Cloudflare vs Google DNS: 1.1.1.1 vs 8.8.8.8

Two of the world's most popular free DNS resolvers, compared on speed, privacy, features, and reliability — so you can pick the one that actually fits how you use the internet.

Updated 7 min read

Cloudflare vs Google DNS — the short answer

Cloudflare (1.1.1.1) and Google Public DNS (8.8.8.8) are both fast, free, reliable resolvers. Cloudflare has the stronger privacy stance and no default filtering; Google is backed by an enormous global network and sends EDNS Client Subnet for slightly better CDN locality at a small privacy cost. For most people, either is a solid upgrade over an ISP's default DNS.

Which one is faster for you depends on your location and network path — run the live DNS speed test to see real numbers from your own connection.

Quick identity check

Cloudflare 1.1.1.1 is operated by Cloudflare, a content-delivery and security company, as part of its 1.1.1.1 resolver launched in 2018. Google 8.8.8.8 is Google's own resolver, one of the longest-running public DNS services, in operation since 2009. Both are free, require no account, and work on any device that lets you set custom DNS servers.

Speed: who answers faster?

Neither resolver is faster everywhere. Both run large anycast networks with points of presence in dozens of countries, so your request typically lands on a nearby server for either one — the difference usually comes down to which company has better peering with your specific ISP, not raw infrastructure size. Rankings you'll find elsewhere online shift by region and change over time as networks are upgraded, which is exactly why a general claim isn't something you should rely on.

The only number worth trusting is one measured from your own connection, at the moment you care about it. Run the live DNS speed test and compare Cloudflare and Google side by side — it takes a few seconds and stores nothing.

Privacy: logging and EDNS Client Subnet

This is where the two resolvers diverge most clearly. Cloudflare DNS's privacy note: No query logging to disk and no client IP retained; anonymized data is purged within 24 hours. Independently audited.

Google Public DNS's privacy note: Keeps a temporary log for a small sample of queries (roughly 24–48h) and permanent anonymized logs. Sends EDNS Client Subnet, which can improve CDN locality but shares part of your network with authoritative servers.

The practical difference is EDNS Client Subnet (ECS) — a DNS extension that shares part of your IP address with the site's authoritative nameservers so a content-delivery network can route you to a closer server. Google sends it by default; Cloudflare does not. ECS can shave a little latency off the page you're visiting (separate from resolver speed itself), at the cost of revealing part of your network location to more parties. Neither approach is "wrong" — it's a trade-off between a small locality benefit and a smaller footprint. If minimizing what you share matters most to you, see our dedicated best DNS for privacy guide.

Features: filtering, security, and variants

Neither Cloudflare nor Google's default address blocks malware, ads, or adult content — both are plain, unfiltered resolvers. Cloudflare offers separate opt-in addresses for malware blocking and family filtering (different IPs, not a setting), while Google Public DNS offers no filtering variants at all. Both support DNSSEC validation, which protects against certain DNS spoofing attacks, and both offer encrypted transport via DNS-over-HTTPS and DNS-over-TLS.

Side-by-side comparison

Cloudflare DNS compared with Google Public DNS
Detail Cloudflare Google
Primary address 1.1.1.1 8.8.8.8
Secondary address 1.0.0.1 8.8.4.4
IPv6 primary 2606:4700:4700::1111 2001:4860:4860::8888
DNS-over-HTTPS Yes, JSON + wireformat Yes, JSON + wireformat
DNS-over-TLS host 1dot1dot1dot1.cloudflare-dns.com dns.google
DNSSEC validation Yes Yes
Query logging No logs written to disk; anonymized data purged within 24 hours Temporary logs kept roughly 24–48 hours, plus permanent anonymized logs
EDNS Client Subnet (ECS) Not sent Sent, to improve CDN routing
Malware / ad / family filtering Only on separate variant addresses Not offered
Independent privacy audit Yes No public third-party audit

Reliability

Both Cloudflare DNS and Google Public DNS run on globally distributed anycast infrastructure built to survive the failure of any single data center, and both have long operating histories with strong uptime records. Neither has published outage data that gives one a clear, durable edge over the other — both are considered dependable choices for everyday use, including as a secondary resolver for redundancy.

Setup: how to switch

Changing your DNS server takes a couple of minutes and does not require installing anything. Set the primary and secondary addresses from the table above on your router (to cover every device on your network at once) or on an individual device. Full walkthroughs are available for Windows, macOS, Android, iPhone, Linux, and your router.

The verdict

Both are excellent, free, mainstream choices — you will not go wrong with either. The honest differentiator is privacy posture, not speed: Cloudflare doesn't log queries to disk and doesn't send ECS, while Google logs briefly and uses ECS to aid CDN routing. If speed is your only concern, test both and use whichever is measurably faster on your connection.

Still unsure? Run the DNS speed test right now — it measures both resolvers from your exact connection and shows you the real median latency and jitter, which is more useful than any general claim.

Cloudflare vs Google DNS — questions

Is 1.1.1.1 or 8.8.8.8 faster?

It depends on your location and network — neither is universally faster. Cloudflare tends to have a slight edge on many connections thanks to its large anycast network, but the only reliable way to know is to run a live DNS speed test from your own connection.

Which is more private, Cloudflare or Google DNS?

Cloudflare has the stronger privacy stance: it does not write query logs to disk, does not send EDNS Client Subnet, and has been independently audited. Google keeps temporary logs for roughly 24–48 hours and sends EDNS Client Subnet by default, which shares part of your network with the sites you visit to improve CDN routing.

Does switching to Cloudflare or Google DNS increase my internet speed?

No. A faster resolver shortens the small delay before a page starts loading, but it does not increase your download or upload bandwidth — your internet plan and connection still set that ceiling.

Can I use Cloudflare and Google DNS together?

Yes, though it isn't usually necessary. You could set 1.1.1.1 as primary and 8.8.8.8 as secondary as a fallback, but most routers and devices already fail over reliably within one provider's primary and secondary addresses.

Do I need to change anything else after switching DNS?

No account, app, or extra software is required — DNS is a setting on your router or device. See our setup guides for step-by-step instructions on Windows, macOS, Android, iPhone, Linux, and routers.