My IP address
This is the public IP address your internet connection is presenting to every website right now.
Details for this address
What does "my IP address" actually mean?
An IP address (Internet Protocol address) is the identifier your network uses to communicate on the internet. There are two kinds that matter to you:
- Public IP — assigned by your internet service provider and visible to every site you visit. That's the one shown above.
- Private IP — used inside your home or office network (e.g.
192.168.1.10). It never leaves your router and can't be seen from this page.
IPv4 vs IPv6
The original IPv4 format (four numbers, e.g. 203.0.113.24) provides about 4.3 billion addresses — not enough for today's internet. IPv6 (eight hexadecimal groups, e.g. 2001:db8::8a2e:370:7334) effectively removes that limit. Many connections now have both; the version above tells you which one reached us. Learn more in our guide to IPv4 vs IPv6 privacy.
What your IP reveals — and what it doesn't
From your IP alone, a website can reasonably estimate your country, region and ISP, and apply geo-based rules. It cannot read your name, browsing history on other sites, or your precise location. To see the bigger fingerprint a browser exposes, try the fingerprint test.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I find my IP address?
You're looking at it — the address at the top of this page is your current public IP. On your device you can also find your local IP in network settings, but that's different from the public one websites see.
Why does my IP address keep changing?
Most ISPs hand out dynamic IPs that rotate periodically or when you restart your router. Mobile networks and VPNs change it too. A fixed address requires a static IP from your provider.
Is it safe to share my IP address?
Your IP is exposed to every site you visit by design, so seeing it isn't dangerous. Avoid posting it publicly alongside other identifying details, and use a VPN if you want to mask it.
Make sure nothing is leaking your real IP
A VPN can be undone by a single WebRTC leak. Test yours in two seconds.
Run WebRTC Leak Test