Rayobyte IPv6 proxies use a slightly different authorization structure compared to standard IPv4 static proxies.

Below is a simplified explanation of how IPv6 proxy authorization works.


➡️ How IPv6 Proxies Are Structured

When you purchase IPv6 proxies, you are assigned multiple unique IPv6 addresses.

  • ✔ Each IPv6 address has its own unique username
  • ✔ The password remains the same across all assigned IPv6 IPs

This means:

  • Username = Unique per IPv6 IP
  • Password = Shared across your IPv6 package

➡️ How Connections Work

Although you are assigned IPv6 IP addresses, your traffic is tunneled through a static IPv4 gateway for compatibility.

This allows IPv6 proxies to function in applications, browsers, or tools that may not fully support direct IPv6 configuration.

In short:

  • ✔ You configure your proxy using the provided credentials
  • ✔ Your connection routes through a static IPv4 entry point
  • ✔ The exit IP is your assigned IPv6 address

➡️ Authorization Method

IPv6 proxies use username/password authentication.

IP authorization is not supported for IPv6 proxy packages.

If you need guidance on how to configure proxy authentication, please refer to:


➡️ Visual Overview

The diagram below illustrates how IPv6 proxy connections are tunneled through an IPv4 gateway:


➡️ Need Help?

If you’re unsure how to configure your IPv6 proxies or are experiencing connection issues, our support team is happy to assist.

We’ll help ensure your IPv6 configuration is set up correctly.