[ What's My IP Address ]
Your public IP address, ISP, location, and connection details. Detected instantly via Cloudflare's global network.
Your IP address is the unique identifier your Internet Service Provider (ISP) assigns to your connection. Every device connected to the internet has one, and it is visible to every website and service you access.
There are two types of IP addresses: public and private. Your public IP is what the outside world sees. Private IPs (like 192.168.x.x or 10.x.x.x) are used internally by your router to identify devices on your local network.
IPv4 uses 32-bit dotted decimal addresses (192.168.1.1). IPv6 uses 128-bit hexadecimal addresses (2001:db8::1) and offers vastly more capacity. Most networks run both simultaneously (dual-stack).
Most home connections use dynamic IPs that change periodically. Business connections often use static IPs that remain fixed. Bookmark this page and compare over time.
Your IP address reveals more than you might think. Websites can see your approximate city, your ISP, and whether you are on a residential or commercial connection. This is used for content localization, fraud prevention, and targeted advertising.
However, your IP does not reveal your exact street address or other personal details. Only your ISP can link your IP to your identity. To mask your public IP, use a VPN that routes traffic through another server.
Verify your public IP when setting up port forwarding, remote access, or firewall rules. Confirm your ISP is assigning the correct address.
Check that your VPN is working by confirming your IP shows the VPN server's location instead of your actual one.
Identify your connection type, ASN, and ISP. Useful for verifying that your traffic is routing through the expected network.
> What's my IP address?
> How do I find my IP address?
> Can someone find my location from my IP?
> How do I hide my IP address?
> Why does my IP address change?
> Is my IP address the same on all my devices?
> Do I have IPv6?
// Next Step
[ Know your IP. Now test your speed. ]
Once you have confirmed your IP, run a speed test to see how your ISP is actually performing.