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Find IP Geolocation InfoLocation · ISP · Timezone

Detect your public IP address and look up geolocation, ISP, timezone, and network details for any IP instantly.

Leave empty and reload to detect your own IP automatically.

Why Use Our IP Lookup

Instant geolocation intelligence

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Auto-Detection

Automatically discovers and displays your public IP address

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Geolocation

City, region, country, and precise geographic coordinates

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ISP Details

Internet Service Provider and organization information

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Timezone Data

UTC offset and timezone identification for any IP address

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Custom Lookup

Enter any IPv4 or IPv6 address to investigate its details

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VPN Check

Verify your VPN connection is properly masking your real location

Complete Guide: How to Use the IP Address Lookup

Find detailed geolocation information for any IP address — including country, city, ISP, organization, time zone, and coordinates. Our tool also detects your own public IP address automatically. Useful for network troubleshooting, security analysis, and understanding where internet traffic originates.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. 1

    Enter an IP address (or use yours)

    Type any IPv4 or IPv6 address to look up, or leave the field empty to automatically detect and show your own public IP address.

  2. 2

    View geolocation data

    See the country, region, city, postal code, latitude/longitude, and time zone associated with the IP address.

  3. 3

    Check network information

    View the ISP (Internet Service Provider), organization name, AS number (Autonomous System), and connection type.

  4. 4

    Copy or share results

    Copy individual fields or the full result. Useful for sharing with network administrators or including in support tickets.

Common Use Cases

  • Security — identify the geographic origin of suspicious login attempts or attack traffic
  • Compliance — verify that services are accessed from authorized countries or regions
  • Troubleshooting — determine which ISP or data center an IP belongs to
  • Content delivery — check which CDN edge node is serving your traffic
  • VPN verification — confirm your VPN is showing the expected exit location
  • Analytics — understand the geographic distribution of your website visitors

Pro Tips

💡IP geolocation is accurate to the city level about 70-80% of the time. It's not precise enough to identify a street address.
💡VPN and proxy users will show the IP of their provider, not their actual location.
💡Private IP ranges (10.x.x.x, 172.16-31.x.x, 192.168.x.x) are not publicly routable and can't be geolocated.
💡IPv6 adoption is growing — make sure your infrastructure supports both IPv4 and IPv6 lookups.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is an IP address?

An IP (Internet Protocol) address is a unique numerical label assigned to every device connected to a network. It serves two purposes: identifying the host or network interface and providing the location of the device in the network. Think of it as a mailing address for your device on the internet.

What is the difference between IPv4 and IPv6?

IPv4 addresses use 32 bits and are written as four numbers separated by dots (e.g. 192.168.1.1), allowing about 4.3 billion unique addresses. IPv6 uses 128 bits written in hexadecimal groups (e.g. 2001:0db8::1), supporting a virtually unlimited number of addresses. IPv6 was created to solve the shortage of IPv4 addresses.

How does IP geolocation work?

IP geolocation maps an IP address to a real-world geographic location using large databases maintained by Regional Internet Registries and ISPs. These databases associate IP ranges with countries, cities, and coordinates. The accuracy varies — country-level is usually very accurate, while city-level may be approximate.

Can someone find my exact location from my IP address?

No. IP geolocation typically reveals your approximate city or region, not your exact street address. Only your Internet Service Provider (ISP) can map your IP to a precise physical address, and they are legally required to protect that information. Using a VPN or proxy will further mask your real location.

Why does my IP address change?

Most residential internet connections use dynamic IP addresses assigned by your ISP via DHCP. Your IP can change when you restart your router, after a lease period expires, or when you connect from a different network. Businesses often use static IPs that don't change. Using a VPN will also show a different IP address.