Understanding ASN (Autonomous System Number) in Proxy Selection
An ASN (Autonomous System Number) is a unique identifier assigned to a network that operates its own routing policy on the internet. For proxy users, the ASN behind a proxy IP is one of the most important factors in determining whether that proxy will work for a given task. Websites use ASN data to classify traffic as residential, datacenter, or mobile — and they apply different trust levels and blocking rules accordingly.
Choosing proxies with the right ASN is the difference between requests that sail through anti-bot defenses and requests that get blocked before they even reach the target server.
Quick ASN Refresher
Every network on the internet that manages its own IP addresses and routing receives an ASN from a Regional Internet Registry (RIR). Large organizations may have multiple ASNs, while smaller networks share infrastructure under a parent ASN.
ASN Categories
| Category | Description | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Residential ISP | Home internet providers | Comcast (AS7922), AT&T (AS7018), BT (AS2856) |
| Mobile Carrier | Cellular network operators | T-Mobile (AS21928), Vodafone (AS3209) |
| Cloud/Datacenter | Cloud computing platforms | AWS (AS16509), Google Cloud (AS15169) |
| Hosting Provider | Server hosting companies | OVH (AS16276), Hetzner (AS24940) |
| Enterprise | Large corporations | Apple (AS714), Microsoft (AS8075) |
| CDN | Content delivery networks | Cloudflare (AS13335), Akamai (AS20940) |
Why ASN Matters in Proxy Selection
ASN-Based Trust Scoring
Websites and anti-bot services maintain databases that classify ASNs by type. This classification determines the baseline trust level applied to incoming requests:
Request arrives from IP 45.67.89.10
↓
Anti-bot system looks up ASN → AS16509 (Amazon AWS)
↓
Classification: Datacenter/Cloud
↓
Trust level: LOW → Apply strict bot detection rules
↓
Result: CAPTCHA, rate limit, or blockCompare with:
Request arrives from IP 73.45.123.67
↓
Anti-bot system looks up ASN → AS7922 (Comcast)
↓
Classification: Residential ISP
↓
Trust level: HIGH → Apply standard rules
↓
Result: Normal accessDetection Rates by ASN Type
Based on real-world scraping experience, detection and block rates vary dramatically by ASN type:
| ASN Type | Typical Block Rate | CAPTCHA Rate | Best Use Cases |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mobile Carrier | 1-5% | 2-8% | Social media, high-security targets |
| Residential ISP | 3-10% | 5-15% | E-commerce, search engines, general scraping |
| Business ISP | 5-15% | 10-20% | B2B platforms, professional sites |
| ISP-assigned (datacenter-hosted) | 10-25% | 15-30% | Medium-sensitivity targets |
| Cloud Provider | 30-60% | 40-70% | Low-sensitivity targets, APIs |
| Hosting/VPS | 40-70% | 50-80% | Non-protected sites only |
ASN-Aware Proxy Selection Strategy
Matching ASN to Target
The key principle: your proxy’s ASN should match the type of user the target website expects.
| Target Website | Expected User ASN | Recommended Proxy ASN |
|---|---|---|
| Amazon, Walmart | Residential ISP | Comcast, AT&T, Spectrum |
| Instagram, TikTok | Mobile carrier | T-Mobile, Verizon Wireless |
| Business ISP or residential | Commercial ISP ASNs | |
| Google Search | Any (but residential preferred) | Residential ISPs |
| Small business site | Any | Datacenter is fine |
| Government data portal | Residential/business | Local ISP ASNs |
Geographic ASN Matching
Beyond ASN type, geographic consistency between the ASN and the target matters:
- Scraping Amazon.com with a Japanese ISP ASN may trigger additional verification
- Accessing UK-specific content with a US residential ASN may return wrong results
- Target websites expect ASN geography to match the requested content region
# Example: Selecting proxies with ASN targeting
import requests
# Provider that supports ASN targeting via username parameters
proxy_configs = {
"us_residential": "http://user-country-us-asn-7922:pass@gate.provider.com:7777",
"uk_residential": "http://user-country-gb-asn-2856:pass@gate.provider.com:7777",
"us_mobile": "http://user-country-us-asn-21928:pass@gate.provider.com:7777",
}
# Select based on target
target = "https://www.amazon.com/product-page"
proxy = proxy_configs["us_residential"]
response = requests.get(
target,
proxies={"http": proxy, "https": proxy}
)ASN Diversity Strategy
Why You Need Multiple ASNs
Relying on a single ASN for all your scraping traffic creates concentration risk:
- Pattern detection: Hundreds of requests from the same ASN with similar behavior signals automation
- ASN-level bans: Some websites blacklist entire ASNs when abuse is detected
- Rate limiting per ASN: Sophisticated sites apply rate limits per ASN, not just per IP
- Fingerprint correlation: Same ASN + similar browser fingerprint = easy to correlate requests
Recommended ASN Distribution
For a robust scraping operation, distribute traffic across multiple ASN types and specific ASNs:
| Traffic Share | ASN Type | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| 40-50% | Residential ISP (mixed) | Primary scraping traffic |
| 20-30% | Mobile carrier | High-security targets, social media |
| 10-20% | Business ISP | B2B platforms, professional sites |
| 10% | Secondary residential ISPs | Diversity buffer |
Monitoring ASN Performance
Track how different ASNs perform against your target websites:
from collections import defaultdict
class ASNPerformanceTracker:
def __init__(self):
self.stats = defaultdict(lambda: {"success": 0, "blocked": 0, "captcha": 0})
def record(self, asn, result):
"""Record the outcome of a request through a specific ASN"""
self.stats[asn][result] += 1
def get_success_rate(self, asn):
"""Calculate success rate for an ASN"""
s = self.stats[asn]
total = s["success"] + s["blocked"] + s["captcha"]
if total == 0:
return 0
return s["success"] / total * 100
def report(self):
"""Print performance report for all ASNs"""
print(f"{'ASN':<15} {'Success%':<10} {'Total':<8} {'Blocked':<10} {'Captcha':<10}")
print("-" * 55)
for asn, s in sorted(self.stats.items()):
total = s["success"] + s["blocked"] + s["captcha"]
rate = self.get_success_rate(asn)
print(f"{asn:<15} {rate:<10.1f} {total:<8} {s['blocked']:<10} {s['captcha']:<10}")
# Usage
tracker = ASNPerformanceTracker()
tracker.record("AS7922", "success")
tracker.record("AS7922", "success")
tracker.record("AS16509", "blocked")
tracker.report()How to Look Up and Verify ASN
Checking a Proxy’s ASN
Before relying on a proxy, verify its ASN:
import requests
def check_proxy_asn(proxy_url):
"""Check the ASN of a proxy IP"""
proxies = {"http": proxy_url, "https": proxy_url}
# Get public IP through the proxy
ip_response = requests.get("https://httpbin.org/ip", proxies=proxies, timeout=10)
public_ip = ip_response.json()["origin"]
# Look up ASN information
asn_info = requests.get(f"https://ipinfo.io/{public_ip}/json").json()
print(f"Proxy IP: {public_ip}")
print(f"ASN/Org: {asn_info.get('org', 'Unknown')}")
print(f"Country: {asn_info.get('country', 'Unknown')}")
print(f"City: {asn_info.get('city', 'Unknown')}")
return asn_infoRed Flags in ASN Data
Watch for these issues when checking your proxy’s ASN:
| Red Flag | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Cloud provider ASN when expecting residential | Provider is misrepresenting proxy type |
| ASN country mismatch with targeted geo | IP geolocation does not match ASN registration |
| Known proxy/VPN ASN | IP is flagged in anti-bot databases |
| Very small/unknown ASN | May be a proxy-specific network, easily blocked |
| ASN associated with abuse | Previously used for spam or attacks |
ASN Blocklists and Reputation
Commonly Blocked ASNs
Certain ASNs are frequently blocked by anti-bot systems:
- Major cloud providers: AS16509 (AWS), AS15169 (Google), AS14061 (DigitalOcean)
- Budget hosting: AS16276 (OVH), AS24940 (Hetzner), AS63949 (Linode)
- Known proxy networks: ASNs specifically registered by proxy providers
- Bulletproof hosting: ASNs associated with abuse-tolerant hosting providers
ASN Reputation Recovery
If an ASN gets a poor reputation:
- The entire ASN’s traffic faces increased scrutiny on affected websites
- Recovery requires sustained clean traffic over weeks or months
- Individual IPs within the ASN cannot escape ASN-level reputation
- This is why shared datacenter hosting has inherently lower trust
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I choose specific ASNs with my proxy provider?
Many premium proxy providers offer ASN-level targeting. This is more common with residential and ISP proxy services. You typically specify the desired ASN through username parameters or API settings. Not all providers offer this feature — check your provider’s documentation.
Does ASN matter more than IP reputation?
Both matter, but ASN provides the initial classification. An IP from a residential ASN starts with higher trust than one from a datacenter ASN. However, an individual IP with poor reputation will still get blocked regardless of its ASN. Think of ASN as your first impression and IP reputation as your track record.
How many ASNs should I use for a scraping project?
For serious scraping operations, aim for at least 5-10 different ASNs, ideally mixing residential ISPs from multiple providers. For highly protected targets, 20+ ASNs provide better resilience against ASN-level blocking or rate limiting.
Why do mobile carrier ASNs have the highest trust?
Mobile carrier IPs are naturally shared among thousands of users via CGNAT. Websites know that blocking a mobile carrier IP would affect many legitimate users, so they apply more lenient rules. Additionally, mobile traffic represents a huge share of legitimate web usage, making it the baseline “trusted” traffic type.
Can I get my own ASN for proxy purposes?
Technically yes, but it is impractical for most proxy users. Getting an ASN requires justifying a multi-homed network setup and costs approximately $500-1,000 annually. A new, unknown ASN would also start with neutral reputation and could be quickly identified as proxy-related by anti-bot services.
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- How to Configure a Proxy in FoxyProxy for Firefox
- Anti-Bot Detection Glossary: 50+ Terms Defined
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- Backconnect Proxies Deep Dive: Architecture and Real-World Performance
- Best Proxies in Southeast Asia: Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines
- How to Build a 4G/5G Mobile Proxy Farm with Raspberry Pi
- How to Configure a Proxy in FoxyProxy for Firefox
- Anti-Bot Detection Glossary: 50+ Terms Defined
- Anti-Bot Terminology Glossary: Complete A-Z Reference 2026
- Backconnect Proxies Deep Dive: Architecture and Real-World Performance
- Best Proxies in Southeast Asia: Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines
- How to Build a 4G/5G Mobile Proxy Farm with Raspberry Pi
- How to Configure a Proxy in FoxyProxy for Firefox
- Anti-Bot Detection Glossary: 50+ Terms Defined
- Anti-Bot Terminology Glossary: Complete A-Z Reference 2026
- 403 Forbidden Error: What It Means & How to Fix It
- 407 Proxy Authentication Required: Fix Guide
- Backconnect Proxies Deep Dive: Architecture and Real-World Performance
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- Anti-Bot Detection Glossary: 50+ Terms Defined
- Anti-Bot Terminology Glossary: Complete A-Z Reference 2026
- 403 Forbidden Error: What It Means & How to Fix It
- 407 Proxy Authentication Required: Fix Guide
- Backconnect Proxies Deep Dive: Architecture and Real-World Performance
- Best Proxies in Southeast Asia: Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines
- Anti-Bot Detection Glossary: 50+ Terms Defined
- Anti-Bot Terminology Glossary: Complete A-Z Reference 2026
- 403 Forbidden Error: What It Means & How to Fix It
- 407 Proxy Authentication Required: Fix Guide
- Backconnect Proxies Deep Dive: Architecture and Real-World Performance
- Best Proxies in Southeast Asia: Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines
- Anti-Bot Detection Glossary: 50+ Terms Defined
- Anti-Bot Terminology Glossary: Complete A-Z Reference 2026
- 403 Forbidden Error: What It Means & How to Fix It
- 407 Proxy Authentication Required: Fix Guide
- Backconnect Proxies Deep Dive: Architecture and Real-World Performance
- Best Proxies in Southeast Asia: Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines
Related Reading
- Anti-Bot Detection Glossary: 50+ Terms Defined
- Anti-Bot Terminology Glossary: Complete A-Z Reference 2026
- 403 Forbidden Error: What It Means & How to Fix It
- 407 Proxy Authentication Required: Fix Guide
- Backconnect Proxies Deep Dive: Architecture and Real-World Performance
- Best Proxies in Southeast Asia: Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines