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Port Scanner

Scan network ports to check for open services

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Important Notice

Only scan hosts that you own or have explicit permission to scan. Unauthorized port scanning may be illegal in your jurisdiction.

๐Ÿ“š Well-Known Ports Reference

20FTP Data
File Transfer Protocol data
21FTP Control
File Transfer Protocol control
22SSH
Secure Shell
23Telnet
Unencrypted text communications
25SMTP
Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
53DNS
Domain Name System
80HTTP
Hypertext Transfer Protocol
110POP3
Post Office Protocol v3
143IMAP
Internet Message Access Protocol
443HTTPS
HTTP Secure
3306MySQL
MySQL Database
3389RDP
Remote Desktop Protocol
5432PostgreSQL
PostgreSQL Database
8080HTTP Proxy
HTTP Proxy/Alternative
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Premium Features

  • โ€ข Extended port range (1-65535)
  • โ€ข Scheduled automated scans
  • โ€ข Detailed security report

Port Scanner: Check Open Network Ports

Our port scanner lets you check which TCP ports are open on a server or device. Identify running services, discover potential security vulnerabilities, and verify your firewall configuration. Results include service identification and response times.

Port scanning is essential for network administrators, security professionals, and system operators. It helps identify exposed services, verify that only necessary ports are accessible, and test firewall rules.

Understanding Port States

Open: A service is listening and accepting connections. The port responded to our scan.
Closed: The port is accessible but no service is listening. Connection was refused.
Filtered: A firewall or filter is blocking access. No response was received within the timeout.

Common Ports & Services

Port 22 (SSH): Secure shell for remote server access.
Port 80 (HTTP): Standard unencrypted web traffic.
Port 443 (HTTPS): Encrypted web traffic (SSL/TLS).
Port 25 (SMTP): Email sending protocol.
Port 3306 (MySQL): MySQL database connections.
Port 3389 (RDP): Windows Remote Desktop.

Security Best Practices

โ€ข Close all unnecessary open ports
โ€ข Use a firewall to restrict access to essential services
โ€ข Keep all services updated with security patches
โ€ข Use fail2ban or similar to prevent brute force attacks
โ€ข Monitor port access logs for suspicious activity

FAQ

Is port scanning legal?

Port scanning your own systems is legal. Scanning third-party systems without permission may violate computer crime laws in many jurisdictions. Only scan hosts you own or have explicit permission to test.

Why are my ports showing as filtered?

Filtered ports indicate a firewall is dropping packets without response. This is often the default behavior for ports that are blockedโ€”more secure than actively refusing connections.