How to Hide Your IP Address (Free & Paid Methods)

Hiding your IP address stops websites and networks from seeing your real connection endpoint. The most reliable options are a VPN, proxy or Tor. In this guide you’ll compare methods, learn how to prevent DNS and WebRTC leaks, and pick the right setup for streaming, work or travel — then verify everything with MyIPScan tools.

What “hiding your IP” really means

When you hide your IP, sites see a different public address — the VPN’s exit server, a proxy, or a Tor relay — instead of your provider-assigned IP. Your private (LAN) IPs stay inside your network. Note that Incognito mode does not change your IP; it only clears local history and cookies.

Methods compared

MethodHides IP?EncryptionSpeedStreamingP2PCostSetup
VPN✅ Yes✅ YesFast–MediumOften worksOften allowed (check ToS)Paid (some free)Easy (apps)
HTTPS Proxy✅ Per app✅ App→ProxyFastSometimesVariesFree/PaidMedium
SOCKS Proxy✅ Per app❌ NoFastSometimesOften usedFree/PaidMedium
Tor Browser✅ Yes✅ Multi-hopSlow–MediumUnreliableDiscouragedFreeEasy (browser)
Mobile Hotspot✅ Changes IP✅ TLS onlyMediumOften okVariesData planEasy
Public Wi‑Fi✅ Different IP✅ TLS onlyMediumVariesVariesFreeEasy

Note: DNS-over-HTTPS/DoH improves privacy of DNS lookups but does not hide your public IP from websites.

Step‑by‑step: set up & verify

  1. Pick a method based on your goal (privacy, streaming, remote work).
  2. Install & connect (VPN app, proxy in your browser/app, or Tor Browser).
  3. Check your IP on What is My IP — confirm the address and city changed.
  4. Run leak tests: WebRTC (browser IP leaks) and DNS Lookup (resolver leaks).
  5. Harden the browser: limit third‑party cookies, consider anti‑fingerprinting, separate profiles for work/personal.

Prevent common leaks

Choosing the right option

Privacy first: Tor or a reputable VPN. Streaming: VPN with servers in your target region. Remote work: VPN that supports your company’s protocols. Quick change of IP: mobile hotspot or different network.

Is hiding your IP legal?

In most countries, using a VPN, proxy or Tor is legal for privacy and security. Do not use these tools to violate terms of service or laws.


Test now: see your current public IP on What is My IP, then verify WebRTC and DNS to ensure there are no leaks.