What's My IP Address?

Browser-based IP lookup from the Constant Labs Utility Suite. No account, no sign-up.

Part of the Constant Labs Utility Suite. Built by Anthony Constant.

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IP details for this connection

These values are resolved in your browser using public IP and geolocation services.

IPv4: Detecting...


IPv6: Detecting...


Location: Detecting...


ISP: Detecting...

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What this IP data represents

Approximate location

IP-based lookups can usually resolve to your city or region and time zone. The result is approximate and depends on how your ISP allocates addresses.

Network provider

Your IP is mapped to the organisation that owns the address range, typically your ISP, hosting provider or corporate network.

Request and logging context

Websites and APIs can use IP information for rate limiting, security, regional controls and analytics. This tool shows you the same high-level data many services see.

Constant Labs Tactical Kit v2.0

Tactical Kit v2.0 is the offline operations layer for the Constant Labs Utility Suite. It is version-controlled, digitally signed and designed for controlled environments where internet access is limited or audited.

Every release is SHA-256 validated and documented for reproducible workflows.

Download Tactical Kit v2.0 View add-ons catalogue
Access earlier Tactical Kit versions

Tactical Kit v1.x builds and pre-release documentation remain available through the Constant Labs Portal for teams that still operate those baselines.

Open Constant Labs Portal

IP address FAQs

Short, practical answers about IP data and how it is used online.

An IP address (Internet Protocol address) is a numeric identifier assigned to your device or network interface. It allows other systems on the internet to route traffic to and from you.

Not directly. Typical lookups return a city or region and sometimes your ISP’s point of presence. Mapping that to a precise address usually requires data from your ISP and, in most jurisdictions, legal authorisation.

You can route traffic through a VPN, proxy or Tor. These relay your requests through other endpoints so websites see the relay IP rather than the one assigned to your device.

Many residential connections use dynamic IPs that change periodically or when the router reconnects. Static IPs are fixed and normally require a specific configuration or service from your provider.

IPv4 uses 32-bit addresses such as 192.0.2.1. IPv6 uses 128-bit addresses, like 2001:0db8::1, providing a much larger address space and additional protocol features.

IP data is used for routing, session security, abuse detection, rate limiting, regional restrictions and high-level analytics. Most modern services treat IPs as part of their security and observability stack.