Your public addresses

IPv4
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IPv6
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Location

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Country
City

IPv4 and IPv6 are detected separately. The IPv6 row is always shown; if no public IPv6 is available, it displays “Not detected.” Location cards appear when a lookup succeeds. On secure (HTTPS) pages, one estimate may be unavailable because some geo endpoints are not reachable over HTTPS in the browser. Approximate geo data; VPNs and mobile networks may differ.

Frequently asked questions

What is my public IP address?

Your public IP is the address the internet sees when you go online. This page shows it using external lookup services so you can copy your IPv4; the IPv6 row always shows your public IPv6 or “Not detected” when none is available.

Does this page show IPv6?

The IPv6 row is always visible. When your connection has a public IPv6 address and the check succeeds, your address appears there. If the row shows “Not detected,” your ISP or network may not provide public IPv6, or the request may have failed.

Is it safe to share my IP address?

For most people, sharing a public IP for support, gaming, or troubleshooting is normal—it does not give others your passwords. It can suggest approximate region and ISP. To share your IP address, use Copy on this page and paste the text. More detail: share IP address safely (step-by-step) and is it safe to share my IP address? (risks explained) — also covers is it safe to share your IP address and is it safe to share an IP address in plain English.

Where do ISP, country, and city come from?

They come from third-party geolocation databases queried in your browser. Results are approximate, not exact street locations. VPNs and mobile data can show a different region.

Is my IP stored on this site?

This is a static page: it runs in your browser and talks to public APIs. This project does not include a server that saves your IP; third-party services have their own privacy policies.