GeoIP Residential Proxy Databases
MaxMind’s GeoIP Residential Proxy database helps protect your business by identifying IP addresses sighted in a residential proxy network. Residential proxy networks use IP addresses commonly assigned to homes, small businesses, and other end users of the internet to provide proxy access via compromised devices. This feed includes confidence scores, timestamps, and residential proxy provider names.
The GeoIP Residential Proxy database is included with a license for the GeoIP Anonymous Plus database. If you are interested in purchasing the database, please contact our Enterprise Business team for assistance.
Binary Database
Binary databases make use of the MaxMind DB file format. MaxMind provides official client APIs that are open source. We also provide a list of unsupported and unofficial client APIs and unsupported and unofficial integrations with various applications.
You can also use the mmdbinspect tool (in beta), a command line interface built with Go, to look up one or more IPs from one or more MMDB databases and receive output in a parsable JSON format.
Looking up an IP
The geoip2 Python client library does not yet ship model classes for this
database. Use the lower-level
maxminddb reader to
read records directly:
import maxminddb
with maxminddb.open_database("GeoIP-Residential-Proxy.mmdb") as reader:
record = reader.get("1.2.3.4")
if record is not None:
print(record["provider_name"])
print(record["anonymizer_confidence"])
print(record["network_last_seen"])
CSV Database
In addition to our MaxMind DB binary format, we also offer GeoIP and GeoLite databases in a CSV format suitable for importing into a SQL database. The CSV files are shipped as a single zip file.The zip file itself is named GeoIP-Residential-Proxy-CSV_{YYYYMMDD}.zip.
The downloaded zip file contains a single directory which in turn
contains several files. That directory is named
GeoIP-Residential-Proxy-CSV_{YYYYMMDD}.
The files in this zip archive are:
| Filename | Description |
|---|---|
LICENSE.txt | End user license |
COPYRIGHT.txt | Copyright statement |
GeoIP-Residential-Proxy-Blocks-IPv4.csv | CSV file containing data on IPv4 addresses |
GeoIP-Residential-Proxy-Blocks-IPv6.csv | CSV file containing data on IPv6 addresses |
Blocks Files
There are two CSV files for network blocks, one each for IPv4 and IPv6 blocks.
These are named GeoIP-Residential-Proxy-Blocks-IPv4.csv and
GeoIP-Residential-Proxy-Blocks-IPv6.csv respectively.
| Data field name | Type | Data field description |
|---|---|---|
| network | IP network as a string | This is the IPv4 or IPv6 network in CIDR format such as "2.21.92.0/32" or "2001:4b0::/64". Due to the nature of residential proxies, this database contains mostly IPv4 /32s and IPv6 /64s. We offer a utility to convert this column to start/end IPs or start/end integers. See the conversion utility section for details. |
| provider_name | string | The name of the residential proxy provider associated with the network. Please note that MaxMind identifies a subset of residential proxy providers. A current list of providers identified in the Residential Proxy database is available on request. |
| anonymizer_confidence | integer | A score ranging from 1 to 99 that is our percent confidence that the network is currently part of an actively used residential proxy service. These scores are bucketed in 5% buckets, but 1 and 99 are also possible (1, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, ... 99). Learn more about anonymizer confidence on our Knowledge Base. |
| network_last_seen | string | The last day that the network was sighted in our analysis of anonymized networks. This is in the ISO 8601 date format (YYYY-MM-DD). Learn more about anonymizer and proxy detection on our Knowledge Base. |
Conversion Utility
We’ve created a small utility program to allow you to convert a GeoIP CSV file’s representation of IP addresses to another format. You can choose between start/end IP addresses, with the addresses represented as strings or integers.
The program is available from our geoip2-csv-converter GitHub project releases tab.
Example Files
We maintain example files in CSV and MMDB format. The files contain dummy data rather than real GeoIP data.CSV Example Files
We maintain examples of the CSV files as they would be downloaded from the account portal:
MMDB Example Files
We maintain test MMDB files on GitHub:
Alternatively, you can view all of our MMDB test data on GitHub.
Database Changes
We may add new data fields to the Residential Proxy database at any time.
New database fields are added as new columns to the right of existing columns in our CSV files, and as additional data in our MMDB files.
Subscribe to our GeoIP release notes to be notified when new data is added to our databases.