What's My IP
See your public IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, geolocation (country, city, ISP), browser user agent, screen resolution, timezone, and more — all in one place.
IP geolocation is approximate. Powered by ipapi.co.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is my IP address accurate?
The IP shown is your public IP address as seen by the internet — the address assigned by your ISP. If you use a VPN, proxy, or Tor, the IP shown is that of the exit node, not your real IP. Mobile data uses carrier IP addresses.
Why is the geolocation wrong?
IP geolocation is approximate. ISPs allocate blocks of IPs to regions, and geolocation databases map those blocks. Accuracy varies: country is usually correct (99%+), city is often off by 50-100+ miles, and some IPs show the ISP's headquarters rather than your location.
What is the difference between IPv4 and IPv6?
IPv4 uses 32-bit addresses (e.g. 192.168.1.1) supporting ~4.3 billion addresses. IPv6 uses 128-bit addresses (e.g. 2001:db8::1) supporting 340 undecillion addresses. IPv6 is the newer standard being adopted as IPv4 addresses run out. If your ISP supports IPv6, both addresses are shown.
What does the Connection tab show?
The Connection tab uses the Network Information API (Chromium browsers only) to show your effective connection type (4G, 3G, etc.), estimated download speed, and round-trip latency. Firefox and Safari do not support this API.