Check your current public IP address and view useful network details such as provider, ASN, hostname, timezone, and approximate location. This tool is designed for quick inspection and troubleshooting of your current connection.
Privacy note: this checks your current visitor IP only. Location and provider details are approximate and not a forensic or reputation analysis.
Public IP
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Provider
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Location
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ASN
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Raw JSON
How to use the IP info tool
Click Detect my IP info to check your current public IP address and load related network metadata. The tool shows details such as your provider, ASN, hostname, timezone, and approximate geographic location when available.
This is useful when you want to verify which public IP your connection is using, check whether your traffic appears to come from a hosting provider or VPN, or quickly confirm basic network details during troubleshooting.
The displayed location and provider data may be approximate, depending on your network, ISP, VPN, proxy, mobile carrier, or upstream IP intelligence source. Use it as a practical diagnostic reference, not as a forensic proof of exact physical location.
Frequently asked questions
This tool displays information about your current public-facing connection.
- Public IP address — the address seen from the internet
- IP version — IPv4 or IPv6
- Provider / ISP — the network operator associated with the IP
- Organization / ASN — the autonomous system and related network owner
- Location — approximate country, region, city, and timezone if available
- Hostname — reverse DNS value when provided
Some environments may also show privacy or network flags such as VPN, proxy, hosting, or relay-related indicators.
A public IP address is the internet-facing address assigned to your connection by your provider or network gateway.
It is the address websites and online services usually see when you connect to them.
This is different from a private IP address such as 192.168.x.x, 10.x.x.x, or 172.16.x.x, which are used only inside local networks.
IP geolocation is based on IP ownership and routing data, not on GPS.
That means the reported city or region may reflect:
- your ISP’s registered network area
- a nearby routing point
- a mobile carrier gateway
- a VPN or proxy exit node
- a hosting provider location
It is useful for troubleshooting and general reference, but it should not be treated as exact physical positioning.
Sometimes, yes.
If the upstream IP intelligence source provides relevant metadata, the tool may show flags related to:
- VPN usage
- proxy usage
- hosting / data center ranges
- relay or Tor-related signals
These indicators are helpful, but they are not guaranteed to be perfect in every case.
Your visible provider may differ from the company name on your home internet bill or mobile subscription.
This can happen when:
- your traffic is routed through another network operator
- your ISP uses upstream transit providers
- you are on mobile data
- you are behind a VPN, proxy, or cloud gateway
- the IP range is registered to a parent or infrastructure company
In short, the displayed provider identifies the network associated with the public IP, which is not always the same branding you expect.
ASN stands for Autonomous System Number.
It identifies a network or group of IP prefixes managed under a common routing policy on the internet.
ASN data is useful for:
- checking whether traffic comes from a residential, mobile, enterprise, or hosting network
- troubleshooting routing or connectivity issues
- understanding which organization controls the IP range
Hostname is usually based on reverse DNS records.
Not every public IP has a reverse DNS entry, and some providers intentionally leave it empty.
So if hostname is missing, that does not automatically mean anything is wrong. It often just means no useful reverse DNS value is published for that IP.
No. This version is designed only for the current visitor’s connection.
It shows the public IP and related metadata associated with your current session context.
Manual lookup for arbitrary IP addresses should stay in a separate dedicated tool.
It is useful for quick diagnostics and visibility, but it is not a full forensic or threat intelligence platform.
It does not perform:
- WHOIS analysis
- blacklist or abuse reputation checks
- deep OSINT enrichment
- traceroute or path diagnostics
Think of it as a clean network visibility tool for fast checks, not a complete investigation suite.
