{"slug":"aws-route-53","name":"AWS Route 53","domain":null,"best_rank":3,"categories":1,"brief":{"category":"best-managed-dns-platforms-for-multi-cloud-infrastructure","title":"Best managed DNS platforms for multi-cloud infrastructure","rank":3,"of":13,"top":null,"day":"2026-07-18","why":[{"t":"100% availability SLA","m":["Claude","Gemini","Grok"],"q":"100% availability SLA"},{"t":"rich routing policies","m":["Claude","Gemini","Grok"],"q":"rich routing policies (latency, geoproximity, weighted, failover)"},{"t":"health checks and IaC support","m":["Claude","Grok"],"q":"health checks, and first-class IaC support"},{"t":"deep AWS integration","m":["Claude","Gemini","Grok"],"q":"deep AWS integration"}],"gap":[],"fix":[{"t":"AWS-centric architecture","m":["Claude","Grok"],"q":"AWS-centric architecture"},{"t":"true active-active syncing is complex","m":["Gemini"],"q":"making true active-active primary/secondary syncing with other DNS providers complex to automate without custom middleware"},{"t":"additional abstraction layers","m":["Grok"],"q":"more cumbersome without additional abstraction layers"}]},"entries":[{"slug":"best-managed-dns-platforms-for-multi-cloud-infrastructure","title":"Best managed DNS platforms for multi-cloud infrastructure","rank":3,"of":13,"score":9,"appearances":3,"modelRanks":{"Claude":3,"Gemini":3,"Grok":3},"reason":"Battle-tested at extreme scale with a 100% availability SLA, rich routing policies (latency, geoproximity, weighted, failover), health checks, and first-class IaC support; it works fine as authoritative DNS for workloads in other clouds, and most multi-cloud shops already have the AWS account and IAM plumbing.","reasons":[{"model":"Claude","reason":"Battle-tested at extreme scale with a 100% availability SLA, rich routing policies (latency, geoproximity, weighted, failover), health checks, and first-class IaC support; it works fine as authoritative DNS for workloads in other clouds, and most multi-cloud shops already have the AWS account and IAM plumbing."},{"model":"Gemini","reason":"Backed by a 100% uptime SLA and extensive geolocation, geoproximity, and latency-based routing policies that integrate natively with AWS and comfortably support external endpoints."},{"model":"Grok","reason":"Mature feature set including health checks, latency-based routing, Traffic Flow, and deep AWS integration; reliable performance, scalability, and IaC support; excellent for multi-account AWS but extensible; consistent high uptime in comparisons."}],"fixes":[{"model":"Claude","fix":"It is still an AWS product — private zone integration, alias records, and Application Recovery Controller all assume AWS-centric architecture, so using it as your neutral control plane bakes one cloud's console and billing into every DNS change."},{"model":"Gemini","fix":"Does not support native AXFR/IXFR zone transfers, making true active-active primary/secondary syncing with other DNS providers complex to automate without custom middleware."},{"model":"Grok","fix":"Vendor-tied biases make pure multi-cloud management more cumbersome without additional abstraction layers; less optimal as primary for non-AWS heavy environments."}],"updated":"2026-07-18","rank_history":{"days":["2026-07-17","2026-07-18"],"ranks":[3,null]},"api":"https://modelsagree.com/api/v1/best/best-managed-dns-platforms-for-multi-cloud-infrastructure.json"}],"page":"https://modelsagree.com/product/aws-route-53","check":"https://modelsagree.com/check?q=AWS%20Route%2053","updated":"2026-07-18T05:29:36.321Z","attribution":"modelsagree.com, CC BY 4.0"}