ASN & Network Route Intelligence
What Network Are You On?
Live ASN, route, and peering data for your exact connection, scanned the moment this page loads.
Understanding Every Signal
What each measurement above actually means, and why it's worth knowing.
Network Route
ASN Number & ASN Owner
Your Autonomous System Number identifies the specific network operator responsible for routing your traffic — almost always your ISP, though sometimes a VPN provider, hosting company, or mobile carrier instead. The owner name is the organization registered against that number.
ASN Type
Classifies what kind of organization operates this ASN — residential ISP, mobile carrier, hosting provider, or proxy/VPN service. This is one of the strongest individual signals for telling apart a normal home connection from a VPN or datacenter route.
Network Tier
Tier 1 networks reach the entire internet without paying for transit. Tier 2 networks are regional providers that both buy and sell transit. Tier 3 networks are local providers that only buy transit and connect directly to end users — most home and mobile connections fall into Tier 2 or 3.
IP Range & Allocation Registry
The IP range is the full block of addresses your specific IP belongs to, as registered with one of the five Regional Internet Registries. The registry shown — ARIN, RIPE NCC, APNIC, LACNIC, or AFRINIC — depends on which world region that block was originally allocated to.
Route Origin & Upstream Provider
Route origin describes how your traffic enters the wider internet — directly through your ISP, or via a mobile network's gateway. Upstream provider is the larger transit network your ISP itself connects through to reach destinations outside its own network.
Estimated Peering Count
An approximate count of how many other networks this ASN exchanges traffic with directly. Higher peering counts generally mean shorter, more efficient routes to popular destinations, since traffic doesn't need to pass through as many intermediate networks.
Announcement Status & BGP Route Status
BGP, the Border Gateway Protocol, is how networks announce which IP ranges they're responsible for. "Announced" and "active" together mean this network's ownership of your IP range is currently visible and accepted across the internet — the normal, healthy state.
Network Health
A composite score reflecting routing stability, peering quality, and tier — not your live connection speed, which is measured separately on the Live Network panel. A lower score here usually points to a smaller or less-connected network rather than an active problem.
Classification Source & Confidence
Shows which data source classified this network and how confident that classification is, so you can judge how much weight to put on the ASN type and tier shown above.
Hosting, Mobile & Proxy Network Flags
Three independent yes/no checks: whether this ASN is a datacenter or hosting provider, whether it's a mobile carrier network, and whether it's flagged as proxy or VPN infrastructure. A network can only really be one of the first two, but the proxy flag can apply alongside either.
Why Your Network Route Matters
It's the foundation everything else builds on
Every other intelligence panel on this site — your identity, VPN detection, live speed — is built on top of the routing data shown here. A datacenter ASN with a proxy flag is often the single strongest signal that a connection isn't a normal residential one, well before any active VPN detection even runs.
It changes when your network changes, not when you do
This data reflects your ISP's infrastructure, not anything personal about you. Switching from Wi-Fi to mobile data, changing ISPs, or connecting through a VPN will all change every value on this page — your device and browser stay completely irrelevant to it.