Live network utility
Look up the approximate location and network owner behind a public IP address or domain. The report compares provider data, shows ASN and ISP details, explains accuracy limits, and gives you a cleaner way to document suspicious logins, VPN exits, hosting IPs or customer support cases.
What IP geolocation is good at
IP geolocation connects an internet address to a likely country, region, city, network owner and time zone. It is useful when you need context: a login appears from a country you do not expect, a VPN exit node needs to be checked, a server IP looks suspicious, or a customer says your site is showing the wrong region. The result is not magic. It is built from public routing data, internet registries, provider records and commercial databases.
For everyday technical work, that context is valuable. An ASN can tell you whether an IP belongs to an internet provider, a cloud platform, a CDN, a university, a company network or a mobile carrier. The city can help spot a routing mismatch. The time zone can explain why logs and user reports do not line up. But none of those fields should be treated as exact physical location.
How to use this lookup responsibly
- Use country, ASN and ISP as stronger signals than street-level assumptions.
- Expect VPN, proxy, cloud and mobile connections to look different from the person using them.
- Compare provider data when the result matters, because geolocation databases can disagree.
- Do not use IP location alone for identity, billing, bans or sensitive security decisions.
- Store only what you need in logs and reports, especially when sharing screenshots.
Why the same IP can show different locations
IP ranges move between providers, companies announce routes from different places, VPNs use shared exit nodes, and mobile carriers often route many people through a small number of gateways. Some databases update faster than others. That is why one provider can show a city while another only shows a region, or why a corporate connection appears near a headquarters instead of the user.
Useful troubleshooting examples
If a user cannot access an admin panel protected by an allowlist, check the visible public IP and ASN before changing the firewall. If analytics show traffic from the wrong country, test whether a CDN, proxy or VPN is involved. If a login looks risky, combine IP geolocation with device history, account behavior and authentication logs instead of judging from location alone.
Common questions
Can this find the exact address of an IP?
No. A lookup can suggest an approximate network location, usually city or regional level. It cannot provide a home address or exact GPS position.
Can I lookup a private IP?
Private IPs such as 192.168.x.x, 10.x.x.x and 172.16-31.x.x are local network addresses. They are not routed on the public internet, so a public geolocation lookup cannot locate them.
Why does a cloud IP show a different city?
Cloud and CDN networks route traffic through large infrastructure blocks. The database may show the registered network, the data center, the routing region or a broad corporate location.
How accurate is IP geolocation?
Usually accurate to the country and often the city or region, but rarely to a street address. It maps the ISP allocation, not your GPS position, so VPNs and mobile carriers can shift it far from your real location.
Why does my IP show the wrong city?
Geolocation databases map the block to where the ISP registered it or routes it, which can be a regional hub. Mobile and CGNAT addresses are especially imprecise.
Can I geolocate any IP or domain?
You can look up any public IP, and a domain by resolving it to its IP first. Private and reserved ranges have no meaningful geolocation.













