Tip: Press Ctrl+Enter to refresh
IP geolocation is approximate. VPN or proxy users will see the VPN server's location.
Your IP address is the unique identifier assigned to your device on the internet. This tool fetches your current public IPv4/IPv6 address along with geolocation details like city, region, country, ISP (Internet Service Provider), and timezone. Data is retrieved in real-time from ipinfo.io — no data is stored by ToolsKit.
Tip: Press Ctrl+Enter to refresh
IP geolocation is approximate. VPN or proxy users will see the VPN server's location.
This tool detects your current public IP address and looks up its associated metadata via ipinfo.io: ISP name, ASN, approximate city, region, country, postal code, coordinates, and timezone. The lookup happens automatically when the page loads — just open it and your IP is there. You can also look up any other IP address by entering it manually and refreshing. Nothing is stored by ToolsKit. The data comes directly from the geolocation API to your browser.
ec2-xx-xx-xx-xx.compute-1.amazonaws.com).Country-level accuracy is very high — over 95% for most databases. City-level is much rougher, typically 50–80% accurate. ISPs register IP blocks from a central office, so the reported city is often where your ISP's regional hub is, not where you physically are. If the tool shows a city that's not yours, that's normal — it's showing where your ISP's address block is registered.
No. Private addresses (10.x.x.x, 172.16–31.x.x, 192.168.x.x) only exist inside your local network — they're never sent to external servers. This tool shows your public IP: the address your router uses when communicating with the internet, assigned by your ISP. Your private IP stays invisible to the outside world.
A few common reasons: mobile carriers often pool traffic through a central city regardless of where you are; corporate VPNs route traffic through office locations; consumer VPN users see the VPN server's location. The geolocation is based on where the IP block is registered, not GPS — so a mismatch is expected, especially on mobile networks.
The tool currently auto-detects the IP of the device making the request. To look up a different IP, use the DNS Lookup or WHOIS tools — or enter an IP directly into the lookup API. You can also check our blog post on how IP geolocation works for more context on what these fields mean and where their limits are.
Want the full explanation? Read the guide: What Your IP Address Actually Reveals (And What It Doesn't) →