What Is My IP?

The field below is already filled with your IP address — click "Locate IP" to see the country, state, city, provider and approximate location on the map. You can also enter any other IPv4 or IPv6 address.

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109 Searches performed
106 Searches in the last 24h
33 Unique IPs looked up

Your IP Address

  • Country Flag: Flag: US US
  • Country: United States
  • State: Ohio
  • City: Columbus
  • Provider: Amazon.com (AS16509)
  • Latitude: 39.9587
  • Longitude: -82.9987

Queried IP: 216.73.217.86

Approximate location — accuracy varies by provider.

What is IPSearch?

IPSearch is a free IP address geolocation tool. From an IPv4 or IPv6 address, we identify the approximate region where that address connects to the internet, the provider responsible for the connection and the estimated geographic coordinates.

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Country, state and city

Identification of the approximate region of any public IP, with the country flag.

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Provider and ASN

Find out which carrier or internet provider is responsible for the queried address.

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Interactive map

View the approximate location on a map, with latitude and longitude coordinates.

Simple and direct

No sign-up and nothing to install: type the IP and see the result on the same page.

Frequently asked questions

What is my IP?

It is the address already filled in the search field on this page. Click "Locate IP" to see the result: IPSearch identifies the public IP your device is currently using to connect to the internet, with no sign-up or install required.

Why does my IP change sometimes?

Most internet providers use dynamic IPs, which change periodically or with every new connection. Switching Wi-Fi networks, using mobile data, or restarting your router can also change the public IP shown.

What's the difference between IPv4 and IPv6?

IPv4 uses 32-bit addresses (e.g. 200.147.35.149) and is the most common format, but available addresses are nearly exhausted. IPv6 uses 128-bit addresses (e.g. 2804:14c:87::1) and offers a virtually unlimited supply. IPSearch looks up both.

Does the IP location show my exact address?

No. IP geolocation points to an approximate region — usually the provider's service area — not a person's exact physical address. VPNs, proxies and mobile connections can change the result significantly.