Unlike "Datacenter" proxies which are easily blocked, UHQ proxies usually come from real home internet connections or mobile (4G/5G) carriers.

Below is a structured "piece" or template for a professional proxy list file, followed by a guide on what actually makes these proxies "UHQ." 📂 Rotating_UHQ_HTTPS_Proxies.txt

# --- UHQ HTTPS ROTATING PROXY LIST --- # Generated: 2026-04-29 # Type: HTTPS | Rotation: Every Request / 5-Min Sticky # Protocol: IPv4/IPv6 Support 45.152.188.12:8080:user7721:pass_uhq_92 185.242.107.54:3128:user7721:pass_uhq_92 103.149.162.19:5001:user7721:pass_uhq_92 91.239.130.17:8000:user7721:pass_uhq_92 194.35.120.41:9090:user7721:pass_uhq_92 23.254.211.88:443:user7721:pass_uhq_92 172.67.182.155:80:user7721:pass_uhq_92 209.127.191.180:8888:user7721:pass_uhq_92 # [End of Sample List] Use code with caution. What Defines "UHQ" (Ultra-High Quality)?

When using a .txt list for automation (like in Python or a scraper), always use the protocol over HTTP. This ensures that the data moving between your machine and the proxy server is encrypted, preventing your ISP or the proxy provider from "sniffing" your traffic.

A UHQ list should have a success rate of 99.9%. If the proxy "rotates" but the new IP is dead, it’s not UHQ.

Format: IP:Port:Username:Password (Standard for most automation tools)