What Is My IP Address?
Your IP address (Internet Protocol address) is a unique numerical label assigned to your device by your Internet Service Provider (ISP). It identifies your device on the internet and reveals information such as your approximate geolocation, ISP, and network.
This tool detects both your IPv4 and IPv6 addresses simultaneously. IPv4 is the traditional 32-bit format (e.g., 203.0.113.1), while IPv6 is the newer 128-bit format designed to address the exhaustion of IPv4 space.
Using a VPN or proxy? Your displayed IP will reflect the VPN server's address instead of your real one. Use our DNS Test tab to check for DNS or WebRTC leaks that could expose your true IP even while connected to a VPN.
About This Speed Test
This tool measures the Time To First Byte (TTFB) from your browser to each popular website. A low latency (under 200 ms) generally indicates a fast, unblocked connection to that site.
High latency or a timeout may indicate the site is blocked or throttled in your region, or your VPN is routing traffic through a distant server. This is useful for quickly checking which sites are accessible from your location.
DNS Leak Test
When you use a VPN, your DNS queries should go through the VPN's DNS servers β not your ISP's. A DNS leak occurs when DNS queries bypass the VPN tunnel and reveal your real location to your ISP or a third party.
WebRTC Leak Test
Browsers use WebRTC (for video calls, P2P, etc.) and can expose your real IP address even when connected to a VPN, because WebRTC communicates directly with STUN servers, bypassing the VPN tunnel.
What Are DNS & WebRTC Leaks?
A DNS leak means your device is using DNS servers outside your VPN tunnel, potentially allowing your ISP or government to monitor your browsing. A WebRTC leak exposes your real IP via the browser's peer-to-peer networking APIs.
If you see your ISP's DNS servers or your home IP in these results while connected to a VPN, your VPN has a leak. Consider switching to a VPN that explicitly prevents DNS and WebRTC leaks, or disable WebRTC in your browser settings.