What’s Worth Using – Continuously Updated (My Go‑To Proxy/VPN Airport Picks)
Currently Using
YToo
Official site (with AFF)
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In my opinion this is a top tier, first‑class airport: quite stable, reasonable pricing, and it offers low‑multiplier nodes.
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Supports SSR, SS, and Trojan protocols, and works with Clash. It’s not recommended to convert subscriptions yourself – using third‑party subscription converters risks leaking your subscription.
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Annual billing is not simply 12× the monthly price. The ¥36/month plan is ¥372/year; combined with 0.2× multiplier nodes the value is excellent, with 1000G traffic per month.
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Pricing, node layout, and multipliers are roughly the same as Huayun, but Huayun has been having more outages lately, and YToo’s support is a bit better.
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Fully dedicated‑line airport, with dedicated routes: #Shenzhen–Hong Kong dedicated line #Shanghai–Japan dedicated line #Beijing–Germany dedicated line.
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Node multipliers: daily 0.2, standard 0.5, advanced/special/shopping 1.0. Explanation: with 0.2×, if you actually use 10GB, the airport’s system only counts 2GB; other labels are analogous.
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Trojan nodes support IPv6 access and can be used via a separate subscription. Currently the uptime of this service is not guaranteed, so try to use standard nodes whenever possible. After purchase, in the subscription link list you’ll find Trojan nodes labeled IPv6. Security is a bit better than IPv4 if your local network supports IPv6.
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Egress locations: mainly Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, Singapore, the US, etc., mostly Kirino. In addition, Japan also has NTT, SONET, Oracle, etc.; Singapore has M247, LeaseWeb; Korea has KT, Oracle; the US has Cogent, Zenlayer, SharkTech. Recently many non‑mainstream regions have been added: Thailand, Vietnam, India, the Philippines, Dubai, Israel, Canada, Brazil, Argentina, the UK, Germany, Italy, Spain, Hungary, Turkey, Australia.
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Speed cap is 1 Gbps at the airport level. Low‑multiplier nodes are throttled more strictly, but still reach several hundred Mbps, which is enough for daily use. With a 0.2× multiplier, 200G per month effectively feels like 1000G. Unlimited client devices, but strict ban on sharing accounts.
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SSH port filtering: port 22 is blocked.
Node Analysis
Pricing
Huayun
Official site (with AFF) To be honest, this is very similar to YToo – almost identical.
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A first‑class, top‑tier airport, generally stable with reasonable pricing and low‑multiplier nodes.
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Supports SSR, SS, and Trojan protocols, and works with Clash. The provider explicitly discourages users from converting subscriptions themselves – third‑party converters may leak your subscription.
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Annual billing is not simply 12× the monthly price. The ¥36/month plan is ¥372/year; combined with 0.2× multiplier nodes, the value is extremely high with 1000G per month. They still seem to charge a service fee, so pay attention.
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Pricing, node layout, and multipliers are all very similar to Huayun’s, but Huayun has been crashing badly lately, and YToo’s support is somewhat better.
(Note: this point is a comparison back to YToo.) -
Fully dedicated‑line airport, with dedicated routes: #Shenzhen–Hong Kong dedicated line #Shanghai–Japan dedicated line #Beijing–Germany dedicated line.
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Node multipliers: daily 0.2, standard 0.5, advanced/special/shopping 1.0. Explanation: with 0.2×, if you actually use 10GB, the airport’s system only counts 2GB; other labels are analogous.
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Trojan nodes support IPv6 access and can be used via a separate subscription. Currently the uptime of this service is not guaranteed, so try to use standard nodes whenever possible. After purchase, in the subscription link list you’ll find IPv6‑labeled Trojan nodes. Security is a bit better than IPv4 if your local network supports IPv6.
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Free EMBY media library: free Emby service, requires logging in via daily nodes or Hong Kong nodes.
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Egress locations: mainly Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, Singapore, the US, etc., mostly Kirino. In addition, Japan also has NTT, SONET, Oracle, etc.; Singapore has M247, LeaseWeb; Korea has KT, Oracle; the US has Cogent, Zenlayer, SharkTech. Recently many non‑mainstream regions have been added: Thailand, Vietnam, India, the Philippines, Dubai, Israel, Canada, Brazil, Argentina, the UK, Germany, Italy, Spain, Hungary, Turkey, Australia.
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Speed cap is 1 Gbps at the airport level. Low‑multiplier nodes are throttled more strictly, but still reach several hundred Mbps, enough for daily use. With a 0.2× multiplier, 200G per month effectively feels like 1000G.
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Unlimited client devices, but strict ban on sharing accounts.
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SSH port filtering: port 22 is blocked.
Node Analysis
Pricing
TAG
Official site (with AFF)
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Probably the airport with the widest node coverage on the market (roughly). Most nodes are native IP (unlocking various streaming services), making it a paradise for collectors of rare‑region nodes. Currently covers 90+ countries/regions with 170+ nodes.
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Many airports have lots of nodes; this one is the most comprehensive. The key is not just coverage, but that it remains fast across those nodes.
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Originally used Tencent AIA dedicated lines; after AIA was discontinued and Tencent stopped selling AIA, they switched to IEPL dedicated lines and then upgraded routes again, with very solid performance.
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While expanding to light up global regions, they also maintained high quality for Japanese nodes. TAG’s Japan egress quality is excellent, with many nodes unlocking residential broadband and a wide range of streaming services.
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Be aware that their TW/JP nodes come in many variants. For example, in Japan there are 1× multiplier and 3× multiplier nodes, and this is tied to node quality. Unlike other airports that reuse the same egress or share data centers, TAG’s Japan nodes have different egress carriers and unlock/residential status, hence the different multipliers.
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Currently they use Guangdong–Hong Kong dedicated lines plus Shanghai–Japan dedicated lines. Overall upstream bandwidth may not match other first‑tier airports, but their egress costs are high and Japan node quality is excellent. For users who absolutely need residential broadband or rare‑country nodes, this is likely the most suitable airport.
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No refunds! Pay monthly! If you buy a quarterly plan, treat it as quarterly.
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There are also annual backup plans you can opt for.
Routing Overview
Southern nodes (HK/TW/SG/AU etc.): Guangzhou Huawei Cloud entry → Guangdong–Hong Kong dedicated line → egress
Eastern nodes (JP/KR/US/South America): Shanghai Huawei Cloud entry → Shanghai–Japan dedicated line → egress
Northern nodes (Europe/Africa): Guangzhou Huawei Cloud entry → Guangdong–Hong Kong dedicated line → egress
For specific egress details, check the node analysis page. To borrow another expert’s summary: Hong Kong has G‑Core business broadband, HGC business broadband, HKT residential broadband; Japan has G‑Core, Kirino, Kirin, Catixs, IDCF, Sonet (Sony broadband), KDDI, SoftBank residential; Singapore has UpCloud, NeroCloud, Kirino, SuperInternet, BasicBrix, M1 residential. The US has 10+ egress nodes from various providers including Cogent business broadband, plus the rare region of Hawaii. Canada has BCE residential; Macau has CTM residential; Malaysia has TM residential and Maxis business; even Vietnam has FPT residential and VNPT business nodes. It’s the only provider with New Zealand Vodafone residential broadband. Starlink has also been added.
Node Analysis
Pricing
QingYunTi (Partnered)
According to information found online, this facility started operations in 2021 and has been running for more than four years. It uses dedicated‑line internal network transmission with speeds up to 4 Gbps, and is run by an overseas team based in Singapore.
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An IPLC‑based airport, with low prices being its main selling point.
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Supports subscriptions for Clash, Surge, Shadowrocket, Quantumult X, and Stash.
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The downside is relatively limited egress diversity. Current egress providers include Akari, Nearoute, CHOOPA, Hytron, Cogent, Fibert, ReliableSite, etc.
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Monthly/quarterly/half‑year plans: 15% discount with promo code wuyi85.
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Annual and multi‑year plans: 20% discount with promo code wuyi80.
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No limit on the number of client devices; multiple IPs can be online simultaneously.
Pricing