Free Brazil Proxies
A free, public proxy list you can filter for Brazil — no signup required. It is best-effort and meant for testing and light tasks, not production traffic.
Brazil Free Features
Free Brazil proxies: what you get
FlashProxy's Free Proxy List is a public, no-cost list of proxies you can browse and filter by country, including Brazil. You do not need to create an account or enter payment details — just open the list, narrow it to Brazil, and pick an entry to try. The proxies span more than 100 countries, so Brazil sits alongside many other locations you can switch between. This is the free, public list for testing and light use, not the paid Brazil pools. Treat every entry as best-effort: it is there to experiment with, not to depend on.
What free Brazil proxies are good for
Free Brazil proxies suit testing, learning, and small one-off jobs. They are handy for checking how a Portuguese-language site or São Paulo-targeted page renders for a local visitor, trying a tool's proxy settings before you commit, or running a quick experiment from a Brazil IP. Students and developers use them to learn how HTTP and SOCKS5 proxies behave without spending anything. Because the IPs are shared and short-lived, keep tasks light and tolerant of failure — anything that must finish reliably belongs on a paid pool.
Formats & access
The Brazil list is refreshed every 30 seconds, so dead entries are cycled out and what you see is current. It includes HTTP, HTTPS, and SOCKS5 proxies, letting you match the protocol to your tool. You can download the filtered list as TXT, CSV, or JSON, or pull it programmatically through the API. That makes it easy to drop Brazil proxies straight into a script, a browser, or a testing harness. Re-fetch often, since the entries that worked a minute ago may already be gone.
Limitations to know
Be realistic about free Brazil proxies: they are best-effort and shared by many users at once. Individual IPs can be slow, unstable, and short-lived, dropping connections without warning. There is no uptime guarantee and no support on the free list — if an entry stops working, your only option is to grab another. Speeds vary widely and cannot be promised, and you should not assume any entry is reliable or anonymous. For anything time-sensitive or high-volume, free proxies are the wrong tool.
When to upgrade to paid
When a project needs Brazil traffic that actually holds up, move to a paid plan. Paid Residential starts at $0.16/GB with Residential Lite and adds the things the free list cannot offer: reliability, faster and more consistent speeds, 99.9% uptime, and real support. That matters once you are running steady scraping, account work, or anything where a dropped connection costs you time or data. The free Brazil list is a fine place to prototype; the paid pool is where you run the real workload.
How to use a free Brazil proxy
Open the Free Proxy List, filter it to Brazil, and choose an entry. Copy its host and port into your browser, scraper, or tool's proxy settings, picking the protocol — HTTP, HTTPS, or SOCKS5 — that matches the entry. Send a quick test request to confirm it responds and shows a Brazil IP, whether you are testing against a São Paulo or Rio de Janeiro target. Because entries expire fast, expect to swap in a fresh proxy regularly; downloading the list as CSV or JSON makes rotating through candidates easy.
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