Registered here. Served from there.
We hold both halves of a domain's geography: the country it was registered from, and the country it is actually served from. The interesting part is not either map. It is where they disagree.
The country the network serving the domain is registered in (from the ASN).
Computed on 1,607 of 49,850 active domains (3.2% coverage). The rest is unknown, not zero: an ASN or RDAP lookup that has not succeeded yet is an absence of evidence, never evidence of absence. Coverage climbs as enrichment sweeps the catalog.
🇺🇸 US 92357.4% 🇷🇺 RU 18511.5% 🇩🇪 DE 784.9% 🇨🇳 CN 603.7% 🇫🇷 FR 352.2% 🇬🇧 GB 251.6% 🇯🇵 JP 231.4% 🇳🇱 NL 201.2% 🇨🇦 CA 181.1% 🇪🇸 ES 181.1% 🇹🇷 TR 140.9% 🇰🇷 KR 130.8% 🇰🇿 KZ 90.6% 🇵🇱 PL 90.6% 🇸🇬 SG 90.6% 🇹🇼 TW 90.6% 🇧🇬 BG 80.5% 🇧🇷 BR 80.5% 🇦🇪 AE 70.4% 🇮🇹 IT 70.4% 🇦🇷 AR 60.4% 🇦🇺 AU 60.4% 🇭🇺 HU 60.4% 🇮🇳 IN 60.4% 🇸🇪 SE 60.4% 🇧🇪 BE 50.3% 🇨🇿 CZ 50.3% 🇷🇸 RS 50.3% 🇺🇦 UA 50.3% 🇻🇳 VN 50.3%Country grain, on purpose. We do not hold lat/lon and we will not invent it: IP-to-city geolocation is a licensed dataset and it is routinely wrong for anycast and CDN addresses, which describes most of this catalog. A pin on a building would look more impressive and mean less. Every figure above comes from a signed observation you can re-verify yourself.