Your country and city
IP geolocation is accurate at city level in most cases. That's how sites filter their content by region.
Here's everything the sites you visit can see: your public IP address, your approximate location, your internet provider. If you're connected to monVPN, the VPN server's data shows up — not yours.
Detected on the fly. No data is retained.
A plain public IP leaks more information than you'd expect.
IP geolocation is accurate at city level in most cases. That's how sites filter their content by region.
BT, Comcast, Orange, Telstra… your operator's name (and AS number) is public. On mobile, it's the 4G/5G carrier that shows up.
Cross-referenced with cookies or browser fingerprinting, your IP becomes an identifier that can follow you from one site to another.
An IP address (Internet Protocol) is the numerical identifier assigned to each device connected to the internet. Without it, you can't send or receive data: it's the equivalent of a phone number for your connection.
In IPv4 it's written as four numbers between 0 and 255 (for example 192.0.2.42). In IPv6 it's longer but the principle is the same. Your internet provider assigns one to you on every connection.
Two people can't simultaneously use the same public IP — unless they go through the same network (home Wi-Fi, carrier-grade NAT, shared VPN).
Three minutes is all it takes to make your real IP disappear.
Monthly, quarterly, yearly or two-year. Seven days to change your mind, no questions asked.
Available on Windows, Mac, Linux, iOS, Android, smart TVs and Fire Stick. One-click connection.
40 countries available. Come back to this page and hit Ctrl+F5: your IP has changed.
An IP address (Internet Protocol) is the numerical identifier assigned to each device connected to the internet. In IPv4 it takes the form of four numbers between 0 and 255 separated by dots (for example 87.229.53.50). In IPv6 it's much longer. Your internet provider assigns one to you on every connection; the sites you visit can see it and use it to roughly locate you.
The easiest way is to use a VPN. Once you're connected, your traffic goes through a remote server: sites see that server's IP, not yours. With monVPN you can pick from 40 countries and switch as many times as you need, at no extra cost.
Browsers often cache the IP test page. Force a full reload with Ctrl+F5 (or Cmd+Shift+R on Mac), or click the "Refresh" button at the top of the page. If the displayed IP still matches your internet provider, the VPN connection isn't active: open the monVPN app and check that the status reads Connected.
A public IP alone won't reveal your civil identity, but it's enough to determine your region, your internet provider and to cross-reference your activity from one site to another. Combined with cookies or browsing history, it becomes a fairly precise identifier. That's why a VPN is recommended to limit this tracking.
Seven days to make sure monVPN works for you. Full refund, no questions asked.