Look up any IP address and get detailed geolocation data including country, city, ISP, and map.
Locating IP address…
IP Lookup & Geolocation shows the approximate geographic location, ISP, timezone, and network information for any public IP address — including yours, which is auto-detected on page load. It also flags whether the IP belongs to a VPN, proxy, or hosting provider.
Instantly find the geographic location, ISP, and network details of any IP address. Our IP Lookup tool provides comprehensive geolocation data including country, city, region, timezone, coordinates, ISP/ASN info, and more. Perfect for network diagnostics, cybersecurity investigations, and understanding your digital footprint.
Your IP is auto-detected on page load, displaying your full geolocation details.
Enter any IPv4 or IPv6 address in the search bar to look up a different IP.
View comprehensive results including city, region, ISP, timezone, and coordinates.
Check the interactive map for a visual representation of the IP's physical location.
Geolocation data is retrieved from public IP address databases through a trusted third-party API. Location data is approximate at the country and city level — it cannot pinpoint exact street addresses. ISP and ASN information is sourced from regional internet registries. Results are cached for 60 seconds to optimize performance.
IP geolocation maps an IP address to a geographic location. It uses public databases to determine the approximate city, region, and country associated with that IP. It is not precise to street-level but provides reliable country and city-level information.
IP geolocation is typically 95-99% accurate at the country level and 55-80% accurate at the city level. Accuracy varies by region and ISP. Results are estimates and should not be used for legal or emergency purposes.
No. IP geolocation provides approximate geographic data (city/region level), not exact street addresses. It cannot identify an individual person or their precise physical location.
Yes. Every website you visit can see your public IP address. That's how the internet works — your IP is needed to send data back to your device. Tools like this one show you what information is publicly available from your IP.
ISP stands for Internet Service Provider. This is the company that provides your internet connection, such as Comcast, AT&T, or Verizon. The ISP field shows which provider owns the IP address block.
Yes, using a VPN (Virtual Private Network) or proxy service hides your real IP and shows the VPN/proxy server's IP instead. Our tool will indicate if an IP belongs to a known proxy, VPN, or hosting provider.