telegram proxy for account management, real mobile IPs that don't get flagged
dedicated mobile proxies for Telegram account management. real carrier IPs on physical SIMs, SOCKS5 support, rotation on demand, 1 SIM per port. from $40/mo.
if you run Telegram accounts for marketing, communities, OTC deals or client work, the network you connect from decides how far you get. dedicated mobile ports give each account a real SingTel, StarHub or M1 carrier IP on a physical SIM, the same kind of IP every normal Telegram user is on.
the difference between unblocking and operating
most “telegram proxy” pages on the internet are free MTProto lists. they exist so people in censored countries can open the app at all, and they’re good at that. they are the wrong tool for running accounts: thousands of strangers share each exit, servers die within days, and the operator is anonymous. whatever the worst user on that exit did last week, Telegram now associates with your account too.
operating accounts is a different problem. you want an IP that is yours alone, has a clean history, belongs to a real mobile carrier, and stays stable for as long as the session needs it. that’s what 1 SIM = 1 port = 1 customer means in practice.
why mobile IPs hold up on telegram
Telegram scores the network an account lives on. datacenter ASNs are an instant tell. shared residential pools recycle exits through thousands of users. carrier mobile IPs sit behind CGNAT shared with real phone users, so per-IP punishment is expensive and trust starts high. that’s why account limits, login challenges and “too many attempts” walls show up far less on mobile IPs.
SOCKS5, the protocol you actually want
Telegram supports SOCKS5 on iOS, Android and Desktop, and every serious automation library speaks it. each of our ports ships SOCKS5 (and HTTP) credentials that drop straight into Telegram’s proxy settings or into Telethon and Pyrogram session configs. if you’re unsure how the two Telegram proxy protocols differ, we wrote up MTProto vs SOCKS5 for Telegram, and the step-by-step is in how to set up a proxy in Telegram.
a setup that survives
- one dedicated port per account, or a small fixed group per port
- pin each account to its port, in the app or in your automation session, and never hop accounts between IPs casually
- sticky sessions by default, rotate via the rotation link only when you have a reason
- warm new accounts slowly on the same port they will live on
- keep the device or browser profile as consistent as the IP
running Singapore-audience accounts or SG bot infrastructure specifically? the Singapore proxy for Telegram page covers the local angle.
pricing
single port $40/mo, three ports $99/mo, ten ports $299/mo on the plans page. test the network first with the 24-hour free trial, log a session in through the proxy and watch it behave before you commit.
frequently asked questions
what is the best proxy type for telegram?
SOCKS5 on a dedicated mobile IP, if you manage accounts. Telegram supports SOCKS5 natively on every platform and in every automation library (Telethon, Pyrogram, GramJS), and a carrier mobile IP carries the highest network trust Telegram sees. MTProto proxies are fine for unblocking the app in censored countries, but they only carry Telegram traffic and free ones are run by strangers.
why not just use a free telegram proxy from a list?
free MTProto lists are built for one job, getting the app to connect where it's blocked. they're shared by thousands of users, die within days, often attach a sponsored channel to your client, and you have no idea who operates the server. for casual unblocking that trade-off is fine. for accounts you make money with, it's how you inherit another user's ban history.
does telegram ban accounts for using a proxy?
not for the proxy itself. Telegram limits and bans accounts based on behaviour and on the reputation of the network they operate from. datacenter ranges and abused public proxies are exactly where bans cluster. a dedicated carrier IP behind CGNAT looks like a normal phone user, because at the network level it is one.
how many telegram accounts per proxy?
keep it boring, a small fixed set of accounts per dedicated port, ideally one port per important account. what kills accounts is hopping many accounts across shared IPs. dedicated ports exist so each account's network history stays its own.
do you support rotating proxies for telegram?
yes, every port has a permanent rotation link and API, so you rotate to a fresh carrier IP exactly when you want. for telegram account work we recommend sticky sessions and rotating only with a reason, not on a timer.