ProxyTool is a “proxy management client.” Its core value is not building its own proxy pool, but connecting proxies you already have—or proxies purchased from a marketplace—into system-level traffic routing. Using system-level capabilities such as the Windows WFP driver, it intercepts connections so that browsers, email clients, databases, games, and apps without native proxy settings can also route traffic through SOCKS or HTTPS/HTTP proxies.
In terms of protocols, the product page explicitly supports SOCKS4, SOCKS5, SOCKS5 + Auth, HTTP, and HTTPS. Routing is its main focus: it supports Universal Proxy Routing, per-application Split Tunneling, rule priorities, direct/proxy/block actions, and proxy chains. Proxy chains can be used for sequential multi-hop routing, redundant failover, or load-balanced rotation. On the monitoring side, it provides a real-time connection table, bandwidth analytics, TLS fingerprint detection, cost tracking, and security events. Privacy features include DNS leak protection, remote resolution, UDP/IPv6 Kill Switch, SMHNR blocking, and 256-bit AES. Performance claims include unlimited connections, no limit bandwidth, and <2ms overhead.
The page mentions a 7-day free trial, a refund guarantee, Start Free, Buy Proxies, and an integrated marketplace, but it does not disclose specific pricing, a list of proxy providers, IP pool size, country coverage, or whether the proxies are residential, datacenter, or mobile. It should therefore be understood as a proxy client with a purchasing entry point, rather than a proxy provider whose IP resource quality can be directly evaluated.
Its strengths are strong system-level control, making it suitable for fine-grained traffic routing, proxy chain testing, and unified management across applications. It also supports Proxifier migration, profiles, remote auto-updates, and Fleet Management. The drawbacks are also clear: it is currently in Public Beta, the Windows driver is not yet fully WHQL-certified, Test Mode must be enabled, and a desktop watermark will appear. In addition, there is limited information about payment methods, logging policy, customer support, and specific plans.
It is suitable for developers, scraping/automation users, network testers, and advanced users looking for an alternative to Proxifier. Access from mainland China is not discussed in the main text, and payment methods are also unknown. If the official website or downloads are restricted, alternatives such as Proxifier, Clash Verge, v2rayN, Surge, and Shadowrocket may be worth considering.
⚠ 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 proxytool.app official site.
proxytool.app is an Unknown Proxies provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach proxytool.app directly.