A Records
Check the IPv4 address records that point a domain or subdomain to a server.
Run a live DNS health report for core website records.
Building DNS report...
The DNS Report Checker helps you review important DNS records for any domain name. Enter a domain, run the report, and check the records that connect a website to hosting, email, name servers, verification services, and other domain settings.
This tool is useful for website owners, developers, domain managers, hosting users, and anyone who needs a clear view of how a domain is configured.
Check the IPv4 address records that point a domain or subdomain to a server.
Review IPv6 address records when a domain uses modern internet addressing.
Check mail exchange records that help route email for the domain.
View the name servers responsible for managing the domain’s DNS records.
Review text records used for verification, email protection, and service setup.
Check alias records that connect one domain or subdomain to another hostname.
DNS stands for Domain Name System. It is the system that helps connect a domain name to the services it uses, including website hosting, email inboxes, domain verification, and name server management.
A DNS report collects the main records for a domain and displays them in one place. This makes it easier to understand whether a domain is pointing to the correct server, whether email records are present, and whether the domain has the records needed for normal website and email operation.
DNS records are especially important when launching a new website, changing hosting, connecting business email, moving a domain, setting up third-party services, or troubleshooting a website that is not loading properly.
If DNS records are missing or incorrect, visitors may not reach the website, emails may fail, or domain verification may not work. A quick DNS report can help identify obvious setup issues before they become bigger problems.
For best results, enter the main domain only, such as example.com. Do not enter a full page URL, tracking link, or extra characters.
Website owners can check whether their domain is pointing to the right hosting and whether key records are available.
Developers can use DNS reports when setting up domains, checking migrations, or reviewing technical records.
Email administrators can review MX and TXT records when setting up mailboxes, sending platforms, and domain verification.
Domain buyers can check active DNS records before reviewing, transferring, or purchasing a domain.
DNS results can change when a domain owner updates hosting, changes name servers, moves email services, or adds new verification records. Some changes may take time to appear across different networks.
If a record is missing, it does not always mean the domain is broken. Some domains only use selected records based on how the website, email, and services are configured.
A DNS Report Checker reviews important DNS records connected to a domain, including website records, email records, name servers, and text records.
DNS records control how a domain connects to websites, email services, verification systems, and other online services. Checking them helps confirm that the domain is configured correctly.
An A record points a domain or subdomain to an IPv4 address. It is commonly used to connect a domain to a website server.
An MX record tells mail systems where to deliver email for a domain. It is important for domain email setup.
TXT records are often used for domain verification, email protection, and connecting third-party services.
Yes. If website-related DNS records are missing or pointing to the wrong server, the website may not load correctly.
Yes. Incorrect or missing mail records can affect how email is received, verified, or trusted by mail services.
Enter the main domain name only, such as example.com. Avoid full page URLs, extra spaces, tracking links, and special characters.