How to Run Grass Extension Across Multiple Accounts: A Complete Setup & Strategy Guide

Grass is a bandwidth-sharing project that lets users earn Grass Points by contributing unused network capacity, which can later be redeemed for $GRASS tokens in airdrops. If you’re looking to maximize your returns, running multiple accounts is the next logical step—but it requires careful planning. Below is a comprehensive guide to implementing a multi-account setup while staying within Grass’s official guidelines and managing your costs effectively.

Before You Start: Core Requirements & Detection Systems

The fundamental challenge with running multiple accounts is that Grass actively monitors for duplicate IP addresses and device fingerprints. Here’s what you need to know:

Each account generates earnings based on three factors: Uptime (how long you stay online), Network Quality (the stability and speed of your connection), and Bandwidth Contribution (the actual data you’re sharing). Since single-account earnings hit a ceiling relatively quickly, many users expand to multiple accounts—but the system treats this as a potential abuse vector.

The critical rule from Grass Foundation: multiple accounts are permitted, but they must run from genuinely different networks and devices. If the system detects multiple accounts originating from the same IP or using the same device fingerprint, your points can be invalidated and accounts suspended. This is non-negotiable.

Four Implementation Routes: From Beginner to Advanced

The method you choose depends on your budget, technical comfort level, and growth targets. Let’s break down each path:

Route 1: Physical Devices & Separate Networks—The Safest Route

Who this suits: Complete beginners; users who want zero risk; people with multiple devices already

This is the most straightforward approach: use different computers, phones, or tablets, each connected to its own internet source.

What you need:

  • Multiple physical devices (PC, laptop, old smartphone, tablet, etc.)
  • Independent network connections (home WiFi for one device, mobile hotspot for another, borrowed WiFi with permission, mobile data for a phone)

Implementation steps:

  1. Install the Grass browser extension via Chrome on each device (or use Desktop Node on Windows/Mac)
  2. Create separate Grass accounts using different email addresses
  3. Connect each device to a different network—this is mandatory
  4. Log in and leave the Grass extension running 24/7
  5. Monitor your dashboard regularly to ensure points are accumulating normally

Advantages: Officially endorsed; completely safe from detection; simple execution; no technical skills required

Disadvantages: Expensive initial setup (each device + network = high cost); doesn’t scale well beyond 2-3 accounts without significant investment; slower growth trajectory

Cost estimate: $300-800 upfront per device setup, depending on equipment quality


Route 2: Virtual Machines + Proxy IPs—The Cost-Effective Path

Who this suits: Tech-savvy users; people willing to invest monthly; those ready for 5-10+ accounts

This approach lets you run multiple virtual operating systems on a single computer, each with its own proxy IP address masking.

What you need:

  • One mid-to-high performance computer
  • VM software (VMware or VirtualBox—both free or low-cost)
  • Residential proxy service ($5-20/month per IP from providers like Luminati, 922Proxy, Oxylabs)
  • Multiple unique email addresses

Implementation steps:

  1. Install your VM software and create multiple virtual machines (allocate 2GB RAM + 1-2 CPU cores per VM)
  2. Inside each VM, install Chrome and add the Grass extension
  3. Configure a different residential proxy IP for each VM (use format: socks5://username:password@ip:port)
  4. Register new Grass accounts and log into each VM’s extension
  5. Run all VMs simultaneously, keeping extensions active

Why residential proxies matter: Grass can detect and penalize data center IPs as low-quality. Residential IPs (from actual home networks) appear legitimate and maintain your earning potential.

Advantages: Single computer runs many accounts; much cheaper per account than Route 1; highly scalable (10+ accounts feasible); semi-passive once set up

Disadvantages: Requires technical knowledge (proxy configuration, VM management); ongoing monthly proxy costs ($50-200+ depending on number of accounts); proxy quality fluctuations can reduce earnings; higher risk of detection if proxies are poor quality

Cost estimate: $5-10 per month per account (proxy only); computer hardware already owned


Route 3: Mobile Solution—Android + Grass Extension on Kiwi Browser

Who this suits: Casual users; those with Android devices; people wanting to test without major investment

Kiwi Browser is unique because it’s one of the few Android browsers that support Chrome extensions, including Grass.

What you need:

  • Android phone or tablet
  • Kiwi Browser (free download from Google Play or APK sites)
  • Either: multiple proxy IPs, or multiple SIM cards with mobile data plans

Implementation steps:

  1. Download Kiwi Browser on your Android device
  2. Install the Grass extension within Kiwi
  3. Switch networks between account sessions (either by switching proxy IPs or swapping SIM cards)
  4. Create separate Kiwi profiles for each Grass account
  5. Log in, run, and accumulate points

Two network-switching strategies:

  • Option A (Proxy-based): Buy multiple proxy IPs and manually log into each one before switching accounts
  • Option B (SIM-based): Insert different SIM cards; each one provides a different mobile IP address

Advantages: Simple mobile operation; works on existing smartphone; Option B (SIM cards) requires no monthly proxy fees; good entry point

Disadvantages: Requires manual network switching each session (not set-and-forget); phone performance limits how many accounts you can run simultaneously; manual overhead is high

Cost estimate: Minimal if using SIM cards ($20-50/month for additional mobile data); $5-10/month if using proxies


Route 4: Automation at Scale—VPS & Scripts for Power Users

Who this suits: Experienced users; people running 10+ accounts; those comfortable with Linux/coding

This route uses a rented virtual server and automation scripts to manage many accounts with minimal manual intervention.

What you need:

  • Linux VPS rental (Ubuntu recommended; $5-15/month from Contabo, Linode, or DigitalOcean)
  • Grass automation script (community-maintained on GitHub, like ‘getgrass_bot’)
  • Multiple proxy IP sets (same as Route 2)
  • Basic Linux command knowledge

Implementation steps:

  1. Rent a VPS and connect via SSH terminal
  2. Install Chrome and necessary dependencies on the server
  3. Download the community Grass script (e.g., from @ymmmmmmmm on GitHub)
  4. Extract your _user_id for each account (found in Grass dashboard developer console)
  5. Edit the script to include multiple user IDs and corresponding proxy configurations
  6. Execute the script—it runs all accounts in the background automatically

What _user_id is: A unique identifier for each Grass account (found by logging into app.getgrass.io, pressing F12, and running a simple command in the console)

Advantages: Fully automated; best for large-scale operations (20+ accounts); minimal ongoing management; cost-efficient at scale; runs 24/7 without user intervention

Disadvantages: Highest technical barrier; requires Linux/scripting knowledge; VPS + proxy costs add up ($50-100+/month); highest risk if misconfigured; script updates from community mean potential maintenance needs

Cost estimate: $10-15/month for VPS + $50-150/month for multiple proxy sets


Critical Rules & Security Checkpoints

Before deploying any multi-account setup, internalize these non-negotiables:

Official policy status (verify at @getgrass_io):

  • ✅ Multiple accounts on different devices/networks: Allowed
  • ✅ Using proxies and VMs: Allowed
  • ❌ Multiple accounts on the same IP: Account suspension
  • ❌ Using data center IPs (cheap/free VPNs): Flagged as low-quality; points reduced or canceled

Network quality rules:

  • Always use residential proxies, never data center IPs or free VPNs
  • Maintain consistent uptime (the more continuous your connection, the better)
  • Avoid VPNs that rotate IPs frequently—stability matters

Cost-benefit reality check: Before scaling up, calculate:

  • Total monthly costs (devices + proxies + VPS) = $X
  • Expected Grass Points per account = Y
  • Future value of $GRASS token = Z (unknown)
  • Your equation: (Total accounts × Y × Z) > X ?

If $GRASS remains low-value or your costs exceed realistic future returns, you’re operating at a loss.

Account security & privacy:

  • Use unique, strong passwords for each account
  • Never share real personal information across accounts
  • Keep all credentials in an encrypted password manager
  • Check local laws regarding proxy usage and VPN compliance
  • Protect your device/server against malware

Monitoring your health:

  • Log into app.getgrass.io weekly to verify points are accumulating normally
  • Check the Network Quality score for each account
  • If any account suddenly shows 0 points or “offline” status, investigate immediately
  • Keep an eye on official Grass announcements for policy changes

Maximizing Returns: Strategic Best Practices

Once your setup is running, these tactics compound your earnings:

The 20% invitation bonus: Each account can invite new users to Grass. When a referred user signs up, you get a 20% bonus on their earned points. This multiplies quickly with multiple accounts—account A invites user 1, account B invites user 2, etc.

Progressive scaling: Don’t launch 10 accounts simultaneously. Start with 2-3 and let them run for a week. Verify that points accumulate, no accounts get flagged, and your setup is stable. Then gradually add more.

Network optimization: Higher network quality = higher earnings. Upgrade to premium residential proxies if you notice quality drops. Monitor your ISP’s speeds and consider switching to fiber if available.

Community intelligence: Join Grass Discord and Reddit communities. Users share script updates, proxy provider recommendations, and early warnings about policy changes. This is your early warning system.

Dashboard hygiene: Check app.getgrass.io daily for the first week, then weekly after. Look for red flags: sudden offline status, zero points, or “suspicious activity” warnings.


Setup Walkthrough: Real Configuration Example

Let’s walk through a concrete 3-account setup using Route 2 (VMs + proxies). This is a realistic scenario for most people:

Prerequisites:

  • One laptop with 12GB+ RAM and 256GB storage
  • VirtualBox installed (free)
  • 3 residential proxy IPs purchased from a provider
  • 3 unique email addresses ready

Sample proxy IPs (fictional):

This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
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