Intosoft Tools

IP Address Checker

Check your public IP address and network information.

Detecting your IP address...

User Agent

Node.js/24

Language

en-US

Platform

Linux x86_64

Cookies Enabled

No

IP geolocation is approximate and may not reflect your exact location.

Instant Results
100% Private
No Installation
Free by Intosoft

What is My IP Address?

Check your public IP address instantly. See your IPv4 and IPv6 address, location, ISP, and network information. Free online IP checker.

How It Works

When you visit this page, our tool detects your public IP address from the incoming connection. It then looks up geolocation data, ISP information, and other network details associated with your IP.

Common Use Cases

  • Quickly finding your public IP address for remote access or firewall configuration
  • Checking if your VPN is working correctly by verifying the displayed IP
  • Sharing your IP address with IT support for troubleshooting network issues
  • Seeing your approximate geolocation based on your IP address

Frequently Asked Questions

An IP (Internet Protocol) address is a unique numerical label assigned to every device connected to the internet. It is used to identify and communicate with your device.

IPv4 uses 32-bit addresses (like 192.168.1.1), while IPv6 uses 128-bit addresses (like 2001:0db8::1) to support the growing number of internet devices.

No, an IP address typically only provides approximate geolocation (city level). It cannot pinpoint your exact street address.

Public IPs are globally unique and visible on the internet. Private IPs (like 192.168.x.x, 10.x.x.x) are used within local networks and are not directly accessible from the internet.

Yes, using a VPN (Virtual Private Network) or proxy server masks your real IP address. The websites you visit see the VPN/proxy's IP instead of yours.

Most ISPs assign dynamic IP addresses that change periodically. When your router reconnects, you may get a new IP. Static IPs are available for an additional fee from most ISPs.

IPv6 uses 128-bit addresses (like 2001:0db8:85a3::8a2e:0370:7334) to support the growing number of internet devices. IPv4's 4.3 billion addresses are nearly exhausted.