One of the most common fears on the internet is that someone can find your exact home address from your IP address. TV shows and movies make it look like hackers can type in an IP and instantly pull up your street address on a map. This is a myth.
But your IP does reveal some location information. Let's look at exactly what it shows — and what it doesn't. Try it yourself: visit CheckWhatIsMyIP.com and see what location appears for your IP.
What Your IP Address DOES Reveal
- Country: 95-99% accurate — almost always correct
- State/Region: 80-90% accurate — usually correct but can be wrong for mobile and satellite users
- City: 50-80% accurate — often correct for urban areas, frequently wrong for rural areas
- ISP name: Very accurate — correctly identifies your internet provider
- Connection type: Residential, business, mobile, or datacenter
- Timezone: Derived from the estimated location
What Your IP Address Does NOT Reveal
- ❌ Your street address — IP geolocation cannot determine your home address
- ❌ Your name — IPs are assigned to ISPs, not individuals
- ❌ Your exact GPS coordinates — the coordinates shown are approximate (often the center of your city)
- ❌ Your phone number or email — no connection between IP and personal contact info
- ❌ Your identity — an IP alone cannot identify a specific person
How IP Geolocation Actually Works
When you see a location mapped to your IP, it comes from geolocation databases maintained by companies like MaxMind and IP2Location. These databases estimate your location by:
- ISP registration records: Where your ISP registered its IP blocks with regional internet registries (ARIN, RIPE, APNIC)
- Network infrastructure: Physical locations of ISP routers and data centers your traffic passes through
- Crowdsourced data: Anonymous location data from users who have consented to share
- BGP routing analysis: Technical analysis of how IP address blocks are routed across the internet
The result is an educated guess — not a precise location. The coordinates shown on a map typically point to the center of a city or the location of an ISP facility, not your actual home.
Real-World Accuracy Examples
- Urban broadband user: IP shows correct city, but coordinates point to the ISP's local hub — often miles from your actual address
- Rural user: IP may show the nearest city with ISP infrastructure — possibly 50+ miles away
- Mobile user: IP often shows the carrier's regional hub — could be a different state entirely
- Satellite user (Starlink): IP shows the ground station location — potentially hundreds of miles away
- VPN user: IP shows the VPN server's location — could be any country
Can Law Enforcement Find You From an IP?
Yes — but not directly through geolocation databases. Law enforcement can subpoena your ISP with a court order to identify which customer was assigned a specific IP at a specific time. Your ISP has your real name and address on file from your service agreement. The IP geolocation databases used by websites are not what law enforcement uses.
How to Hide Your IP Location
If you want to prevent websites from seeing your approximate location through your IP:
- Use a VPN: NordVPN replaces your IP with a server IP in any country you choose
- Use Tor: Routes through multiple nodes, making IP tracking extremely difficult
- Use a proxy: Acts as an intermediary, showing the proxy's IP instead of yours
After connecting, verify at CheckWhatIsMyIP.com that your real location is hidden, then run our VPN Leak Test to confirm there are no leaks.