NativeIP
Israeli 4G mobile proxy · single tariff

A real Israeli 4G IP.
Yours. $70 a month.

A dedicated Cudy WR300 router with a Partner or Bezeq SIM, exposed over standard SOCKS5 at il.nativeip.io:8080. No SDK. No demo call. No "unlimited" asterisk. Pay $70, get credentials, run curl.

Tel Aviv · Partner & Bezeq100 GB / mo fair-useSOCKS5 · sticky 24h
~/work — zsh — 92×24
# 1. point any HTTP client at il.nativeip.io:8080
$ curl --proxy socks5://YOUR_KEY:@il.nativeip.io:8080 \
       https://api.ipify.org
185.220.41.78   # Partner SIM, Tel Aviv

# 2. same IP for the next 24 hours, same SOCKS5 username
$ curl --proxy socks5://YOUR_KEY:@il.nativeip.io:8080 \
       https://ipinfo.io/json
{
  "ip": "185.220.41.78",
  "city": "Tel Aviv",
  "region": "Tel Aviv District",
  "country": "IL",
  "org": "AS12400 Partner Communications",
  "asn_type": "mobile"
}

$ man curlIf this snippet feels like documentation, that's the point.

Why this exists

Five things you don't get
from a global proxy pool.

Bright Data and friends will sell you 200 countries and an asterisk on every promise. We sell one country, one router per customer, and a price you can read without a call.

01

Real Israeli 4G. Not a VPN.

A physical Cudy WR300 router with a Partner or Bezeq SIM is sitting in a rack in Tel Aviv right now, waiting for your key. Cloudflare, PerimeterX and DataDome see what they see from any other phone on the cell — because that's what it is.

02

100 GB. The number is the number.

One hundred gigabytes of fair-use bandwidth per month. No throttling at 50, no "soft cap" buried in section 9.3, no asterisk. If you need more than that, email and we'll talk. We won't surprise you on the 22nd.

03

Live in five minutes.

Sign up. Pay with a card or USDT on TRC-20. The dashboard hands you a SOCKS5 username and you're routing traffic before the receipt lands in your inbox. No demo, no quote, no minimum, no procurement loop.

04

Plain SOCKS5. No SDK.

Works the moment you set HTTPS_PROXY. curl, Python requests, Node axios, Go net/http, Playwright — they all already speak it. If we vanish tomorrow, you change one URL and you're on another provider.

05

Israel, done right.
Not "200 countries", done thinly.

Depth over breadth. We don't have a pool in Jakarta or a node in São Paulo, and we won't pretend to. If you need Brazilian IPs, the right answer is Bright Data — tell them we sent you. If you need an Israeli mobile IP that survives a real Cloudflare challenge, you're already where you should be.

How it works

Three steps. Mostly typing.

There is no onboarding flow worth naming. You sign up, you get a SOCKS5 username, you point your client at it. That is the entire product surface.

01

Sign up & pay.

$70 a month, billed via Lemon Squeezy. Card or USDT on TRC-20. No commitment, cancel anytime from the dashboard.

# Lemon Squeezy → card / USDT
02

Grab credentials.

Your dashboard shows the SOCKS5 host, port, and a username token. The token doubles as a sticky-session key.

user: nip_7c4f… host: il.nativeip.io:8080
03

Point a client at it.

Anything that speaks SOCKS5 works. curl, requests, axios, Playwright. No library to install.

export HTTPS_PROXY=socks5://nip_…@il.nativeip.io:8080
One tariff

One router. One price.
One honest number.

Personal modemSKU · NIP-IL-1
$70 / month

Billed monthly. Cancel any time, no contract.

  • Dedicated Israeli 4G IP, Partner or Bezeq SIM
  • 100 GB / month fair-use, no throttling games
  • Sticky sessions up to 24h via SOCKS5 username token
  • Pay with card or USDT (TRC-20) via Lemon Squeezy
  • Standard SOCKS5 — works with anything, no SDK, no lock-in
Get an IP — $70 / month

Need more bandwidth or multiple IPs? Email support@nativeip.io — single-tariff doesn't mean single-customer-size.

The skeptical reader

Questions you probably
already typed into a notes app.

We get it. Every proxy provider's marketing page reads the same. Here are the things we'd want answered before opening a wallet.

Q·01Are these residential or mobile IPs?

Mobile. Each IP comes from a real Partner or Bezeq SIM card sitting in a physical Cudy WR300 router, on a real 4G cell tower in Israel. The ASN you'll see in ipinfo.io is AS12400 Partner or the equivalent Bezeq AS — the same ASN a phone in Tel Aviv hands out.

That matters because mobile carrier IPs sit in a CG-NAT pool shared with thousands of consumer devices. Blocking the pool means blocking the carrier's subscribers, which most anti-bot vendors are reluctant to do.

Q·02How are these different from a VPN?

A VPN exits from a datacenter IP — typically AWS, Hetzner, OVH, or a known commercial VPN ASN. Those ranges are public, fingerprinted, and rate-limited everywhere that cares.

Our exit is a mobile carrier IP from a SIM card on a residential 4G connection. From the destination server's perspective there is no datacenter signal — TLS fingerprint, ASN, reverse DNS, latency profile all read as "phone on Partner".

Q·03Will my IP get banned by Cloudflare or PerimeterX?

Honest answer: any IP can get rate-limited if you hit a target hard enough from it. What we can promise is that the IP itself — its ASN, its reputation, its CG-NAT shared history — looks like a consumer phone and not like a proxy.

We don't make claims about specific bypasses, and we don't sell "anti-detect" snake oil. We sell a clean carrier IP; what you do with it (TLS fingerprinting, request pacing, headful browsers) is on you.

Q·04What happens if I exceed 100 GB?

You get an email at 80 GB and again at 95 GB. If you cross 100, the proxy keeps working at reduced throughput until the next billing cycle — no surprise charges, no silent cutoff.

If 100 GB consistently isn't enough, write to support@nativeip.io and we'll quote a second modem or a higher cap. There is no auto-upsell.

Q·05Can I cancel anytime?

Yes. One button in the dashboard. Your IP stays live until the end of the current paid period, then the SOCKS5 endpoint stops accepting your key. No retention call, no "are you sure" loop.

Q·06Do you log my traffic?

We keep connection metadata — timestamp, bytes in/out, source authentication token — because we need it to enforce the 100 GB cap and to comply with Israeli law if served a court order. We do not log destination URLs, headers, or payload bodies, and we don't perform TLS interception. Your traffic is encrypted end-to-end past our router.

If you need a stricter posture (e.g. for legal-sensitive workloads), email us before signing up.