IP Blacklist Checker

Check if an IP address is listed on major DNS-based blacklists (DNSBL). Test against Spamhaus, SpamCop, Barracuda, SORBS, and more. Free real-time blocklist checker.

How to Use the IP Blacklist Checker

  1. 1

    Enter an IP address

    Type or paste any IPv4 address, or click 'Check my IP' to test your own public IP address.
  2. 2

    Run the check

    Click Check to query 12 major DNSBL providers simultaneously. The tool reverses the IP and performs DNS lookups against each blacklist.
  3. 3

    Review results

    Each blacklist shows green (clean), red (listed), or gray (timeout). If your IP is listed, click the blacklist name for delisting instructions.
  4. 4

    Request delisting

    If listed, visit the blacklist provider's website to submit a delisting request. Most providers have automated removal after the issue is resolved.

Common Use Cases

1

Email Deliverability

Check if your mail server's IP is blacklisted, which would cause emails to bounce or land in spam folders.
2

Server Reputation

Verify that your web server or VPS IP hasn't been flagged due to previous abuse by another tenant.
3

Network Troubleshooting

Diagnose why certain services are blocking your connections by checking if your IP is on known blocklists.
4

Security Monitoring

Regularly monitor your IP addresses to catch blacklisting early before it impacts your business.

Why Check IP Blacklists?

If your IP address is on a blacklist, your emails may be rejected or marked as spam by receiving mail servers. Websites may also block your access. This commonly happens to shared hosting IPs, VPN exit nodes, or IPs that were previously used to send spam. Regular blacklist checks help you maintain your IP reputation and ensure email deliverability.

IP Blacklist Checker tests any IPv4 address against 12 major DNS-based blackhole lists (DNSBL) used by mail servers and firewalls worldwide. When an IP appears on a blacklist, emails from that address may be rejected, web requests may be blocked, and services may be degraded. This tool performs real-time reverse DNS lookups to check each list simultaneously.

The tool checks against Spamhaus (ZEN, SBL, XBL), SpamCop, Barracuda BRBL, SORBS, UCEPROTECT, Composite Blocking List, and more. Results show whether the IP is clean, listed, or if the check timed out. For listed IPs, direct links to the provider's delisting page are provided. Combine with our Email Header Analyzer to trace where blacklisted IPs appear in your email routing.

How It Compares

Most blacklist checkers require you to check lists one by one or only support a few providers. FindUtils IP Blacklist Checker queries 12 major blacklists simultaneously with a progress indicator and response time for each. All checks run via DNS-over-HTTPS directly from your browser, ensuring fast results with no server-side processing.

Tips for IP Reputation

1
Check your IP regularly, especially after setting up a new mail server or changing hosting providers.
2
If listed on Spamhaus, resolve the root cause (open relay, compromised account, etc.) before requesting delisting.
3
Shared hosting IPs are more likely to be blacklisted due to other users' activities. Consider a dedicated IP for email.
4
Set up SPF, DKIM, and DMARC records for your domain to improve email deliverability regardless of blacklist status.
5
Some blacklists auto-delist after 24-48 hours if no further abuse is detected. Others require manual delisting requests.

Frequently Asked Questions

1

What is a DNSBL?

A DNS-based Blackhole List (DNSBL) is a database of IP addresses known to send spam or be involved in malicious activity. Mail servers query these lists to decide whether to accept, reject, or flag incoming email.
2

Why is my IP blacklisted?

Common reasons include: sending spam (even accidentally), compromised email accounts, open mail relays, malware on your network, or inheriting a previously-abused IP from your hosting provider.
3

How do I get delisted?

First, fix the underlying issue. Then visit the blacklist provider's website and submit a delisting request. Most providers have automated forms. Spamhaus, for example, allows self-service removal at their website.
4

Does this tool support IPv6?

No. DNSBL is an IPv4-only standard. Most blacklist providers don't maintain IPv6 lists because the address space is too large for traditional DNSBL methods.
5

How often should I check?

For mail servers, check weekly. For critical business IPs, set up automated monitoring. After resolving a blacklist incident, check daily until confirmed clean across all lists.

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