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Glossary · AAAA record

DNS AAAA Record

A DNS record that maps a hostname to an IPv6 address, the IPv6 counterpart of an A record used for dual-stack reachability.

Sitecheck Team

An AAAA record maps a hostname to an IPv6 address. It is the IPv6 counterpart of an A record: same role, different address space. When a hostname publishes both, clients on dual-stack networks usually prefer IPv6 and fall back to IPv4 only if the IPv6 connection fails. The name reflects the size: an IPv6 address is four times longer than an IPv4 address.

Why it matters

A growing share of mobile networks and ISPs now route traffic over IPv6 by default. Without an AAAA record, those clients are forced through carrier-grade NAT or translation, adding latency and connection failures that show up as flaky uptime and slow page loads. Publishing an AAAA is also part of several public-sector compliance baselines.

How to check

  • Confirm your hosting provider, load balancer, and firewall accept IPv6 traffic before adding the record.
  • Run dig +short example.com AAAA and verify the address belongs to the right server or CDN edge.
  • Keep A and AAAA records aligned to the same logical service.
  • Use the same TTL on both records so failover behaves predictably.
  • For platform-hosted subdomains, prefer a CNAME so the provider manages both stacks.
  • Test from an IPv6-only client or curl -6 to confirm end-to-end reachability, not just resolution.

See also