IP address lookup retrieves geographic location and network details for any IPv4 address, IPv6 address, domain name, or full URL. Leave the input blank and query to see your own current public IP. The page also runs an automatic lookup on load.
What each result field means
- Country / country code: Geographic location of the IP's registered address — e.g. United States / US
- ISP: The internet service provider — e.g. Comcast, Deutsche Telekom
- Organization: The registered entity that owns the IP block, often the same as ISP but can differ for corporate allocations
- ASN: Autonomous System Number — the routing identifier for the network block, e.g. AS15169
- ASN organization: The entity that holds the ASN — useful for identifying cloud providers, CDNs, or residential ISPs
- Coordinates: Approximate latitude/longitude of the IP's registered location, typically city-level precision
- Continent code: Two-letter code — AS (Asia), EU (Europe), NA (North America), etc.
- Timezone / UTC offset: e.g. America/New_York, UTC-5
Supported input formats
IP address formats
- IPv4: e.g.
8.8.8.8 - IPv6: e.g.
2001:4860:4860::8888
Domain and URL formats
- Domain: e.g.
google.com - Full URL: e.g.
https://www.example.com(domain is extracted automatically)
What ASN tells you beyond basic geolocation
The ASN and ASN organization fields let you identify the nature of the network, not just its country. A well-known cloud provider ASN (e.g. AS16509 for AWS, AS13335 for Cloudflare) means the IP belongs to a hosted service rather than a residential or corporate user. This distinction is valuable in security analysis and traffic attribution.
Accuracy limitations
IP geolocation data is city-level at best. Corporate leased lines, VPNs, proxies, and Tor exit nodes routinely show locations that differ significantly from the actual physical location. Query results should be treated as approximate reference data, not as precise location evidence.