google.com NS Lookup
Use this NS lookup tool to find the authoritative nameservers for google.com. NS records indicate which DNS servers respond to all queries for google.com, including A records, MX records, TXT records, and every other record type. Below are the current nameservers for google.com.
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What Are google.com's Nameservers?
NS (Name Server) records for google.com identify the DNS servers that hold the authoritative DNS zone for this domain. When a recursive resolver needs to look up any record for google.com — whether an IP address, mail server, or TXT record — it contacts these nameservers to get the definitive answer.
Every domain must have at least two nameservers for redundancy. If one nameserver for google.com goes offline, the remaining nameservers continue answering queries so the domain stays reachable. Most DNS providers assign multiple nameservers spread across different networks and geographic locations.
The nameservers for google.com are set at the domain registrar and are part of the delegation chain that makes DNS work. Changing these nameservers is how you switch google.com's DNS hosting from one provider to another.
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How DNS Delegation Works
NS records create the hierarchical delegation chain that makes DNS work. The root DNS servers delegate to TLD servers (e.g., .com servers), which delegate to google.com's authoritative nameservers via NS records. Each level points to the next, allowing any device on the internet to resolve google.com to its IP address.
When you update nameservers at your registrar for google.com, you're changing the delegation at the TLD level. This tells the .com (or other TLD) servers to direct queries for google.com to a new set of nameservers. This change can take up to 48 hours to fully propagate due to DNS caching.
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Who Hosts DNS for google.com?
An NS lookup reveals google.com's DNS provider from its nameserver hostnames. Cloudflare uses *.ns.cloudflare.com, AWS Route 53 uses *.awsdns-*.com, Google Cloud DNS uses ns-cloud-*.googledomains.com, DigitalOcean uses ns*.digitalocean.com, and many registrars like GoDaddy, Namecheap, and Google Domains provide their own nameservers.
Knowing the DNS provider for google.com is useful for troubleshooting resolution issues, understanding the domain's infrastructure, or evaluating the reliability of its DNS hosting. Enterprise-grade DNS providers like Cloudflare and Route 53 offer features like DDoS protection, anycast routing, and sub-second propagation.
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Why Nameserver Redundancy Matters
If all nameservers for google.com become unreachable, the domain effectively disappears from the internet — websites won't load, email won't deliver, and all services depending on DNS will fail. This is why every domain should have nameservers on at least two separate networks.
Major DNS outages like the 2016 Dyn attack demonstrated what happens when nameserver infrastructure fails. Modern DNS providers mitigate this with anycast routing, where the same nameserver addresses are served from dozens of data centers worldwide. Check google.com's nameservers above to see how many are configured.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Who hosts DNS for google.com? — The nameservers shown above reveal google.com's DNS hosting provider. Look at the nameserver hostnames to identify the provider (e.g., cloudflare.com, awsdns, etc.).
How many nameservers does google.com have? — The number of NS records indicates how many nameservers serve google.com. Most domains have 2–4 nameservers for redundancy and performance.
What DNS provider does google.com use? — The nameserver hostnames identify the provider. Compare them against known DNS provider naming patterns to determine who manages DNS for google.com.
How do I change nameservers for a domain? — Nameserver changes are made at the domain registrar (not the DNS provider). Log into your registrar account, find the nameserver settings, and update them to the new provider's nameservers. Propagation takes up to 48 hours.