Your DNS (Domain Name System) provider is the company responsible for translating your domain name (like example.com) into an IP address that browsers and services can understand. This provider hosts the DNS records that control how your domain behaves, including where your website, email, or custom services point.
If you’re trying to:
You’ll likely need to log into your DNS provider’s dashboard and make specific changes. But with domains often registered at one company and DNS hosted somewhere else, it’s easy to lose track of who is handling what. That’s where this tool comes in.
We perform a real-time DNS lookup on your domain and analyze the nameservers in use. Based on this data, we identify the likely DNS provider, their website, and provide a direct link to their DNS management login page—so you can jump straight to making updates.
It’s fast, accurate, and supports major DNS providers like Cloudflare, GoDaddy, AWS Route 53, Google Domains, Namecheap, DigitalOcean, Bluehost, and others. We also handle custom or self-hosted DNS configurations, showing the raw nameservers if the provider is unknown.
DNSDone makes DNS changes easier for everyone — from developers and IT teams to small business owners and digital agencies. Our DNS Provider Lookup tool is just one part of our platform that helps you to track, verify, and communicate DNS changes
Whether you’re troubleshooting a broken email setup or onboarding a client to your platform, identifying the correct DNS provider is step one. We make that step fast, simple, and free.
A DNS provider hosts your domain’s DNS records. These records control where your domain points for web, email, APIs, and other internet services.
That’s totally normal. A domain may be registered with GoDaddy but use Cloudflare or AWS for DNS. Our tool looks at the active nameservers, not the registrar.
Absolutely. It’s ideal for agencies and freelancers who manage multiple client projects and need to locate DNS records quickly for changes or migrations.
We support lookups for all major DNS providers and any custom nameserver configuration. If your provider isn’t recognized by name, we still show the active nameservers so you can trace it manually.