on wallet hygiene and proxy routing.
what AdsPower actually does
AdsPower creates isolated browser profiles, each with its own local storage, cookies, cache, and, most importantly, hardware fingerprint. The fingerprint vectors it covers are the ones that actually matter: Canvas API output, WebGL renderer strings and vendor data, WebRTC IP leak suppression, AudioContext fingerprint, system font enumeration, screen resolution, timezone, language headers, and user agent string. It also handles navigator properties like hardwareConcurrency, deviceMemory, and platform strings, which are increasingly probed by on-chain dApp front-ends to correlate sessions.
Each profile can be assigned its own proxy, either via a built-in proxy manager or by dropping in credentials from an external provider. https://singaporemobileproxy.com is one provider I have used with AdsPower for Southeast Asian geo-targeting, and the integration is straightforward: you paste the proxy string into the profile settings and AdsPower routes all traffic from that profile through it. There is no cross-profile proxy leakage in my testing.
AdsPower ships two browser cores: SunBrowser (Chromium-based) and FlowerBrowser (Firefox-based). For airdrop farming, SunBrowser is the one you want. Most dApp front-ends and wallet extensions are tested against Chromium, and extension compatibility is almost universally better there. The Firefox core exists mostly for operators who have specific detection-evasion needs that favour Gecko’s fingerprint profile.
The product also includes a built-in RPA (robotic process automation) tool called “RPA Robot” that lets you record click-and-fill sequences and replay them across profiles. It is not as programmable as Playwright or Puppeteer, but for simple flows like connecting a wallet, signing a transaction, or filling a referral form, it gets the job done without writing a line of code. For more complex automation, AdsPower exposes a local API on port 50325 that you can call from Python or Node to open profiles, close them, and retrieve the remote debugging URL for Playwright/Puppeteer attachment. This is the approach I prefer for serious multi-wallet campaigns.
For team use, paid plans support sub-accounts and profile sharing with permission controls. You can assign profiles to team members without exposing proxy credentials. It is a genuine feature, not a checkbox, though the permissions model is not as granular as Multilogin’s.
pricing
Pricing as of May 2026, verified against the AdsPower website:
- Free: 2 profiles, no expiry. Core fingerprint spoofing included. No RPA, no API access.
- Base: $9/month (monthly) or roughly $5.40/month billed annually, for 10 profiles. RPA and API included.
- Pro: $30/month monthly, for 100 profiles. Team sub-accounts included.
- Custom: negotiated, for 1,000+ profiles.
Pricing is per-seat if you want team members on sub-accounts, which adds up. A two-person operation on Pro with one extra seat is around $50-60/month depending on billing cycle. That is materially cheaper than Multilogin’s entry-level plan at the same profile count, which is the main commercial argument AdsPower makes.
One thing to watch: profile count is a hard ceiling, not a soft warning. If you hit the limit on the Base plan, you cannot open new profiles without upgrading or deleting old ones. For airdrop farmers rotating through campaign windows, this can be annoying.
what works
Fingerprint coverage is genuinely comprehensive. The EFF’s Cover Your Tracks tool and BrowserLeaks both show clean, differentiated fingerprints across profiles in my tests. Canvas hash, WebGL vendor/renderer, and AudioContext all vary per profile. WebRTC handling specifically deserves credit: AdsPower sets the WebRTC IP policy to “disable non-proxied UDP” by default, which closes the most common IP leak vector. This matters because WebRTC’s STUN-based IP discovery can reveal your real IP even when all other traffic goes through a proxy.
The free tier is a genuine on-ramp. Two profiles with full fingerprint spoofing is enough to test a new airdrop strategy before deciding whether the project merits a larger operation. I have used the free tier specifically to smoke-test proxy setups and wallet extension compatibility before scaling. Most competitors either time-limit their trials or disable meaningful features on free plans.
RPA Robot is useful for simple flows. Recording a wallet connection and transaction signing sequence takes about five minutes per profile template. For testnet faucet claims or simple snapshot interactions, the RPA approach saves a lot of manual time. The recorder is stable, it does not break on page refreshes as often as some competitors’ tools, and sequences are portable between profiles of the same fingerprint template.
Profile import and export works reliably. You can export a profile’s full environment (cookies, local storage, fingerprint config) and reimport it. For airdrop farming this is useful when you want to clone a profile setup across machines or hand off a profile state to a team member without starting cold.
The local API is well-documented and actively maintained. The AdsPower API documentation covers profile creation, proxy assignment, browser launch, and status checks. I have run it alongside Playwright without instability on Windows. The API approach is how I recommend running anything more complex than 10 wallets.
what doesn’t
Profile limits are aggressive on mid-tier plans. At 10 profiles on the Base plan and 100 on Pro, operators running 200-500 wallets need the Custom tier, which requires a sales conversation. GoLogin and Dolphin Anty both offer more profiles at comparable price points on their mid-tier plans. If your operation is growing fast, you may find yourself in upgrade conversations more often than you want.
Linux support is incomplete. AdsPower runs on Windows and macOS. There is no native Linux client. For operators running unattended automation on a Linux VPS, this forces either a Windows VPS (more expensive) or a workaround like running AdsPower inside a Windows VM. Competitors like GoLogin have had Linux support for some time. This is a meaningful gap if your infrastructure is Linux-first.
Support response times lag for lower-tier accounts. Outside APAC business hours, email support responses have taken 24-48 hours in my experience. The live chat widget is staffed inconsistently. For a free or Base plan account dealing with a fingerprint issue mid-campaign, this is a real problem. Enterprise accounts reportedly get faster handling, but that is of limited comfort at the $9/month level.
The Firefox core (FlowerBrowser) lags on extension compatibility. MetaMask, Phantom, and most other wallet extensions install and run fine on SunBrowser. On FlowerBrowser, extension compatibility is hit-or-miss, and some extensions that use Manifest V3 APIs behave unexpectedly. For airdrop farming specifically, stick to SunBrowser.
Profile count and team seats are billed separately. If you need 100 profiles and 3 team members, the cost is higher than the base Pro plan suggests. Read the pricing page carefully before committing, because the headline number assumes solo use.
who should buy
Buy AdsPower if you are running 5-100 wallet profiles, you are on Windows or macOS, you want built-in RPA without committing to a coding-heavy automation setup, and you want the lowest entry price in the serious anti-detect browser category. It is also a good fit if you are new to anti-detect tooling and want to test the approach on a free tier before deciding your stack. Operators who have used multiaccountops.com/blog/ for workflow ideas will find AdsPower maps well to the profile isolation patterns described there.
Skip AdsPower if your infrastructure is Linux-based, you are managing 500+ profiles on a fixed monthly budget without a custom contract, you need granular team permission controls, or you need responsive support during off-hours campaigns. At that scale and complexity, Multilogin’s higher price is offset by better team tooling and support SLAs.
alternatives to consider
Multilogin is the category leader for team-based operations and has the most granular permission model. It costs more, typically starting around $29/month for the Starter plan, but the stability and support are better for high-stakes campaigns.
GoLogin offers Linux support and slightly more generous profile counts on its mid-tier plans, making it a better fit for operators running unattended VPS-based automation.
Dolphin Anty has become popular in the CIS airdrop farming community partly for its Telegram community support and partly because its free tier includes 10 profiles, not 2. If community-sourced workflow help matters to you, Dolphin Anty’s ecosystem is active.
For proxy sourcing that pairs with any of the above, cloudf.one is worth checking alongside singaporemobileproxy.com depending on the geo coverage you need for your target dApps.
verdict
AdsPower hits the fingerprint vectors that matter, runs reliably on Windows and macOS, and prices accessibly enough that it is a defensible first anti-detect browser for operators building out a multi-wallet airdrop stack. The profile limits and lack of Linux support are real friction points that will push higher-volume operators toward competitors, but for the 5-100 profile range on a budget, it remains one of the better-value options in the category.
Written by Xavier Fok
disclosure: this article may contain affiliate links. if you buy through them we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. verdicts are independent of payouts. last reviewed by Xavier Fok on 2026-05-19.