Find My IP Address
Instantly discover your public IP address along with your timezone, browser, and connection details. Copy your IP to clipboard with a single click.
Your IP is fetched securely and never stored or logged
Your IP Address
How to Find Your IP Address
Visit This Page
Your public IP address is detected automatically when you load this page. No buttons to click -- it appears instantly.
View Your Details
See your IPv4 address displayed prominently, along with your timezone, browser, platform, screen resolution, and connection type.
Copy to Clipboard
Click the Copy IP button to copy your IP address to your clipboard. Use it for network configuration, remote access setup, or troubleshooting.
How IP Address Detection Works
Your Device β ISP β Public IP β Website ServerEvery device that connects to the internet is assigned a public IP address by its Internet Service Provider (ISP). This address is visible to every server you connect to and is how responses are routed back to your device.
1. Your browser makes a request to an external API2. The API server sees your public IP in the request headers3. The server responds with your IP address4. This page displays it along with local browser infoKey things to understand about your IP address:
- Public vs. Private -- Your public IP is assigned by your ISP and is visible to the internet. Your private IP (e.g., 192.168.x.x) is used within your local network only.
- Dynamic vs. Static -- Most home connections use dynamic IPs that change periodically. Businesses often pay for static IPs that remain constant.
- VPN and Proxy -- If you use a VPN or proxy, the IP shown here will be the VPN/proxy server IP, not your actual ISP-assigned address.
- IPv4 vs. IPv6 -- This tool shows your IPv4 address. IPv6 addresses are longer and look different (e.g., 2001:db8::1).
The browser information shown (timezone, screen resolution, etc.) is read locally from your browser using standard JavaScript APIs and is never sent to any server.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an IP address?
An IP (Internet Protocol) address is a unique numerical label assigned to every device connected to a network. It serves two main purposes: identifying your device on the network and providing your location address for routing internet traffic. Think of it like a postal address for your computer.
What is the difference between IPv4 and IPv6?
IPv4 addresses use 32 bits and look like 192.168.1.1 (four groups of numbers separated by dots). IPv6 addresses use 128 bits and look like 2001:0db8:85a3::8a2e:0370:7334. IPv6 was created because the world was running out of IPv4 addresses. Most websites and ISPs now support both formats.
Can someone find my exact location from my IP address?
No. An IP address can reveal your approximate geographic region (city or area), your ISP, and your country, but it cannot pinpoint your exact street address or building. The timezone shown on this page is based on your browser settings, not your IP. For precise location, websites need explicit permission through the Geolocation API.
Why does my IP address change?
Most home internet connections use dynamic IP addresses, which means your ISP assigns a new IP address periodically (often every 24 hours or when your router restarts). If you use a VPN, your visible IP address will show the VPN server location instead. Businesses often use static (unchanging) IP addresses.
Is this tool safe to use?
Yes. This tool fetches your public IP address from a trusted third-party API (ipify.org) and displays it in your browser. No data is stored, logged, or shared. The browser information shown (timezone, screen resolution, etc.) is read locally from your browser and never transmitted anywhere.
Privacy Notice
Your IP address is fetched from ipify.org, a trusted public API, and displayed only in your browser. We do not store, log, or transmit your IP address or any other information. Browser details (timezone, screen resolution, platform) are read locally using standard JavaScript APIs and never leave your device. If you are using a VPN, the IP shown will reflect the VPN server, not your actual location.