Beijing Residential Proxies
Beijing is China's political capital and the headquarters city for state-owned giants like China Telecom, China Unicom, China Mobile, PetroChina, and Sinopec, alongside tech champions ByteDance, Baidu, Xiaomi, JD.com and Didi. The residential broadband market is split almost entirely between China Telecom (southern distribution), China Unicom (dominant in Beijing and the north) and China Mobile. Hex Proxies sources residential exit nodes across Beijing's districts, including Tongzhou, Fangshan, Changping and Daxing.
The Great Firewall context
All traffic leaving China passes through a limited number of state-controlled gateways, and Beijing-originated residential traffic routes through China Unicom's Beijing IXP. Websites doing Chinese compliance verification — checking how content renders for domestic users, whether specific URLs are reachable, and how ICP-filed sites display licensing — must test from inside China with residential fingerprints. Beijing exits let compliance teams see exactly what a mainland consumer sees.
Chinese e-commerce
Taobao, Tmall, JD.com, Pinduoduo and Vipshop all dominate Chinese online retail, and each serves Beijing-specific delivery logic tied to Jingdong Logistics warehouses, Cainiao pickup stations and same-day delivery zones. Retail intelligence uses Beijing residential exits to monitor pricing and stock authentically.
PIPL compliance
China's Personal Information Protection Law (PIPL) governs how companies handle data about Chinese residents, with cross-border data transfer rules that differ from GDPR. Compliance teams use Beijing residential exits to verify that consent flows, privacy notices and data subject rights mechanisms render correctly for mainland users.
Pool composition
Exits rotate across Chaoyang, Haidian, Xicheng, Dongcheng, Fengtai and the outer districts. Residential egress at $4.25-$4.75 per GB.