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What's My IP Address?

Instantly detect your public IP address, geolocation, ISP, and network details

Features

Everything you need to know about your connection

Instant IP Detection

Your public IP address is detected automatically the moment you visit this page. No forms or buttons needed.

IPv4 & IPv6 Support

Detects and displays both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses when available, so you know exactly how you are connecting.

Geolocation Data

See your approximate city, region, country, postal code, and geographic coordinates based on your IP.

ISP Identification

Identifies your Internet Service Provider and autonomous system number (ASN) for network diagnostics.

How It Works

Three simple steps

1

Visit This Page

Simply open this page in your browser. No input or configuration is required.

2

IP Is Detected Automatically

Your public IP address is read from the connection headers and looked up instantly.

3

View Your Details

See your IP address along with location, ISP, timezone, and other network information.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about IP addresses

Your IP address is a unique numerical label assigned to your device by your Internet Service Provider (ISP). It identifies your device on the internet and allows websites and services to send data back to you. Think of it as your device's return address on the internet.

IPv4 addresses use a 32-bit format (e.g., 192.168.1.1) and support about 4.3 billion unique addresses. IPv6 addresses use a 128-bit format (e.g., 2001:0db8::1) and support a virtually unlimited number of addresses. IPv6 was created because the world is running out of IPv4 addresses.

Yes. Every time you visit a website, your IP address is sent as part of the connection request. This is how the website knows where to send the response. Websites can use your IP to estimate your general location, but it does not reveal your exact physical address.

You can mask your IP address by using a VPN (Virtual Private Network), a proxy server, or the Tor network. These services route your traffic through their own servers, so websites see the intermediary's IP address instead of yours.

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