SEOWebsiteTool

SEO UTILITIES

Domain to IP Address Lookup — Resolve a Domain

Resolve any domain name to its IP address. Look up the A and AAAA records a domain points to and see where it actually lives on the internet.

Every domain name is really just a friendly label for a numeric address. This tool does the translation your browser performs silently on every visit: it asks the DNS system which IP a domain currently points to and shows you the answer — the IPv4 from its A record, and the IPv6 from its AAAA record when one exists.

It's a quick sanity check before a migration, when debugging a deployment, or to confirm a DNS change has taken effect.

How to use it

  1. Type the domain name to resolve (no http:// needed).
  2. Run the lookup to query its DNS records.
  3. Read the returned IP address and copy it if you need it.

Frequently asked questions

Why does a domain return more than one IP address?
Large sites often list several A records so traffic spreads across multiple servers, or they sit behind a CDN that answers with a different edge IP depending on your location. Seeing several addresses — or a different one than a colleague sees — is normal.
The IP I get doesn't match the real server — why?
If the site uses a CDN or proxy such as Cloudflare, the address you resolve belongs to that network's edge, not the origin server behind it. Hiding the origin IP that way is deliberate.
I just changed my DNS and still see the old IP.
DNS answers are cached for the period set by the record's TTL. Until that window passes, resolvers keep serving the previous address, so a change can take anywhere from minutes to a day or more to appear everywhere.
Can I resolve a subdomain too?
Yes. A subdomain like blog.example.com has its own records and can point to a completely different IP than the root domain, so enter the exact hostname you care about.

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