Your IP stays hidden
Every request exits through a rotating Tor circuit. The destination sees a Tor exit node — never your address, your ISP, or your location.
Open a page
Drop in any link. We fetch it through the Tor network and stream it back to you, so your real IP address never reaches the destination. No accounts to create, nothing written down.
How it works
You paste a URL. Our server requests it over Tor, so the page is fetched by an anonymous exit node, rewritten, and streamed back to you. Your address bar shows anonymizing.com; the destination only ever sees a stranger — you can watch the live circuit in the panel on the left. Keep SSL on and the whole path stays encrypted.
What you get
Every request exits through a rotating Tor circuit. The destination sees a Tor exit node — never your address, your ISP, or your location.
No accounts, no browsing history. Traffic between you and us is SSL-encrypted and the proxy keeps no record of where you went.
Geoblocks, workplace filters, national censorship — read foreign content as though you were a local visitor.
Questions
A relay between your browser and the sites you visit. It fetches pages on your behalf, so the destination only sees the proxy — bypassing ISP, workplace, or government restrictions while keeping you anonymous.
Whenever content is blocked by your network or country, or when you simply don't want a site to track your real identity. If a news site, YouTube, or Facebook is filtered where you are, route it through here.
Your IP address uniquely identifies your device online — like a home address. Routing through this proxy substitutes a Tor exit node's address for yours, so sites can't identify or track the real you.
Most sites work. Some aggressively detect proxies, so we can't guarantee 100% — but the large majority of pages, including the commonly blocked ones, load fine.