Allow Remote Desktop connections from outside your home network in windows

Ever desired to accessibility your pc when you're away from home? If you have a house system, you can use Distant Desktop laptop or computer Relationship to accessibility your house PCs from outside the system. This can be useful when you're journeying or at work.

There are six steps you'll need to follow to set this up. Each one is explained in detail below.
  1. Allow remote connections to the computer you want to access.
  2. Make sure Remote Desktop is able to communicate through your firewall.
  3. Find the IP address of the computer on your home network that you want to connect to.
  4. Open your router's configuration screen and forward TCP port 3389 to the destination computer's IP address.
  5. Find your router's public IP address so that Remote Desktop can find it on the Internet.
  6. Open Remote Desktop Connection and connect.

Allow remote connections to the computer you want to access

To access one pc from another pc, you first need to allow remote connections on the pc you want to access, which must be running one of the following versions of Windows:

  •     Windows XP Professional edition
  •     Windows Vista Business, Ultimate, or Enterprise edition
  •     Windows seven Professional, Ultimate, or Enterprise edition
On the computer you want to access, follow these steps:
  1. Open System by clicking the Start button , right-clicking Computer, and then clicking Properties.
  2. In the left pane, click Remote settings If you're prompted for an administrator password or confirmation, type the password or provide confirmation.
  3. Under Remote Desktop, select one of the options to allow connections. For more information about these options, see What types of Remote Desktop connections should I allow?
  4. Click Select Users.
  5. In the Remote Desktop Users dialog box, click Add.
  6. In the Select Users or Groups dialog box, do one or more of the following:
    • To specify the search location, click Locations.
    • To specify the types of objects (user names) that you want to search for, click Object Types.
    • In the Enter the object names to select box, type the user name that you want to search for, and then click Check Names. If the user name isn't found, click Advanced to run an advanced search.
  7. When you find the correct name, click OK.
    The name will be displayed in the list of users in the Remote Desktop Users dialog box.
  8. Click OK, and then click OK again.

Make sure Remote Desktop is able to communicate through your firewall

If you're using Windows Firewall, follow these steps:
  1. Click the Start button , click Control Panel, type "firewall" in the search box, and then click Windows Firewall.
  2. Click Allow a program or feature through Windows Firewall.
  3. Under Allowed programs and features, scroll down to Remote Desktop and make sure its check box is selected.
  4. Under Home/Work (Private), make sure the check box next to Remote Desktop is selected.
If you're using a non-Microsoft firewall, refer to the instructions that came with your firewall.

Find the IP address of the computer on your home network

Next, determine the IP address of the destination computer—the one you want to connect to.
  1. Click the Start button , click Control Panel, type "network" in the search box, and then click Network and Sharing Center.
  2. Next to Connections, click the link for your current network connection (either Wireless Network Connection or Local Area Connection).
  3. Click Details.
  4. Write down the IP address listed next to IPv4 Address. You'll need this address when you turn on port forwarding

Forward TCP port 3389 to the destination computer's IP address

To allow remote connections from outside of your home network, you need to set up your router to forward remote access requests to the computer that you want to connect to.
  1. On any home network computer that's connected to the Internet, open a web browser and type the internal IP address of your router. This address will usually be 192.168.1.1, 192.168.0.1, or 192.168.2.1. Refer to the instructions that came with your router if you need more information about accessing the router's configuration screen.
  2. Type the router administrator user name and password.
  3. In the router's configuration screen, look for a place to turn on port forwarding (also called port mapping).
  4. Forward TCP port 3389, the default port for Remote Desktop Connection, to the IP address of the home computer you want to access from outside the network.
To access more than one of your home computer systems from outside the network, you can forward an additional TCP slot to each additional pc. For example, you can forward TCP slot 3390 to a second pc, TCP slot 3391 to a third pc, and so on. Then change the hearing slot, the slot that Distant Desktop pc listens to for incoming network traffic that matches that slot, on each pc to match the number you assigned. When you use Distant Desktop pc Relationship to connect to these computer systems, type the IP address of the router, followed by a colon and the slot number (for example, 208.147.66.254:3390).

Changing the hearing slot is also helpful as a security measure, since a harmful user might first try slot 3389, the default for Distant Desktop pc Relationship. By modifying the hearing slot, the harmful user has to guess which slot you've chosen. For information about modifying the hearing slot, see How to change the hearing slot for Distant Desktop pc on the Microsoft website.

Find your router's public IP address

While you're still at house and linked with your house system, start a web internet browser and look for for "find IP address" to discover a support that will review your router's community IP deal with. Unfortunately, some computer systems are given a different IP deal with everytime they get linked with the Online. An Isp (ISP) can use a few IP details to provide many clients that way, but it indicates that your pc's deal with on the Online is always modifying.

To get around the issue of a regularly modifying IP deal with, try a DNS powerful upgrade support, which allows you to allocate a URL to your wireless router that you can use instead of an IP deal with. The URL remains the same no issue how often the IP deal with changes. To discover a support, look for for "DNS powerful update" on the Online.

Open Remote Desktop Connection and connect

Now you're ready to actually make the connection. Follow these steps on a computer outside of your network:
  1. Click the Start button , type "remote" in the search box, and then click Remote Desktop Connection.
  2. Type the router's public IP address in the Computer field (followed by a colon and the new port number, if you've changed the listening port; for example, 208.147.66.254:3390).
  3. Log on to the remote computer as you normally do.