Curious how people here are handling localized rank tracking these days. If the goal is to check search results by country, state, or city, what usually works better in practice for you: - rotating residential proxies - ISP / static residential proxies I can see the tradeoff both ways. Residential seems better when: - location flexibility matters - search pages are more sensitive - repeated checks need broader rotation ISP/static seems better when: - session consistency matters more - you want more stable repeated checks - debugging result differences is easier with less rotation What I’m most interested in is how people actually decide between them for SEO workflows. For example: - do you use residential for broad checks and ISP for repeated checks? - how granular are you going with location targeting? - are you optimizing more for success rate, geo accuracy, or consistency over time? Not looking for provider recommendations as much as real-world decision logic. I’ve seen a lot of generic advice on proxies, but not much that is specific to SEO rank tracking.
For rank tracking specifically I have landed on ISP / static residential, and not because residential is bad in general. Rotating residential pools have gotten so abused by scrapers in the last two years that Google now silently de-personalises or returns generic SERPs on a large slice of the IPs, you do not even see a CAPTCHA. ISP statics from the same ASN, hit consistently, give me SERPs that match what an actual user in that city sees, which is what rank tracking is supposed to measure. The real tradeoff for me has been cost vs control. I tested running my own ISP-static pool through Bright Data and IPRoyal for a while, kept hitting IP burn whenever I scaled checks past about 800 queries an hour per city. What I ended up doing for most clients is just paying DataForSEO or SerpApi for the localised SERP fetch and accepting the per-call price, because they have already absorbed the proxy rotation, geo-targeting and the CAPTCHA-solving cost at scale. For a small site with 200 keywords across 3 cities that is cheaper than building it yourself by a wide margin. One thing nobody mentions: if your goal is mobile SERP tracking specifically, cloud mobile-carrier IPs return the cleanest results in my experience, the AT&T / T-Mobile pool gets way less Google scrutiny than residential. The flip side is they are expensive and you basically only get them via the bigger proxy vendors. Worth it if mobile rank is the conversion driver for the site, overkill if you only care about desktop.