TL;DR
Airplane mode can change your visible I.P. address, but not in the way you might think. It doesn’t ‘mask’ your I.P. like a VPN. It disconnects you from mobile networks and Wi-Fi, meaning websites see the I.P. address of your home or work network (if connected via Ethernet) or no public I.P. at all if completely offline.
How Airplane Mode Works
Airplane mode turns off all wireless communication on your device: cellular data, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and sometimes NFC. This is primarily for use during flights to avoid interference with aircraft systems.
Does it Hide My I.P.? The Steps
- Understanding Your I.P. Address
- Your I.P. address is a unique identifier assigned to your device when you connect to the internet. There are two main types:
- Public I.P.: This is what websites see and use to locate you generally.
- Private I.P.: Used within your home or work network (e.g., 192.168.x.x).
- Airplane Mode & Mobile Data
- When you enable Airplane mode, your device stops connecting to your mobile carrier’s network. This means websites no longer see the I.P. address assigned by your carrier.
- If you then connect to Wi-Fi after enabling Airplane mode, your device will use that Wi-Fi connection’s I.P. address instead.
- Airplane Mode & Wi-Fi
- If you have Wi-Fi enabled and connect to a network while in Airplane mode, your device uses the Wi-Fi network’s public I.P. address.
- This is not hiding your I.P.; it’s changing which I.P. address websites see – from your mobile carrier to your Wi-Fi provider.
- Airplane Mode & No Connections
- If you enable Airplane mode and do not connect to any Wi-Fi networks, your device won’t have a public I.P. address visible to the internet.
- Websites will be unable to see an I.P. associated with your device directly. However, this also means you can’t access the internet!
- Checking Your I.P. Address
- You can check your current public I.P. address using websites like:
Why Airplane Mode Isn’t a Privacy Solution
- No Encryption: Airplane mode doesn’t encrypt your internet traffic.
- Network I.P.: You are still using someone else’s network (Wi-Fi provider), and they can see your activity.
- Not Anonymous: It doesn’t prevent tracking by websites through cookies, browser fingerprinting, or other methods.
Better Alternatives for Privacy
- Virtual Private Network (VPN): A VPN encrypts your internet traffic and routes it through a server in a location of your choice, masking your I.P. address and providing greater privacy.
# Example: Connecting to a VPN using OpenVPN - Tor Browser: Tor uses a network of relays to anonymize your internet traffic.
- Proxy Servers: Similar to a VPN, but generally less secure.
In Summary
Airplane mode is useful for disconnecting from networks, but it’s not a reliable or effective way to hide or mask your I.P. address for privacy purposes. Use a VPN or Tor if you need true online anonymity and cyber security.

