Seeing a different country than the one you selected in an IP checker does not mean NymVPN is malfunctioning or leaking. IP geolocation is an estimate, not an exact science: different databases assign the same IP address to different places, and they update at different speeds. NymVPN uses IPinfo, widely regarded as one of the most accurate providers, but the checker you visited may use a different database with stale data.
Why geolocation databases disagree
An IP address does not carry a location. Geolocation companies infer it from routing data, registration records, and usage signals, then sell those mappings as databases. When a server's IP is reassigned or moved between data centers, some databases catch up in days, others in months. Node IPs in a decentralized network come from many independent operators and hosting providers, which makes conflicting records more likely than with a single VPN company's fixed ranges.
How to check what is actually happening
- Confirm the exit country shown in the NymVPN app: that is the location of the exit node you are routed through, as determined by IPinfo. See How is server location determined by NymVPN?
- Compare two or three IP checkers. If they disagree with each other, you are looking at database inconsistency, not a VPN problem.
- Make sure the IP shown is not your real one. A different country than selected is a geolocation quirk; your own IP and city showing up would be a real issue worth reporting to Nym Support.
Reporting an incorrect location
If you believe a node's location is genuinely wrong, you can report it directly to IPinfo at ipinfo.io/corrections. Corrections there improve the data for everyone.
Related questions
A website thinks I am in the wrong country and shows the wrong content. What can I do?
The website uses its own geolocation database. Try a different exit country, or reconnect to get a different exit node. See Best NymVPN server location: how to choose entry and exit countries.
Does a mismatched country reduce my privacy?
No. Your traffic is still routed and encrypted exactly the same. The mismatch only exists in third-party location databases.