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Ping / Traceroute

Ping a host, run continuous pings, or trace the network route to a destination.

Free & unlimited
Processed on our servers and deleted right after. Never stored or shared.

About this tool

  1. 1

    Enter a target

    Type a domain name or IP address you want to diagnose.

  2. 2

    Choose a tool

    Select Ping to measure latency or Traceroute to map the network path.

  3. 3

    View results

    See round-trip times, packet loss, and each network hop along the route.

  • High packet loss on ping usually indicates network congestion or an unreliable connection.
  • Traceroute shows every router between you and the target - look for sudden latency spikes to identify bottlenecks.
  • Some hosts block ICMP ping requests - a timeout does not always mean the server is down.
  • Compare traceroute results at different times of day to spot recurring congestion points.
  • ICMP ping with round-trip time and packet loss statistics
  • Full traceroute with hop-by-hop latency breakdown
  • Reverse DNS lookup for each hop
  • Visual latency graph for easy analysis
  • Diagnose slow website loading by identifying where latency increases along the route.
  • Verify that a remote server is reachable and responsive.
  • Troubleshoot VPN or proxy routing issues by tracing the actual network path.
  • Document network performance for an ISP support ticket.
Asterisks mean that hop did not respond within the timeout. Many routers are configured to ignore traceroute probes for security.
Under 20 ms is excellent for local servers. 50-100 ms is typical for cross-country. Over 200 ms may feel sluggish for real-time applications.

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