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The address at the top is what every website sees when you connect — assigned by your network or carrier, not your device. People look it up for the practical reasons: configuring remote access, allow-listing themselves on a server, checking whether a VPN is actually on, or reading it out to IT support.
We don't log it, geolocate it, or keep it — the page literally echoes your connection's address back and forgets it. The browser details below come from your own browser locally and are never transmitted.
Frequently asked questions
Why does my IP address keep changing?
Most home and mobile connections use dynamic addresses that the provider rotates — after a router reboot, a lease expiry, or a tower handoff. That's normal; static IPs are usually a paid business feature.
Why do I see IPv6 here but IPv4 on another site?
Your connection likely has both, and each site sees whichever protocol your browser used to reach it. Both are genuinely yours.
Does my IP reveal my exact location?
Roughly, not exactly — geolocation databases typically resolve to a city or region (and are often wrong by miles, sometimes by countries). It identifies your network, not your front door.
How do I hide my IP address?
A VPN replaces your visible address with the VPN server's — reload this page with one connected and you'll see the swap. Tor goes further at the cost of speed.