Running Stellar AIO without the right proxies is a bit like showing up to a limited drop with one tab open, no backup accounts, and your home IP already waving a red flag at the retailer’s servers.
This guide covers how to choose the right type of proxy for Stellar AIO, how to format and import them correctly, and how to avoid the most common mistakes that get IPs flagged before you’ve even started a task.
What Type of Proxy Does Stellar AIO Need?
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ToggleStellar AIO supports both residential and datacenter proxies. The right choice depends on what you’re targeting and how much bot protection the site has in place.
Most retail sites that Stellar AIO is used on have some form of request monitoring. This means sending dozens of tasks from a single IP is a reliable way to get that IP blocked almost immediately.
Proxies let you spread those requests across multiple addresses, which keeps any one IP from standing out as a bot.
Can You Run Stellar AIO Without a Proxy?
You can run Stellar AIO without a proxy, but it won’t hold up for long.
Without a proxy, every task runs through your home IP. Most retail sites will rate-limit or ban that address after seeing an unusually high volume of requests in a short window.
Beyond the immediate ban risk, running without proxies also ties your real connection to any accounts that get flagged, which is a problem you don’t want following you outside the bot session.
For anything beyond local testing, proxies aren’t optional.
Residential vs Datacenter Proxies for Stellar AIO
Datacenter proxies come from cloud server infrastructure rather than real ISP connections. This makes them fast and cost-effective but more recognizable to sites with aggressive bot detection.
Residential proxies route traffic through real devices on real broadband connections. This makes them significantly harder for retailers to distinguish from genuine shoppers.
For high-demand drops on well-protected sites, residential proxies are the safer choice and generally worth the higher cost per IP.
For lower-competition tasks or less protected sites, datacenter proxies can get the job done at a lower price point without the overkill.
How to Choose the Best Proxies for Stellar AIO
The best proxy for Stellar AIO is one that’s fast enough to keep up with task speeds, clean enough to avoid immediate detection, and located close enough to the retailer’s servers to keep latency low.
Choosing proxies means matching the proxy type and location to the specific site and task you’re running.
Speed and Latency
Latency is a real factor in retail botting, particularly during high-demand drops where even a small delay can result in a sold-out response before your task gets to checkout.
Proxies that are geographically close to the retailer’s server will naturally have lower round-trip times than proxies routed through a distant location.
For UK or European retail sites, EU-based proxies will almost always outperform US-based ones, even if the raw speed looks similar on paper.
Proxy Pool Size and Rotation
Running too many tasks through the same IP is one of the most consistent ways to trigger a ban, regardless of how good the proxy is.
If you’re running a large number of tasks simultaneously, you need a pool large enough that each IP isn’t being reused at a rate that looks suspicious.
Rotating residential proxies handle this automatically by cycling through a pool of addresses. This keeps any single IP from appearing more often than it should.
The size of the pool you need scales with the number of tasks you’re running at once. So it’s worth factoring that into your proxy plan before you scale up.
Why Does Stellar AIO Keep Getting My Proxy Banned?
A Stellar AIO proxy banned situation is almost always caused by one of three things:
- shared IPs that were flagged before you ever used them;
- too many tasks running through the same address;
- using datacenter proxies on a site that’s specifically filtering for them.
Fresh residential proxies with proper rotation address all three of those issues.
If you’re seeing bans early in a session, check whether your proxy provider is selling shared pools that have already been burned by other users before being assigned to you.
KocerRoxy provides residential proxies with a clean, rotating pool. This means the IPs you’re using haven’t already been flagged before your session starts.
Stellar AIO Proxy Format
Getting the proxy format right is one of the most straightforward things to sort out, but it’s also one of the most common reasons new users find proxies not working when the issue has nothing to do with the proxies themselves.
Stellar AIO expects a specific format. If your list doesn’t match it, the bot won’t connect and won’t always throw an error that makes the cause obvious.
What Is the Correct Stellar AIO Proxy Format?
Stellar AIO uses the format IP:Port:Username:Password. This applies to authenticated residential and datacenter proxies alike.
If your proxy provider gives you credentials in a different format, such as username:password@IP:port, you’ll need to reformat the list before importing it into the bot.
Importing proxies in the wrong format is a very common source of connection failures that get blamed on the proxy when the format is the actual problem.
How to Convert Proxies to the Right Format
Most providers give you proxies in one of a few standard formats. They don’t always match what the bot expects out of the box.
Manually reformatting a list of 50 or 100 proxies is tedious and introduces mistakes. This is why a proxy generator is the practical solution.
KocerRoxy’s proxy generator lets you paste in your proxy list and output it in the correct Stellar AIO format automatically. This removes the reformatting step entirely and gets you to the import stage without the unnecessary friction.
Stellar AIO Proxy Setup: Importing and Testing
Once your proxies are formatted correctly, the import process in Stellar AIO is pretty easy. The bot has a built-in proxy manager where you can add lists, organise them by group, and assign them to specific task profiles.
How to Import Proxies Into Stellar AIO
Open the proxy manager in Stellar AIO and create a new proxy list.
Paste your proxies into the input field in IP:Port:Username:Password format, with one proxy per line.
Save the list and assign it to the relevant task group before running.
If you’re running different proxy types for different sites, it’s worth naming your lists clearly so you don’t accidentally assign datacenter proxies to a task that needs residential, or mix up pools mid-session.
Testing Your Proxies Before Running Tasks
Stellar AIO has a built-in proxy tester, and running it before every session is a good habit. The tester checks whether each proxy is connecting and gives you a latency reading. This lets you identify dead or slow IPs before they occupy a task slot during a live drop.
If a proxy fails the test, check the format first, then confirm with your provider whether the IP is active on their end.
A proxy that passes the tester but still causes issues during tasks is usually a sign of site-level detection rather than a connectivity problem, which means the issue is the proxy type rather than the proxy itself.
Get Proxies That Work With Stellar AIO
Getting your proxy setup right is less complicated than it tends to look from the outside. Most of the problems users run into come down to format errors, wrong proxy types for the target site, or shared IPs that were already flagged before the session started.
KocerRoxy offers residential proxies that are compatible with Stellar AIO, along with a proxy generator to get your list into the correct format without the manual reformatting step.
If you’d like to test them with your setup before committing to a larger plan, we’re happy to offer a small test package so you can see how they perform in a real session.
Get in touch with the KocerRoxy team through the live chat to find out more and get set up.
FAQs About Proxies for Stellar AIO
Q1. What type of proxy works best with Stellar AIO?
Residential proxies generally perform best with Stellar AIO, particularly on retail sites with stronger bot detection. They route traffic through real ISP connections. This makes them harder for sites to identify as proxy traffic compared to datacenter IPs.
Datacenter proxies are a valid option for less protected sites and cost less per IP. But they carry a higher risk of being flagged on platforms with active bot filtering. The right choice depends on the specific site you’re targeting.
Q2. What is the correct proxy format for Stellar AIO?
Stellar AIO uses the IP:Port:Username:Password format. If your provider gives you proxies in a different format, such as user:pass@IP:port, you’ll need to convert them before importing.
Using a proxy generator, like the one offered by KocerRoxy, handles this conversion automatically and reduces the chance of formatting errors that cause import or connection failures inside the bot.
Q3. Can you run Stellar AIO without a proxy?
You can technically run Stellar AIO without a proxy, but it won’t hold up for real use. Running tasks from your home IP means every request comes from the same address, which will trigger rate-limiting or a ban from most retail sites fairly quickly.
Any accounts that get flagged during that session are also tied to your real connection. For anything beyond basic local testing, proxies are necessary.
Q4. Why does Stellar AIO keep getting my proxy banned?
Proxy bans in Stellar AIO are most commonly caused by using shared IPs that were already flagged by retailers before you started using them, running too many tasks through the same IP, or using datacenter proxies on sites that specifically filter for them.
Using fresh residential proxies with a rotating pool, and keeping your task load per IP reasonable will reduce ban frequency significantly.
Q5. How do I import proxies into Stellar AIO?
Open the proxy manager in Stellar AIO, create a new list, and paste your proxies in IP:Port:Username:Password format with one proxy per line. Assign the list to your task group, then run the built-in proxy tester before starting your session.
This lets you identify any dead or misconfigured proxies before they take up a task slot during a live drop.
Q6. How many proxies do I need for Stellar AIO?
The number of proxies you need scales with how many tasks you’re running at once. As a general rule, avoid running too many tasks through the same IP at the same time, as this increases the chance of detection.
A rotating residential proxy pool is the most practical solution for multi-task sessions. It gives you a larger number of addresses to work with without burning through a fixed list quickly.
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