What Is My IP
Find your current public IP address, location, ISP and connection details instantly.
| Country | United States |
| Region | Ohio |
| City | Columbus |
| Postcode | 43215 |
| Timezone | America/New_York |
| ISP | Amazon.com |
| Organisation | Anthropic, PBC |
| ASN | AS16509 Amazon.com, Inc. |
| Coordinates | 39.9587, -82.9987 |
About Your IP Address
Your IP (Internet Protocol) address is the unique identifier assigned to your device by your Internet Service Provider (ISP). It is visible to every website you visit and every server you connect to. This tool shows your current public IP address — the address that appears to the outside world — along with geolocation metadata derived from that address.
Public IP vs private IP
- Public IP — Assigned by your ISP, visible on the internet. All devices on your home or office network typically share a single public IP via NAT (Network Address Translation).
- Private IP — Your device's local address within your network (e.g. 192.168.1.x, 10.x.x.x). Not visible on the internet. Assigned by your router via DHCP.
IPv4 vs IPv6
IPv4 addresses are 32-bit numbers written as four octets (e.g. 203.0.113.42). The world has largely run out of IPv4 addresses, which is why IPv6 was created — 128-bit addresses written in hexadecimal groups (e.g. 2001:db8::1). Many ISPs now assign IPv6 addresses, and you may see either or both depending on your connection and the website you visit.
Dynamic vs static IP
Most residential ISP connections use dynamic IPs — the address can change when your router reconnects. Static IPs remain fixed and are typically required for hosting servers, using IP-whitelisted services, or remote access without a VPN. Businesses usually have static IPs; residential customers typically have dynamic.