IP Location Hub
Advanced public geolocation & connection assessment dashboard
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Input public IPs or domain hostnames (one per line, comma, or space separated). Maximum 50 items per check.
| Target Query | Country | City | ISP / Provider | ASN | Risk Index | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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No results populated. Enter IPs to check. |
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Measures the real-time Round Trip Time (RTT) from your browser terminal to core public servers and local backend resources.
This list shows the IP coordinates logged during your active browser session. Data is cached locally and is never sent back to any tracking server.
Understanding IP Geolocation & Network Metrics
Welcome to the Master Blaster IP Geolocation Hub—your premium, comprehensive dashboard for identifying geographical locations, tracing network routing nodes, and assessing security parameters for any public IP address or domain name. Whether you are troubleshooting network latency, verifying autonomous system ownership, or checking for VPN usage, our free diagnostic tool delivers high-fidelity telemetry metrics instantly.
How does IP Geolocation work?
Every device connected to the internet is assigned a unique IP address (either IPv4 or IPv6). Geolocation mapping aggregates network distribution data from global registries (ARIN, RIPE, APNIC, LACNIC, and AFRINIC) and major Internet Service Providers (ISPs). This allows mapping services to associate an IP block with physical coordinates, country, region, city, and zip code metrics.
What is Autonomous System (ASN) Routing?
An Autonomous System (AS) is a collection of IP routing prefixes managed by a single network operator (like hosting providers, commercial ISPs, or large tech networks). Each AS is assigned a unique Autonomous System Number (ASN), which directs BGP routing paths across the backbone of the internet. Our tool displays the ASN and its registered name, allowing you to trace the exact administrative network responsible for host traffic.
What is a VPN, Proxy, or Tor Connection?
Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) and proxies encrypt or redirect traffic to mask a client's real IP and location. Tor relays bounce encrypted traffic through multiple nodes globally. Identifying these proxy variables is critical for fraud prevention, server access controls, and network security auditing. We query updated threat registers to assign a risk score from 0 to 100%.
Why does Reverse DNS (rDNS) Matter?
While standard DNS (Domain Name System) translates a hostname into an IP address, Reverse DNS (rDNS) does the exact opposite—resolving an IP address back to its associated hostname (using a PTR pointer record). Reverse DNS validation is a crucial step in spam prevention, tracing email server domains, and checking network diagnostics.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
How accurate is IP Geolocation data?
At the country level, accuracy is above 99%. For states/provinces, it ranges between 80% to 90%, and for cities, accuracy is generally 50% to 80% depending on the provider and internet connection type. IP Geolocation is designed to determine general regional coordinates and is not capable of identifying exact street-level or building addresses.
Can I find a person's physical location using their IP?
No. Geolocation databases match IP address blocks to ISPs, routing hubs, and regional nodes, not residential buildings or individual coordinates. Only an Internet Service Provider (ISP), usually acting under a legal subpoena, possesses the logs necessary to map an IP address to a specific billing address.
What is the difference between IPv4 and IPv6?
IPv4 addresses are 32-bit numerical labels formatted in four octets (e.g., 8.8.8.8) which provide roughly 4.3 billion unique combinations. IPv6 is the modern standard, utilizing 128-bit hexadecimal strings (e.g., 2001:4860:4860::8888) to generate an practically infinite quantity of unique IP addresses, meeting the demands of the modern Internet of Things (IoT).
Why does my location show a different city?
Your ISP dynamic IP routing may route your connection through a central network hub or gateway server situated in a neighboring city or state. Consequently, mapping databases associate your dynamic IP address with that primary hub rather than your immediate physical city.