| Type | Value | TTL | Priority |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 104.18.26.120 | 300s | — |
| A | 104.18.27.120 | 300s | — |
| AAAA | 2606:4700::6812:1b78 | 300s | — |
| AAAA | 2606:4700::6812:1a78 | 300s | — |
| MX | — | 0 | |
| NS | elliott.ns.cloudflare.com | — | — |
| NS | hera.ns.cloudflare.com | — | — |
| TXT | _k2n1y4vw3qtb4skdx9e7dxt97qrmmq9 | — | — |
| TXT | v=spf1 -all | — | — |
example.com currently has 9 DNS records across 5 record types: A, AAAA, MX, NS, TXT. Use the re-check button to get the latest values.
An A record maps a domain name to an IPv4 address. It is the most fundamental DNS record type — it tells browsers which IP address to send traffic to when someone visits your domain.
MX (Mail Exchanger) records specify which mail servers are responsible for accepting email for the domain. They include a priority value — lower numbers mean higher priority.
DNS has propagation delays when records change — updates can take up to 48 hours to spread across all global resolvers. Different geographic locations may see different results during this propagation window.
TTL (Time To Live) is the number of seconds a DNS record can be cached by resolvers before they must re-query the authoritative nameserver. Lower TTLs mean faster propagation after changes but more DNS queries.