Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Miru is a global network relay service aimed at individual users who need overseas internet access. Its website highlights an “intelligent routing system”: domestic Chinese websites connect directly, while commonly used overseas websites are accelerated. It also supports access scenarios such as Apple service acceleration, Google, YouTube, Twitter, Instagram, and GitHub. Overall, it is closer to an end-user VPN/relay acceleration service than a proxy pool product publicly described as residential proxies, datacenter proxies, or mobile proxies.
Based on the disclosed information, Miru focuses on cross-platform use and streaming unblocking. The service supports macOS, iOS, Android, and Windows, and notes that third-party clients can extend support to Linux, routers, game consoles, TV boxes, and other devices. For streaming, the page lists Netflix, Hulu, HBO, TVB, Happyon, AbemaTV, as well as Spotify and Pandora. On the network side, it mentions IEPL relay nodes and connections to global content providers via IXP, but it does not disclose node countries, node count, IP pool size, specific route coverage, or bandwidth limits. It also does not clearly state whether it supports HTTP, SOCKS5, or any particular VPN protocol.
Miru uses monthly plans. The Lite plan is ¥10/month and includes 50GB of traffic and 2 online clients; the Standard plan is ¥20/month and includes 200GB of traffic and 3 online clients; the Flagship plan is ¥30/month and includes 500GB of traffic and 5 online clients. The pricing is friendly for light individual users, and the plan structure is straightforward. However, the page does not disclose its refund policy, how overage traffic is handled, or available payment methods.
The advantages are its low price and low barrier to entry, with clearly stated traffic quotas and numbers of simultaneous online clients. It also supports multiple platforms, intelligent routing, and streaming unblocking, making it suitable for everyday overseas website access and entertainment. The downsides are also clear: it does not disclose proxy type, protocols, IP pool size, covered countries, logging policy, or privacy audits, and only broadly mentions encrypted transmission for privacy protection. Customer support is also described only as providing a “certain degree” of technical support during the subscription period, with no SLA or response-time commitment.
Miru is suitable for individual users who need overseas streaming, cross-border e-commerce access, Apple service acceleration, social media, and developer website access, especially those who are budget-conscious and have manageable traffic needs. It is not suitable for users who require clearly defined residential IPs, SOCKS5/HTTP proxies, enterprise-grade concurrency, an auditable no-logs policy, or large-scale automated scraping. Its accessibility from China is not clearly stated on the page, and no verifiable connectivity information is provided, so it should be considered unknown. If access is restricted, users may need a backup network or another similar relay/VPN service as an alternative.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on miru.cloud official site.
miru.cloud is an Unknown Proxies provider. TG4G tracks its product information, with monthly pricing from $1.40, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach miru.cloud directly.