DNS comparison

Managed DNS vs registrar DNS

Registrar DNS is often enough for simple domains. Managed DNS becomes more useful when DNS itself is part of how you operate, automate, or keep services reachable.

Registrar DNS

Best for simple domain setups with only a few records and little need for automation.

  • Usually bundled with registration.
  • Fine for basic websites and mail records.
  • Often less flexible for advanced workflows.

Managed DNS

Best when DNS needs to support operations, automation, or changing infrastructure.

  • Central DNS management.
  • Works with Dynamic DNS and APIs.
  • Better fit for technical teams and self-hosting.

Quick comparison

NeedRegistrar DNSManaged DNS
Basic recordsUsually enoughYes
Dynamic DNSOften limitedYes
Automation / APIVariesCore use case
Best fitSimple domainsOperational DNS needs

How to choose

If your domain only needs a few stable records, registrar DNS may be fine. If you need Dynamic DNS, DNS APIs, more deliberate control, or DNS services separate from registration, managed DNS is usually the better fit.

Need DNS to do more than sit still?

DNSExit Managed DNS combines record control, Dynamic DNS, and API access from one place.

Explore by goal

Keep moving with the guide that matches the problem.

;