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📅 ⏱️ 👤 Ahmad Raza
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What Is DNS and How Does It Affect Your Internet Speed?

DNS (Domain Name System) is the internet’s phone book — it translates human-readable domain names (like google.com) into IP addresses (like 142.250.80.46) that computers use to communicate. Every time you visit a website, your device queries a DNS server first. If your DNS server is slow, every website takes longer to start loading — even if your connection is fast. Test your overall internet performance with our free speed test.

How DNS Affects Page Load Speed — Illustrated

When you type a URL, before any content loads: (1) your browser queries the DNS resolver for the IP address, (2) the resolver responds with the IP, (3) your browser connects to that IP and downloads the content. Step 1 and 2 add DNS latency to every new domain connection. With a fast DNS server (1–5ms), this is imperceptible. With a slow ISP DNS (50–100ms), every page’s initial load feels sluggish — adding noticeable delay to each new domain your browser contacts.

DNS Speed Comparison — Major Providers

DNS Provider Primary Secondary Avg Response Time Privacy
ISP Default DNS Varies Varies 30–100ms Low
Cloudflare DNS 1.1.1.1 1.0.0.1 11ms High
Google DNS 8.8.8.8 8.8.4.4 22ms Medium
Quad9 9.9.9.9 149.112.112.112 19ms High (malware blocking)
OpenDNS 208.67.222.222 208.67.220.220 20ms Medium

How to Change Your DNS — Quick Guide

Change DNS at router level to affect all devices: login to your router admin panel → find DNS settings (usually under WAN or Internet settings) → replace with 1.1.1.1 and 1.0.0.1 → save and restart. To change on Windows: Network Settings → adapter properties → IPv4 properties → manual DNS. On Mac: System Preferences → Network → Advanced → DNS tab. The change is free, takes 2 minutes, and can reduce page load times noticeably. For more detailed steps and additional speed improvements, see our guide on best DNS servers for speed.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Does changing DNS actually improve speed?

Yes — but only for page load initiation, not download speed. Switching from a slow ISP DNS (50ms) to Cloudflare (11ms) shaves 40ms from every new domain lookup. On a page loading 20 unique domains, this saves 800ms of DNS resolution time. Download speed remains identical. For users with slow ISP DNS, the improvement feels dramatic — pages appear to start loading faster.

Is 1.1.1.1 the fastest DNS?

Globally, yes — Cloudflare’s 1.1.1.1 consistently ranks as the fastest public DNS resolver in independent benchmarks, with sub-15ms average response times globally. However, actual DNS speed depends on your location and network path. In some regions, a different provider may be faster. For the best results, use a DNS benchmark tool (like GRC DNS Benchmark) to test which public DNS server is fastest from your actual location.

Can DNS improve gaming ping?

DNS resolves server addresses before the game connects — it affects connection setup time, not in-game ping. Once you’re connected to a game server, DNS plays no role. However, a slow DNS can cause game lobbies and matchmaking to load slowly. Faster DNS doesn’t reduce in-game ping. For reducing in-game ping, see our guide on how to reduce ping in gaming.