Title: The Ultimate Guide to Globalping: Test Your Website from Anywhere
Author: Immanuel Raj
Published: March 14, 2026

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![An illustrative graphic for "Globalping," showing a digital tablet above a glowing
Earth. Light beams connect the tablet to cities like Paris, London, Tokyo, Sydney,
and São Paulo, representing global website testing.](https://immanuelraj.dev/wp-
content/uploads/2026/03/global-ping.avif)

# The Ultimate Guide to Globalping: Test Your Website from Anywhere

[March 14, 2026](https://immanuelraj.dev/globalping-guide/)

—

by

[Immanuel Raj](https://immanuelraj.dev/author/iamimmanuelraj/)

in [Hosting](https://immanuelraj.dev/category/hosting/)

Read Time

3–5 minutes

Imagine this: Your website loads perfectly on your computer, but a user in Japan
emails you to say it is completely down. How do you figure out what is wrong without
actually traveling to Japan?

This is where **Globalping** comes to the rescue.

In this post, we will look at what Globalping is, its best features, how you can
use it natively, and how it fits into a broader toolkit alongside awesome tools 
like **Upptime**. I will keep things simple and avoid heavy jargon so you can get
started right away.

## What is Globalping?

Created by the team at jsDelivr, **Globalping** is a free, open-source network testing
platform. It relies on a global network of “probes” (small servers run by the community)
spread across the world.

Instead of just testing if a website is online from your own house, Globalping lets
you run commands to test if your website is online from Paris, Tokyo, Brazil, or
almost anywhere else.

### Key Features

 * **Multiple Test Types:** You can run standard tests like Ping (checking if a 
   server is awake), HTTP (checking if a web page loads), DNS (checking if your 
   web address translates to the right IP), and Traceroute (seeing the exact path
   data takes to reach you).
 * **TCP Ping:** Sometimes firewalls block regular “ping” tests. Globalping recently
   added TCP Ping, which lets you check specific parts of your server (like an email
   server or database) even if standard pings are blocked.
 * **Magic Location Search:** You do not need to know exact server IDs. You can 
   just type “Europe,” “California,” or even the name of a specific internet provider,
   and Globalping will automatically pick the right location to test from.
 * **Generous Free Limits:** Anyone can use it for free. If you create a free account
   using GitHub, your limits increase to 500 tests per hour.

## How to Use Globalping

You can use Globalping in a few different ways, depending on what you are comfortable
with.

### 1. The Native Web Tool (Easiest)

You do not need to install anything to use Globalping.

 * Simply go to **globalping.io**.
 * At the top of the page, choose your test type (like Ping or HTTP).
 * Type in the website URL you want to test.
 * Type a location in the “Location” box (e.g., “London”).
 * Click **Run Test**. You will instantly see the results and a map showing exactly
   where the test came from.

### 2. The CLI Tool (For Independent/Terminal Users)

If you prefer using your computer’s command line, Globalping has a powerful CLI (
Command Line Interface).

 * Once installed on Windows, Mac, or Linux, you can simply open your terminal and
   type a command like: `globalping ping yourwebsite.com --from London`
 * This is incredibly useful if you want to write simple scripts to test your network
   automatically.

### 3. VS Code Extension (For Coders)

If you are writing code or managing servers in Visual Studio Code, you do not even
need to leave your editor. You can highlight a web address in your code, right-click,
and run a Globalping test right there.

## Other Great Tools to Know About

While Globalping is fantastic for **active troubleshooting** (finding out _why_ 
something is broken right now), you also need tools for **passive monitoring** (
keeping an eye on your site 24/7 and alerting you when it breaks).

Here are two amazing tools that do exactly that:

### 1. Upptime (Automated Uptime Monitoring)

[Upptime](https://github.com/upptime/upptime) is a brilliant, completely free open-
source tool. Instead of requiring you to rent a server to monitor your website, 
it uses **GitHub Actions**.

 * **How it works:** Every 5 minutes, GitHub automatically visits your website to
   make sure it is up.
 * **Status Pages:** It automatically builds a beautiful, public status page hosted
   on GitHub Pages.
 * **Incident Reports:** If your site goes down, it automatically opens a GitHub
   Issue to alert your team.
 * **Cost:** Completely free.

### 2. Uptime Kuma (Self-Hosted Dashboard)

If you want to host your own private dashboard to monitor all your apps, Uptime 
Kuma is the most popular open-source choice.

 * **The Best Part:** Uptime Kuma actually integrates **directly with Globalping!***
   Instead of Uptime Kuma only checking if your site works from your own server,
   you can connect it to Globalping. This means your dashboard can automatically
   warn you if your site goes down specifically in South America or Europe.

## Summary

If you are building websites or running servers, keep these tools in your back pocket:

 * Use **Upptime** or **Uptime Kuma** to monitor your websites 24/7 and alert you
   if they crash.
 * Use **Globalping** to instantly investigate _why_ it crashed, check regional 
   outages, and verify that your fixes worked for people all around the world.

Best of all? They are all open-source, community-driven, and completely free to 
use!

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