Mint a residential pool, then filter it down to the IPs identified on AT&T network ranges so those sessions read as that carrier's subscriber traffic. Descriptive ASN/ISP tagging on UNP Premium, from $5/GB — every IP filtered, no affiliation implied.
AT&T spans a wide stretch of US consumer connectivity, from fiber broadband to mobile data, and its ranges are among the most common a site will encounter. When your goal is to look like an everyday subscriber rather than a datacenter or a fringe network, narrowing your pool to the AT&T-identified proxies puts you on familiar ground.
The mechanism is descriptive ASN/ISP identification. After you mint, the dashboard flags which proxies are announced on AT&T's autonomous system, and you filter your pool down to those clean addresses. It's plain network matching against publicly announced ranges — no logo, no partnership, and no implied endorsement from the carrier.
Geography and carrier sit at different steps, so identifying AT&T never costs you location control. Mint with a country and a US state; then, once the pool is tagged, filter it down to the AT&T proxies inside that geography. Need a single IP to hold across a multi-step flow? Sticky sessions keep one AT&T-identified address for 10 to 180 minutes; rotating sessions hand you a fresh one per request when that fits the job better.
Quality control is identical across carriers. Every IP runs through the 4-layer filter — connectivity, fraud/abuse, latency, and ban detection — before it reaches your pool, so you never inherit a flagged address just because it happened to land on the carrier you filtered to.
Residential IPs the dashboard has identified as living on AT&T network ranges. You mint a residential pool first; descriptive ASN/ISP tagging then flags which of your proxies are on AT&T, so you can keep that subset for sessions that should read as that carrier's residential address space.
No. Minting is country-level — you choose a country and optionally pin a US state, but not a carrier. Once the proxies are in your pool, the ISP-tagging filter identifies each one's network by its ASN, and you filter the pool down to the AT&T proxies from there.
Region is a mint-time choice — it answers where the IP is. AT&T identification happens after minting and answers whose network announces each IP. The two stack: mint with a US state and country, then filter the identified pool to the AT&T subset.
No. Identification is purely descriptive — we match the carrier's publicly announced ASN ranges. There is no AT&T partnership, logo, or endorsement involved.
Yes. Carrier has nothing to do with quality control. Every IP passes connectivity, fraud/abuse, latency, and ban-detection checks before it enters your pool, so the AT&T subset you filter to is already clean.
Sign in, mint your residential pool, and filter it down to the clean IPs identified on AT&T. From $5/GB, 5 GB minimum.