Country IP data
Every country in the IPLogs catalog with regional context, dominant residential ISPs, and known commercial VPN providers. Pick a country to see the IP-detection context used when a visitor geolocates to it.
North America (5)
Offshore financial centre. Digicel and ONE Communications dominate residential.
OVH Canada (Beauharnois) and AWS ca-central-1 host commercial VPN endpoints. Five Eyes membership limits privacy appeal.
Small market. Tele Greenland is the dominant ISP.
Telmex (AS8151) dominates residential traffic. Limited local VPN exit infrastructure; most Mexico-facing VPN traffic uses US-hosted exits.
Largest commercial VPN market globally. Major hosting ASNs include AWS (AS16509), Google (AS15169), Microsoft (AS8075), DigitalOcean (AS14061), and Vultr (AS20473). Heavy VPN exit presence in US-East (Virginia) and US-West (California).
South America (13)
Telefónica and Claro Argentina dominate residential traffic. Buenos Aires hosts most local VPN infrastructure.
Entel Bolivia and Tigo dominate residential traffic.
Largest Latin American market. AS10429 (TIM), AS7738 (Telemar/Oi), AS8167 (Vivo) dominate residential traffic. VPN exits concentrated in São Paulo datacenters.
Entel Chile and Telefónica Chile dominate residential traffic.
Claro Colombia (AS10620) and Tigo dominate residential traffic.
CNT and Claro dominate residential traffic.
Sure South Atlantic is the primary ISP.
GTT and Digicel dominate residential / mobile.
Tigo Paraguay and Copaco dominate residential.
Telefónica del Perú and Claro dominate residential traffic.
Telesur and Digicel dominate.
Antel (state-owned) dominates residential.
CANTV is the dominant state-owned residential ISP. VPN use common for circumvention; exit infrastructure almost entirely offshore.
Central America (7)
Belize Telemedia (BTL) and Smart dominate. Small market.
Small market. ICE and Cabletica dominate residential traffic. Limited datacenter VPN infrastructure.
Tigo and Claro dominate residential traffic.
Claro and Tigo dominate residential traffic. No major local VPN exit infrastructure.
Claro and Tigo dominate residential. Limited local hosting presence.
Claro and Tigo dominate. Small market, limited VPN hosting.
Legal domicile of NordVPN (registered ASN AS212238). Actual exit infrastructure is distributed globally.
Europe (51)
ALBtelecom and Vodafone Albania dominate residential.
Andorra Telecom (state monopoly) is the sole ISP.
A1 Telekom dominates residential traffic. Vienna hosts several commercial VPN exit points.
Beltelecom state-run ISP dominates. Sporadic internet restrictions during political events.
Proximus and Telenet Group dominate residential traffic.
BH Telecom, Mtel and HT Eronet dominate residential.
Vivacom and A1 Bulgaria dominate residential traffic. Sofia hosts regional VPN exits.
Hrvatski Telekom dominates residential traffic.
Cyta and Primetel dominate residential. Offshore VPN hosting popular.
O2 Czech Republic and T-Mobile CZ dominate residential. CDN77 (AS60068) is a notable local CDN operator.
TDC Group and Stofa dominate residential traffic. Moderate datacenter VPN presence.
Telia Estonia and Elisa dominate residential traffic. Digital-first government drives above-average tech ecosystem.
Faroese Telecom dominates residential.
Elisa and DNA Oyj dominate residential traffic. Helsinki is a minor VPN exit hub.
OVH (AS16276) is a dominant budget host. Paris and Roubaix data centers host a large fraction of user-operated VPN endpoints.
European VPN hub. Hetzner (AS24940) and OVH-Germany host a large share of budget VPN endpoints. Strong data-protection rulings make Germany attractive to privacy-focused providers.
Gibtelecom and GibFibre dominate. Notable IVPN-related jurisdiction.
OTE (Cosmote) dominates residential traffic.
Sure Guernsey and JT Guernsey dominate.
Magyar Telekom and Telenor Hungary dominate residential traffic.
FlokiNET (AS63018) offers offshore privacy-focused hosting. Síminn dominates residential traffic.
AWS eu-west-1 (Dublin) and Azure North Europe host large cloud-VPN footprints. Eircom/Vodafone dominate residential.
Manx Telecom and Sure dominate.
Telecom Italia (TIM, AS3269) and Fastweb dominate residential traffic. Milan is the primary Italian datacenter hub.
Jersey Telecom and Airtel-Vodafone dominate.
IPKO and Kujtesa dominate residential.
Lattelecom dominates residential traffic.
Telecom Liechtenstein dominates. Small market.
Telia Lietuva dominates residential traffic.
POST Luxembourg dominates residential. Notable privacy-focused datacenter presence.
Melita and GO dominate residential.
Orange Moldova and Moldtelecom dominate. Trabia Network (AS9902) hosts significant commercial VPN infrastructure.
Monaco Telecom dominates. Small market.
Crnogorski Telekom dominates residential.
Amsterdam AMS-IX is the largest European exchange. Leaseweb (AS60781, AS28573) hosts extensive VPN and residential-proxy infrastructure.
Makedonski Telekom and A1 Makedonija dominate.
Telenor and Telia dominate residential traffic. Growing privacy-focused hosting footprint due to favorable legal environment.
Orange Polska and T-Mobile Polska dominate residential traffic. Warsaw hosts growing datacenter VPN presence.
MEO (Altice Portugal) and NOS dominate residential traffic.
Bucharest datacenters host cheap VPN endpoints. RCS & RDS (Digi) is the dominant residential ISP.
TSPU DPI filtering (AS8997 Rostelecom, AS12389 MTS, AS25513 MegaFon, AS42610 Beeline) affects traffic patterns. VPN endpoints hosted in Russia are rare for privacy reasons; most Russian-facing VPN traffic originates abroad.
TIM San Marino dominates. Small market.
Telekom Srbija and Yettel dominate residential traffic.
Slovak Telekom (Deutsche Telekom) and Orange Slovakia dominate.
Telekom Slovenije dominates residential traffic.
Telefónica Spain (AS3352) and Orange España dominate residential traffic. Madrid datacenters host significant VPN infrastructure.
Headquarters of Mullvad VPN (AS397397). Strong privacy legal tradition attracts additional privacy-focused VPN infrastructure.
ProtonVPN home jurisdiction (AS209103). Strong data-protection law and outside EU/US legal reach. Popular for privacy-critical VPN exits.
Kyivstar, Ukrtelecom and Volia dominate residential. Extensive international bandwidth and low-cost datacenters historically made Ukraine a mid-tier VPN hosting market.
Major commercial VPN exit point for EU-facing traffic. London is the highest-density region. Post-Brexit regulatory regime diverges from EU data law.
Traffic routed through Italian operators.
Middle East (14)
Batelco, stc Bahrain and Zain Bahrain dominate.
Heavy state-level filtering (NIN, SIAM). ArvanCloud and Asiatech dominate domestic hosting. Iranian IPs rarely host legitimate commercial VPN exits.
Earthlink, Newroz and Asiacell dominate. Regional volatility affects routing.
Bezeq and Cellcom dominate residential traffic. Tel Aviv datacenters host cloud workloads.
Orange Jordan and Zain dominate residential traffic.
Zain Kuwait, Ooredoo and stc Kuwait dominate residential traffic.
Ogero state-run ISP dominates fixed lines; Touch and Alfa are mobile carriers.
Omantel and Ooredoo Oman dominate.
Paltel dominates fixed-line. Jawwal and Ooredoo are mobile carriers.
Ooredoo Qatar and Vodafone Qatar dominate residential traffic.
STC, Mobily and Zain KSA dominate residential traffic. Content filtering at the ISP edge.
Syrian Telecom (state-owned) dominates. Sanctioned jurisdiction, limited international connectivity.
Etisalat and du dominate residential traffic. Commercial VPN use is nominally restricted.
YemenNet (state-owned) dominates. Fractured connectivity due to ongoing conflict.
Africa (54)
Algérie Télécom dominates fixed-line. Djezzy and Mobilis are mobile carriers.
Angola Telecom, Unitel and Movicel dominate.
Moov Benin and MTN Benin dominate.
BTC, Mascom and Orange Botswana dominate.
Orange Burkina Faso and Onatel dominate.
Econet Leo and Onatel dominate.
Orange Cameroon, MTN Cameroon and Camtel dominate.
CV Telecom and Unitel T+ dominate.
Orange Centrafrique and Telecel are dominant.
Airtel Chad and Moov Chad dominate.
Telco Comores and Comores Télécom dominate.
Orange Côte d'Ivoire and MTN Côte d'Ivoire dominate.
Vodacom Congo, Airtel DRC and Orange RDC dominate.
Djibouti Telecom dominates. Strategic Horn of Africa landing station.
TE Data (Telecom Egypt) and Vodafone Egypt dominate residential traffic.
GETESA and Muni dominate.
EriTel (state-owned monopoly) is the sole ISP.
MTN Eswatini and Eswatini Post dominate.
Ethio Telecom (formerly state monopoly) still dominates; Safaricom Ethiopia launched 2022.
Gabon Telecom and Airtel Gabon dominate.
Africell and Gamtel dominate.
MTN Ghana and Vodafone Ghana dominate residential traffic.
MTN Guinea and Orange Guinea dominate.
MTN Guinea-Bissau and Orange Guinea-Bissau dominate.
Safaricom dominates mobile + fixed. Liquid Intelligent Technologies on enterprise.
Econet Telecom Lesotho and Vodacom Lesotho dominate.
MTN Liberia (Lonestar) and Orange Liberia dominate.
LTT (Libya Telecom & Technology) state-owned dominates. Fragmented connectivity.
Telma, Orange Madagascar and Airtel dominate.
Airtel Malawi and TNM dominate.
Orange Mali and Malitel dominate.
Mattel, Chinguitel and Mauritel dominate.
Mauritius Telecom dominates residential. Offshore financial centre; some privacy-focused hosting.
Maroc Telecom and Orange Maroc dominate residential traffic.
Movitel, Vodacom Mozambique and Tmcel dominate.
MTC, Telecom Namibia and Paratus dominate.
Airtel Niger, Moov Niger and Orange Niger dominate.
MTN Nigeria, Airtel Nigeria and Globacom dominate mobile; Spectranet on fiber.
MTN Congo and Airtel Congo dominate.
MTN Rwanda and Airtel Rwanda dominate.
CST and Unitel STP dominate. Small market.
Orange Sénégal (Sonatel) and Free Sénégal dominate.
Cable & Wireless Seychelles and Airtel Seychelles dominate.
Orange Sierra Leone and Africell dominate.
Hormuud and Somtel dominate. Fractured connectivity.
Telkom, MTN, and Vodacom dominate. Johannesburg is the main cloud/VPN hub for the continent.
MTN South Sudan and Zain are the dominant mobile carriers.
Sudatel and Zain Sudan dominate. Intermittent shutdowns.
Vodacom Tanzania, Airtel Tanzania and TTCL dominate.
Togocom and Moov Togo dominate.
Tunisie Telecom, Ooredoo Tunisia and Orange Tunisia dominate.
MTN Uganda and Airtel Uganda dominate. Occasional state-level shutdowns.
MTN Zambia, Airtel Zambia and Zamtel dominate.
TelOne, NetOne and Econet dominate.
Asia-Pacific (25)
Grameenphone, Robi and Banglalink dominate mobile; ISP licenses are ISP/BTCL-regulated.
Bhutan Telecom and TashiCell dominate.
UNN (Unified National Networks) dominates.
Smart Axiata, Metfone and Cellcard dominate.
Great Firewall blocks most commercial VPN protocols. Domestic cloud VPN exits are heavily restricted. Detection focus is typically on Chinese residents using VPN clients, not on Chinese IPs acting as VPN endpoints.
Traditional Asia-Pacific network hub. Lower VPN exit density after 2020 national security law. Some providers have withdrawn Hong Kong exits.
Reliance Jio (AS55836) is the largest residential ISP. Mumbai hosts most cloud VPN infrastructure. VPN server registration was mandated in 2022.
Telkom Indonesia (AS7713) dominates residential traffic. Jakarta is the regional data-center hub.
Home of SoftEther VPN (AS36599). Tokyo hosts AWS ap-northeast-1 and is a major Asia-Pacific exit point.
Lao Telecom, Unitel Laos and ETL dominate.
CTM (Companhia de Telecomunicações de Macau) dominates.
TM (AS4788) and Maxis dominate residential traffic. Kuala Lumpur is a secondary SEA cloud hub.
Dhiraagu and Ooredoo Maldives dominate.
MPT, Telenor Myanmar / Atom and Ooredoo dominate. Intermittent state-level shutdowns post-2021.
Nepal Telecom and Ncell dominate. Landlocked; traffic routes through India.
Star Joint Venture Company (Kwangmyong intranet) dominates; international connectivity extremely limited.
PTCL and Jazz dominate residential / mobile traffic. Sporadic state-level filtering.
PLDT (AS9299) and Globe Telecom dominate residential traffic.
Regional hub for Asia-Pacific VPN exits. AWS, Google, and DigitalOcean all operate major Singapore regions that host VPN servers.
KT (AS4766), SK Broadband and LG U+ dominate residential traffic. Seoul hosts regional cloud exits.
SLT and Dialog dominate residential traffic.
Chunghwa Telecom dominates residential traffic. Taipei is a regional VPN exit hub.
True Corporation and AIS dominate residential traffic.
Timor Telecom and Telkomcel dominate.
VNPT (AS45899) and Viettel dominate residential traffic. Heavy VPN circumvention demand.
Oceania (17)
AWS Sydney and regional AS4637 transit. Five Eyes membership. Lower VPN exit density than US or EU.
Vodafone Fiji and Digicel Fiji dominate.
OPT / Vini dominates residential.
GTA Teleguam and Docomo Pacific dominate. US territory.
ATHKL (OceanLink) dominates. Small market.
NTA Marshall Islands dominates.
FSM Telecom dominates.
Digicel Nauru and Cenpac dominate.
OPT-NC is the sole ISP.
Spark New Zealand and Vodafone NZ dominate residential traffic.
Palau National Communications Corp (PNCC) and PalauTel dominate.
Digicel PNG and Telikom PNG dominate.
Digicel Samoa and Vodafone Samoa dominate.
Our Telekom and bmobile dominate.
Tonga Cable, Digicel and Tonga Communications Corp dominate.
Tuvalu Telecommunications Corporation is the sole ISP.
Digicel Vanuatu and Telecom Vanuatu dominate.
Central Asia (10)
Afghan Telecom, MTN Afghanistan and Roshan dominate. Intermittent connectivity.
Team (Beeline Armenia), Ucom and Viva MTS dominate.
Azertelekom, Bakcell and Azerfon dominate.
Caucasus Online, Magticom and Silknet dominate.
Kazakhtelecom dominates. Certificate-pinning ('Kazakhstan root CA') was attempted 2019; use of local hosting for privacy exits is limited.
Beeline Kyrgyzstan, MegaCom and O! dominate.
Mobicom, Unitel and Skytel dominate mobile.
Tcell and Babilon-M dominate.
Turkmentelecom (state monopoly) dominates. Heavy filtering; most VPN protocols blocked.
Uztelecom (state-owned) and Beeline Uzbekistan dominate.
Caribbean (20)
Flow and Digicel dominate residential.
Setar dominates residential.
BTC (Bahamas Telecommunications) dominates residential.
Flow Barbados and Digicel dominate residential.
Offshore jurisdiction popular with ExpressVPN and similar commercial VPN registrations. Flow BVI dominates residential.
Offshore financial centre. Flow Cayman and Digicel dominate.
ETECSA is the state-owned monopoly ISP. Traffic subject to state filtering. VPN use common for circumvention.
UTS and Flow Curaçao dominate residential.
Digicel and Flow dominate residential.
Claro Dominicana and Altice dominate residential traffic.
Digicel and Flow dominate residential.
Digicel and Natcom dominate mobile / residential.
Flow Jamaica (Cable & Wireless) and Digicel dominate residential.
Liberty Puerto Rico and Claro dominate. US territory, AWS us-east-1 proximity.
Digicel and Flow dominate residential.
Digicel and Flow dominate residential.
Digicel and Flow dominate residential.
UTS and Telem dominate residential.
TSTT and Digicel dominate.
Digicel and Flow dominate residential.