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Parsera · Excel Guide

Fetch the Parsera Proxy Country List Into an Excel workbook

2026-05-14
5 min read

The Scenario

You're a competitive intelligence analyst and your team is scoping a price comparison project across 15 markets. Before anyone writes a line of scraping code, you need to know which countries Parsera supports for proxy routing — because if six of your target markets aren't covered, the whole project scope changes. Your manager asked for a reference workbook by tomorrow morning. You need the supported country list in a worksheet, clean and usable.

The bad version:

  • Go to the Parsera documentation, find the proxy configuration section, scroll through the list of supported countries
  • Start typing country names and codes into the workbook manually — Albania, AL, Algeria, DZ, Argentina, AR…
  • Get halfway through and lose your place because someone pings you on Slack
  • Come back, try to figure out where you left off, finish the list, and then wonder if you missed any entries

This is a reference list that exists in a structured source. Transcribing it by hand is the kind of work that should be automated, and the only reason it isn't is that nobody has set up the automation yet.

The Easy Way: One Prompt in SheetXAI

SheetXAI is an AI agent that lives inside your Excel workbook. Through its Parsera integration, it can fetch the full proxy country list and write it into your workbook — country names and codes — without you touching the documentation.

Fetch the Parsera proxy country list and paste it into the 'Proxy Regions' sheet so I can check which markets are covered before starting my scraping project

What You Get

  • Column A fills with country names (e.g., "United States", "Germany", "Brazil")
  • Column B fills with the corresponding country codes (e.g., "US", "DE", "BR")
  • The list is complete — no missing entries from losing your place mid-copy

What If the Data Is Not Quite Ready

You want the list sorted alphabetically before sharing

Fetch the Parsera proxy country list with country name and code, paste it into the 'Proxy Regions' worksheet, and sort the rows alphabetically by country name

You need to cross-reference the proxy list against your target markets

Get all available Parsera proxy countries and list them in the 'Proxy Regions' worksheet. Then in the 'Markets' worksheet, for each country in column A, check whether it appears in the Parsera proxy list and write "supported" or "not supported" in column B

You want to flag the target markets that aren't covered

Fetch the Parsera proxy country list and write it into the 'Proxy Regions' worksheet. Then look at the 15 countries listed in the 'Target Markets' worksheet and for each one, flag any that are not in the Parsera proxy list in column C

Fetch the list, check coverage, and summarize the gaps in one pass

Get all available Parsera proxy countries and write them into the 'Proxy Regions' worksheet. Then look at the 15 countries in the 'Target Markets' worksheet and for each one, note in column C whether Parsera supports it. Write a summary in cell A18 counting how many target markets are covered and how many are not

The consistent pattern: fetch and analysis in a single ask instead of two separate manual operations.

Try It

Get the 7-day free trial of SheetXAI and open any Excel workbook where you're planning geo-targeted scraping work. Ask SheetXAI to pull the Parsera proxy country list into a reference worksheet before you scope the project. For related tasks, see how to import the Parsera LLM specs catalogue for model comparison or list all your Parsera agents.

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