What Is My IP Address? Complete Beginner's Guide
Everything you need to know about IP addresses — how they work, what they reveal, and how to protect your privacy.
Read article →Your public IP address, location, and network details — detected instantly
Complete network information for your current connection
Based on IP geolocation (not GPS-precise). Learn about accuracy →
Enter any public IPv4 or IPv6 address to see its full details.
Learn everything about IP addresses, privacy, and network security
Everything you need to know about IP addresses — how they work, what they reveal, and how to protect your privacy.
Read article →Understand the shift from IPv4 to IPv6 — why it happened, how they differ, and what it means for you.
Read article →VPNs, Tor, proxies, and more — the complete guide to protecting your online identity.
Read article →What hackers can and cannot do with your IP address — and how to protect yourself effectively.
Read article →The truth about IP location accuracy — what it can and cannot tell you, and why your location may appear wrong.
Read article →Common questions about IP addresses and this tool
An IP (Internet Protocol) address is a unique numerical label assigned to every device on a network. It lets devices communicate across the internet. Your public IP is assigned by your ISP and may change when you restart your router.
IP geolocation is typically accurate at the country level (99%+) and city level (50–80%). It is not accurate at the street or building level. VPNs, proxies, and mobile networks can affect the displayed location.
IPv4 uses 32-bit addresses (e.g., 192.168.1.1) supporting about 4.3 billion addresses. IPv6 uses 128-bit addresses supporting 340 undecillion addresses. IPv6 was developed to solve the IPv4 address exhaustion problem.
Yes — every website you visit can see your public IP address. This is how the internet works. Your IP is used to route responses back to your device. Using a VPN or Tor can mask your real IP from websites.
The most common methods: (1) VPN — encrypts your traffic and replaces your IP, (2) Tor network — routes traffic through multiple servers, (3) Proxy server — acts as a middleman. VPNs are the most user-friendly option.
Your device has two IP addresses: a private IP (like 192.168.x.x) used within your home network, and a public IP assigned by your ISP that the internet sees. This tool shows your public IP — the one visible to all websites you visit.