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Steam ID Finder

Paste a Steam profile link, a username, or any ID you already have, and this hands back every ID format Steam uses. That includes the 17-digit SteamID64 that most tools, servers, and trade sites actually ask for.

Paste a profile URL, a username, or any SteamID format.

Why there are so many Steam IDs

Steam has used a few different ID formats over the years, and they all point at the same account. The one you need depends on what you are doing.

  • SteamID64 is the long 17-digit number, like 7656119xxxxxxxxxx. This is the modern standard. Most APIs, game servers, and third party sites want this one.
  • SteamID is the old-school format that looks like STEAM_0:1:12345678. You still see it in older games and server configs.
  • SteamID3 looks like [U:1:24691357] and shows up in source engine games and some admin tools.
  • Vanity URL is the custom name in a profile link, the part after /id/. Not everyone has one set.

The finder converts between all of them, so whatever you paste in, you get the rest back.

How to use it

  1. Copy the profile link, or just the username, of the account you want.
  2. Paste it into the box above and hit search.
  3. Copy whichever ID format you need. Every field has a copy button.

You can paste a full URL like steamcommunity.com/id/somename or steamcommunity.com/profiles/7656119..., a bare vanity name, or an ID in any format. It sorts out what it is looking at.

Finding your own Steam ID

If you are after your own ID, the fastest route is to open your Steam profile, copy the URL from the address bar, and paste it here. Our step by step guide covers the other ways, including finding it inside the Steam client.

FAQ

Do I need to log in? No. This reads public data only. If you can open the profile in a browser without signing in, the finder can read it.

It says it cannot find the profile. Two usual causes. The vanity name might be spelled differently than you think, or the profile is private. Try pasting the full profile URL instead of the username.

Is a SteamID64 the same as an account number? Close enough for most uses. The SteamID64 is the unique number tied to the account, and it does not change even if the person renames their profile.