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Is Your VPN Actually Protecting You?
Run a full leak test across your IP address, DNS resolvers, and WebRTC in seconds. See exactly what websites can see about you.
What This Test Checks
IP Address Leak
Your public IP is fetched from a third-party API and compared against known VPN/proxy ranges. If your real IP is exposed, sites can identify you and your location.
DNS Leak
DNS queries reveal which servers resolve your domain lookups. A DNS leak means your ISP’s servers are used instead of your VPN’s — exposing every site you visit to your ISP.
WebRTC Leak
Browsers use WebRTC for peer-to-peer features. This can expose your local and public IP addresses directly — bypassing your VPN entirely without your knowledge.
IPv6 Leak
Most VPNs only tunnel IPv4 traffic. If your connection has IPv6, your real address may leak through unprotected IPv6 channels while IPv4 appears masked.
What To Do If You’re Leaking
A DNS or IP leak means your VPN is misconfigured or fundamentally flawed. Switch to a VPN with built-in DNS leak protection and a kill switch. For WebRTC leaks, disable WebRTC in your browser settings or use a browser extension that blocks WebRTC. For IPv6, either disable IPv6 at the OS level or choose a VPN that provides full IPv6 tunneling.