DNS Record Monitoring

Detect Unauthorized DNS Changes Instantly

Monitor A, CNAME, MX, NS, TXT, SOA, CAA, and AAAA records for unexpected changes. Catch misconfigurations and hijacking attempts before they cause downtime or security breaches.

 

One Wrong DNS Record Can Take Down Everything

A typo in a DNS change, an accidental revert, or a hostile takeover — and suddenly your email routes to attackers or your site points to the wrong server. DNS monitoring catches these changes the moment they happen.

 

Monitor Every DNS Record Type

All Record Types

A, AAAA, CNAME, MX, NS, TXT, SOA, CAA — monitor anything in your zone file.

Change Detection

Alert on any modification — value, TTL, or record removal.

Complete Change Log

Full history of every DNS change with timestamps. Easy audit trails.

Expected Value Alerts

Define expected values. Get alerts when actual records diverge from your baseline.

Protect Email Delivery

Monitor MX, SPF, DKIM, and DMARC records. Prevent email deliverability disasters.

Instant Alerts

Get notified on Email, Slack, WhatsApp, SMS, or webhook the moment a record changes.

 

Critical Scenarios

DNS Hijacking Detection

Instantly detect if someone takes over your DNS or modifies records maliciously.

Migration Monitoring

Track DNS propagation during migrations to verify changes go live globally.

Compliance Audits

Maintain records of DNS changes for security audits and SOC 2 compliance.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

DNS monitoring continuously queries your DNS records and alerts you when they change unexpectedly. It detects misconfigurations, hijacking attempts, and accidental modifications.

A, AAAA, CNAME, MX, NS, TXT, SOA, and CAA records are all supported. You can monitor as many types as you need per domain.

We check your DNS records at regular intervals defined by your plan. When a change is detected, the alert fires immediately.

Yes. Since these are stored as TXT records, you can monitor them with TXT record monitoring to prevent email deliverability issues.

Absolutely. DNS provider audit logs show what they set, but DNS monitoring shows what the world sees. Detect propagation issues, third-party overrides, and accidental changes from teammates or integrations.