IP & Website Lookup
Look up any IP address or domain to find geolocation, ISP, and network details
Supports IP addresses (IPv4/IPv6) and domain names (e.g. example.com, reddit.com)
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What is an IP & Website Lookup?
An IP lookup reveals geographic and network information associated with an IP address or domain name. Every device connected to the internet has an IP address-either IPv4 (like 192.168.1.1) or the newer IPv6. When you look up a domain name, the tool resolves it to its hosting IP and displays the server location, ISP, and network details.
How to Use
- Enter an IP address (e.g. 8.8.8.8) or a domain name (e.g. google.com) in the input field.
- Click "Lookup" to query the geolocation database, or "My IP" to see your own public IP info.
- Review the results including country, region, city, ISP, timezone, and coordinates.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I look up a website's hosting location?
Yes. Enter any domain name (without https://) and the tool will resolve it to its server IP and show where that server is located. This tells you where the website is hosted, not where the owner lives. For example, entering "netflix.com" might show servers in the US, while a small business site might resolve to a data center in Germany. Keep in mind that sites using CDNs like Cloudflare may show the CDN's location rather than the origin server.
How accurate is IP geolocation?
Country-level accuracy is typically 95-99%. City-level accuracy drops to 50-80% depending on the ISP and region. IP geolocation identifies the general area where the ISP routes that IP block, not an exact street address. Rural areas tend to have less accurate geolocation since IP blocks are often registered to the nearest urban center. Mobile IPs are particularly imprecise because carriers route traffic through regional hubs that may be hundreds of miles from the user.
Can someone find my exact location from my IP?
No. An IP address typically resolves to your ISP's routing center, which may be in a different city. Only your ISP can map your IP to your physical address, and they require a legal order to share that. Using a VPN masks your IP entirely by routing your traffic through a server in another location. Similarly, Tor routes through multiple relays to make tracing nearly impossible, though at the cost of significantly slower speeds.
