What Port 3401 Is
Port 3401 is unassigned. The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) maintains the official registry of port numbers, and port 3401 appears there as a blank — no service name, no protocol, no owner.1
This isn't unusual. The registered port range (1024-49151) contains tens of thousands of ports. Many are assigned to specific services. Many are not.
The Registered Port Range
Ports divide into three bands:
- Well-known ports (0-1023): Assigned to fundamental Internet services — HTTP, HTTPS, SSH, DNS, SMTP. These require administrator privileges to open on most systems.
- Registered ports (1024-49151): Applications and services can apply to IANA to claim a port in this range. Port 3401 lives here.
- Dynamic/ephemeral ports (49152-65535): Temporarily assigned by operating systems for outbound connections. Not registered to anyone.
Being in the registered range means port 3401 could theoretically be claimed by an application that formally registers it with IANA. So far, none has.
Unofficial Uses
No widely-used application is known to run on port 3401 by default. Some security databases note that port 3401 was used by malware in the past — the kind of boilerplate trojan activity that touched hundreds of obscure ports in the 1990s and early 2000s.2 This doesn't mean the port is dangerous. It means it was once available and someone took advantage of that availability.
Developers sometimes choose unassigned ports like 3401 for internal services, development servers, or custom applications. If you see traffic on 3401, that's almost certainly what's happening — something local, not something standard.
What's Actually Listening on Your System
If port 3401 is open on a machine you manage, find out what's using it:
On Linux or macOS:
On Windows:
If you don't recognize the process, that's worth investigating. But if you do — a development server, a custom application, something you deployed — then port 3401 is simply doing its job as unclaimed space that someone found useful.
Why Unassigned Ports Matter
The port system works because most services agree to use the same doors. HTTP goes to 80. HTTPS goes to 443. SSH goes to 22. This consensus is what makes the Internet navigable.
Unassigned ports like 3401 exist at the edge of that consensus — available for registration, available for informal use, available for someone who needs a port and doesn't want to fight over a popular one. They're the undeveloped land of the Internet's address system.
The risk is that "available" cuts both ways. Malware, custom backdoors, and unauthorized services can all settle into unassigned space precisely because nothing legitimate is expected to be there, and firewalls often don't scrutinize it as closely.
If you didn't put something on port 3401, and something is there, find out what it is.
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