What Is My IP

Your public IP address, plus what your browser quietly reveals about you.

This is the fastest way to answer what is my IP: your public IPv4 address in big, copyable text, plus everything your browser quietly hands over, your operating system and browser, language, time zone and screen size. It's the page you open to give your IP to support, to check whether a VPN actually changed it, or to see what a website sees when you show up. Your address is shown to you and never logged.

Queries run through the PacketNebula lookup service. We log nothing.

Your public IP address
checking...

Your browser

Browser
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Operating system
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Languages
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Cookies
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Do Not Track
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Screen & locale

Time zone
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Screen
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Window
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Pixel ratio
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Connection
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Your address is shown to you and never logged. The browser details are read locally.

What your IP does and does not say about you

Your public IP is how the internet routes replies back to you, so every site you visit sees it. It roughly points to your ISP and your region, not your street. People mostly land here for three reasons: to hand their address to a support tech, to confirm a VPN actually changed it, or to check what a service sees when they connect. The big number up top is that address, ready to copy.

The browser details matter too

The two panels show what any website reads from your browser without asking: your operating system and browser version, your languages, your time zone, your screen size. None of it is secret, and together it forms part of a fingerprint that trackers use to recognize you even without cookies. Worth seeing once, honestly, just to know how much leaks by default. Our HTTP headers checker shows the other side of that conversation, what a server sends back.

Frequently asked questions

How does this page know my IP address?

When your browser loads the page it makes a request, and the server on the other end sees the source address of that request, which is your public IP. We read it and send it straight back to you. We do not store it. You can confirm in your browser network tab that the only call is the one that fetches your own address.

Is this my public IP or my local one?

Public. It is the address the rest of the internet sees, assigned by your ISP or carrier. Your local IP (the 192.168.x.x or 10.x.x.x your router hands out) is private and never leaves your network, so a website cannot see it directly.

Why is my IP different here than on another site or device?

Plenty of normal reasons: a VPN or proxy is rewriting it, you switched between WiFi and mobile data, your ISP rotates addresses, or you are behind carrier-grade NAT sharing one public IP with many subscribers. If you turned on a VPN and the address here did not change, your VPN is not actually routing your traffic.

Why do you not show my IPv6 address?

This site is reached over IPv4, so your browser connected over IPv4 and that is the address the server sees. If your connection also has IPv6, other tools that publish an AAAA record can show it. For most purposes the IPv4 address shown here is the one you need.

How do I hide or change my IP?

Route your traffic through something that terminates the connection for you: a VPN, an HTTP or SOCKS proxy, or Tor. The site then sees that intermediary address instead of yours. Come back here with it on to confirm the change actually took effect.