Kameleo is one of the strongest antidetect browsers for managing many identities. To make each identity convincing, it needs a residential proxy whose location matches the profile's persona. This guide walks through connecting Roam residential proxies to a Kameleo profile in a few minutes — no client software, just a standard HTTP proxy.
One clean residential IP per Kameleo profile so your fingerprint work isn't undone by a shared datacenter exit.
Rotating residential at $2/GB for bulk profiles, or a fixed $4/IP/month residential IP for accounts you keep.
Set the exit country per profile so IP geo matches the identity Kameleo presents.
Validate the whole setup on a free trial before spending anything.
# Kameleo → New profile → Proxy → HTTP Proxy type : HTTP Server : gw.roamproxy.com Port : 41080 Username : USER-session-kameleo01-country-us Password : PASS
Sign up at roamproxy.com (300MB free trial), then copy your username:password and the gw.roamproxy.com:41080 endpoint from the dashboard.
In Kameleo, create a new browser profile. Under the Proxy section, choose proxy type HTTP.
Server: gw.roamproxy.com, Port: 41080. Username: your Roam username plus -session-
Launch the profile and visit ipinfo.io. You should see a residential ISP in your chosen country — the profile is now browsing through a real residential IP.
Keep the same -session id to reuse the exact IP next time, or change it for a fresh one. For long-term accounts, use a dedicated static residential IP instead.
Use HTTP. Enter server gw.roamproxy.com, port 41080, and your Roam username:password. Add -session-
Keep the -session-
Yes. Roam gives a 300MB residential free trial with no card required — enough to create a Kameleo profile, connect the proxy, and confirm your residential exit IP before paying.
Roam works with Kameleo as a standard HTTP proxy — no plugin needed. Paste the credentials into Kameleo's proxy settings and it works. We're happy to help partners and power users; reach support@roamproxy.com.
No card required. Test your setup on real residential IPs, then pay only for what you use at $2/GB.