Ping Web or IP Here

Checks run on this service’s machine (ICMP when available; otherwise TCP reachability). Browsers cannot send ICMP from your own computer.

Ping Any Website or IP Address — Straight From Your Browser

No terminal. No command prompt. No installation. No account needed. Just enter any website URL or IP address and get a full ping response in seconds — completely free, on any device.

No Terminal. No Command Line. No Install.

Most ping tools require you to open a terminal, type commands and know exactly what you are doing. Not here. Whether you are a developer, IT admin or just someone checking if a website is actually down — everything you need is right in your browser. Type a URL or IP address, press ping and you have your answer in seconds.

Check Website Latency in Seconds

Slow website? Server not responding? Check website latency instantly from your browser without opening a single command line window. Get real millisecond response times and see exactly how fast — or slow — any website or server is responding right now.

Find Any Website's IP Address Instantly

Not sure what IP address a website is running on? Enter any URL and instantly discover the server IP address behind it. No DNS lookup tools, no terminal commands, no technical knowledge required. Just type and go.

What Your Ping Results Actually Mean

Every ping response contains detailed network data. Here is exactly what each value tells you about your connection and the server you are testing.

Bytes Received

The size of the data packet returned in the ping reply. Standard ping responses return 32–64 bytes. If bytes received is zero or missing, the server may be blocking ICMP requests or is completely unreachable.

Source IP Address

The IP address the ping reply actually came from. This confirms which server responded to your request and helps identify if traffic is being routed through a proxy, CDN or load balancer rather than the origin server directly.

ICMP Sequence Number (icmp_seq)

Each ping packet is numbered in order. The ICMP sequence number lets you track which packets were received and which were lost. Missing sequence numbers indicate dropped packets and potential network instability between you and the server.

TTL — Time To Live

TTL is the number of network hops remaining before your packet expires and is discarded. A starting TTL of 64 typically indicates a Linux or Mac server. TTL 128 usually means Windows. As the packet travels across the internet each router reduces the TTL by one — so the TTL value you receive tells you roughly how many hops away the server is.

RTT — Round-Trip Time in Milliseconds

Round-trip time is the total time your ping packet took to travel from your browser to the server and back. RTT under 50ms is excellent. 50–150ms is good. 150–300ms is acceptable. Anything over 300ms indicates significant latency that will noticeably affect website load times and user experience.

Works on Any Device — Desktop, Tablet or Mobile

No app to download. No software to install. Our online ping tool runs entirely in your browser and works perfectly on desktop, laptop, tablet and mobile. Test website latency and server response time from anywhere, on any device, any time — completely free.

Built for Developers, IT Teams and Everyday Users

Our browser-based ping tool was built for everyone who needs fast network diagnostics without the complexity of a terminal.

Developers

Quickly test server response times, verify IP addresses and check latency across different environments without switching out of your browser or opening a command line.

Network and IT Administrators

Run fast ping tests from any device on your network. Check server availability, measure round-trip time, analyze TTL hops and diagnose latency issues in seconds without installing diagnostic software.

Everyday Users

Not technical? No problem. If a website seems slow or unreachable, just type the URL and press ping. You will instantly know whether the problem is the website itself or your own connection — no terminal, no jargon, no confusion.

Why Use a Browser Ping Tool Instead of Terminal

Terminal ping is powerful but not always practical. You may be on a locked-down work computer, a mobile device, a Chromebook or simply not want to switch windows. A browser-based ping tool gives you identical diagnostic data with zero friction — no commands to remember, no permissions required, no setup at all. Just open, type and ping.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I ping a website without using terminal or command prompt?

Yes. Simply enter any website URL or IP address into our online ping tool and get a full ping response instantly — no terminal, command prompt or technical knowledge required.

What does TTL mean in a ping result?

TTL stands for Time To Live. It is the number of network hops remaining before your packet is discarded. It also helps identify the operating system of the server you are pinging — Linux servers typically start at TTL 64 while Windows servers start at TTL 128.

What is a good RTT ping time?

RTT under 50ms is excellent. 50–150ms is good for most web applications. 150–300ms is acceptable. Above 300ms indicates high latency that will affect website performance and user experience.

Why is my ping showing no response or request timed out?

A timed out ping usually means the server is blocking ICMP requests, a firewall is filtering the packets, the website is down, or the IP address does not exist or is unreachable from your location.

Is this ping tool completely free?

Yes. Our online ping tool is 100% free to use with no account, no signup and no software installation required. Works on any device from any browser.

Can I use this tool on my phone or tablet?

Yes. The tool works on all devices including iPhone, Android, iPad and any mobile browser. No app download needed.

Start Pinging — Free, Instant, No Terminal Required

Enter any website URL or IP address above and get your full ping response in seconds. Check latency, discover IP addresses, analyze TTL and RTT — all from your browser, all completely free.