NetDig/IP Lookup

IP Address Lookup

Find your public IP address or look up any IPv4/IPv6 — country, city, region, ISP, ASN, timezone, and coordinates.

Your IP Address
my-ip.sh
Detecting your IP…
ip-lookup.sh
Looking up IP…

What is an IP Address?

An IP (Internet Protocol) address is a unique numerical identifier assigned to every device connected to the internet. IPv4 addresses look like 192.168.1.1 (four numbers from 0–255). IPv6 addresses are longer: 2001:0db8:85a3::8a2e:0370:7334.

Your public IP is assigned by your ISP and is how websites and services identify your network. Your private IP is your device's address on your local network (e.g., 192.168.x.x) and is not visible from outside your router.

What does IP geolocation show?

IP geolocation maps an IP address to an approximate physical location using databases maintained by organizations like RIPE, ARIN, and APNIC. It shows country, city, region, ISP name, ASN (Autonomous System Number), and coordinates. Note: geolocation is approximate — typically accurate to city level, not street level.


Frequently Asked Questions

Your public IP address is displayed automatically at the top of this page. It is the address your ISP assigns to your internet connection. Websites you visit see this address, not your device's local/private IP address.
IPv4 uses 32-bit addresses (about 4.3 billion total), written as four groups of numbers separated by dots (e.g., 8.8.8.8). IPv6 uses 128-bit addresses (340 undecillion total), written as eight groups of hex digits separated by colons. IPv6 was introduced to address the exhaustion of IPv4 addresses.
You can find the ISP and ASN that owns an IP address using our WHOIS lookup. This shows the organization registered to that IP block. You cannot find the specific end-user's identity through public tools — that requires a legal request to the ISP.
IP geolocation databases associate IPs with the ISP's regional hub or data center location, not your exact physical address. If you're using a VPN, mobile data, or a corporate network, the location shown will reflect those networks, not your actual location.