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What Is My Location

How to Find My Current Address

To find your current address, allow a location tool to access your device's GPS, then use reverse geocoding to translate the latitude and longitude into a street address. Most browsers can do this in one click.

Permission-based · Private

Find Your Location

Your browser will ask for permission before sharing your location. We don't need to store your location to show it on this page.

Step by step

  1. Open a browser that supports the Geolocation API (any modern browser will work).
  2. Visit a location tool that performs reverse geocoding (this site does).
  3. Allow location permission when prompted.
  4. The tool sends your GPS coordinates to a reverse geocoding service, which returns the street address.
  5. Copy or share the address as needed.

Common problems

  • Permission was denied — see how to enable
  • Page is on HTTP — only HTTPS sites can request location
  • Location Services are off in device settings
  • Indoor or rural areas have weaker GPS signal

Frequently Asked Questions

What is my location?
Your location is the place where your device is currently detected using browser location permission, GPS, Wi-Fi, cellular, or network signals. This site shows it as both coordinates and a readable address.
Can this website see my location automatically?
No. Your browser asks for permission before sharing precise location with the website. If you decline, only an approximate IP-based region is available.
Is this free?
Yes. Every tool on this site is free and requires no account.
Do you store my coordinates?
We don't store your precise coordinates. Reverse geocoding uses a server proxy that truncates coordinates to roughly 100-meter precision before any logging.

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