Vermont Residential Proxy Coverage
Vermont's broadband market serves a small but well-connected population. Comcast Xfinity provides cable broadband in Burlington and several other communities along the western corridor. Consolidated Communications (formerly FairPoint, which acquired Verizon's northern New England operations) delivers DSL and fiber across much of the state. Burlington Telecom, the city-owned fiber network, provides gigabit service in Burlington — one of the earliest and most successful municipal fiber deployments in the US. VTel provides fiber in several southern Vermont communities. Waitsfield and Champlain Valley Telecom operate regional networks. Vermont's Communications Union Districts have organized community-driven broadband expansion. Hex Proxies sources residential IPs from these authentic Vermont carrier networks.
Why Vermont Residential Proxies Matter
Vermont's economy is distinctive, driven by tourism, agriculture, craft food and beverages, technology, and a growing remote-work sector. The state is home to Ben & Jerry's (now Unilever), Cabot Creamery Cooperative, and a thriving artisan food industry. Vermont's craft beer scene and the maple syrup industry (Vermont produces over 50% of US maple syrup) drive specialized e-commerce. Ski tourism at Stowe, Killington, Sugarbush, and Jay Peak generates significant hospitality platform activity. Vermont's quality of life has attracted remote workers, particularly since 2020, with the state offering relocation incentives. GlobalFoundries operates a major semiconductor fabrication facility in Essex Junction. Burlington's tech scene includes Dealer.com (now Cox Automotive) and a growing startup community anchored by UVM.
Key Use Cases for Vermont Proxies
Tourism operators monitor competitor pricing for ski resorts, fall foliage lodging, and summer vacation rentals. Craft food and beverage companies track competitor pricing for artisan products, maple syrup, cheese, and craft beer on e-commerce platforms. Real estate monitoring in Vermont's desirable markets — Burlington, Stowe, Woodstock — requires local IPs, especially as remote workers have driven price appreciation. SEO professionals need Burlington IPs for local search results. Agricultural businesses monitor dairy commodity pricing and farm-to-table platform listings. Technology companies track competitor operations in Burlington's growing tech scene.
Coverage and Pricing
Vermont residential proxies cost $4.25-$4.75 per GB with targeting for Burlington, South Burlington, Rutland, and Montpelier. Our pool draws from Comcast, Consolidated Communications, and Burlington Telecom subscriber connections.