What is NextDNS?
For anyone serious about privacy, speed, and security, the “Modern DNS” debate usually boils down to three heavyweights: NextDNS, Pi-hole, and AdGuard Home.
As a tech enthusiast who has experimented with kernel tuning and network security, you know that the “best” choice depends on whether you want a “set-and-forget” cloud solution or a “tinker-friendly” local server.
Here is a deep dive into NextDNS and how it stacks up against the self-hosted giants.
What is NextDNS?
Think of NextDNS as a “Firewall in the Cloud.” It provides the same ad-blocking and tracking protection as a Pi-hole, but instead of running on a Raspberry Pi in your living room, it runs on a global network of high-performance servers.
The Key Advantages of NextDNS
- Zero Hardware Required: You don’t need to buy a Raspberry Pi or keep a server running 24/7.
- Protection Everywhere: Because itโs cloud-based, you can use it on your phoneโs 5G connection, at a coffee shop, or at workโnot just on your home Wi-Fi.
- Modern Encryption: It natively supports DNS-over-HTTPS (DoH) and DNS-over-TLS (DoT).
- Security Feeds: It uses professional threat intelligence feeds to block malware, phishing, and “Newly Registered Domains” (often used for scams) in real-time.
- Parental Controls: Includes one-click toggles to block apps (TikTok, Roblox, Tinder), enforce SafeSearch, and even set “Recreation Time” schedules.
NextDNS vs. Pi-hole vs. AdGuard Home
While all three do essentially the same jobโblocking domains at the DNS levelโtheir “philosophies” are very different.
| Feature | NextDNS | Pi-hole | AdGuard Home |
| Hosting | Cloud (Remote) | Local (Self-hosted) | Local (Self-hosted) |
| Setup Difficulty | Very Easy | Medium | Medium |
| Mobile Usage | Built-in (Apps/Config) | Needs VPN (Wireguard) | Needs VPN (Wireguard) |
| Privacy | They see your logs (Cloud) | You own the data (Local) | You own the data (Local) |
| Native Encryption | High (DoH/DoT/DoQ) | Needs extra tools (Unbound) | High (DoH/DoT/DoQ) |
| Cost | Free up to 300k queries | Free / Hardware cost | Free / Hardware cost |
1. The Pi-hole Perspective
Pi-hole is the original king of network-wide ad blocking.
- Why choose it? If you are a privacy purist. Since it lives on your local network, your DNS queries never leave your house in an identifiable way.
- The Downside: If your Raspberry Pi crashes, your entire house loses internet. Also, keeping it working when you leave the house requires setting up a VPN like Wireguard.
2. The AdGuard Home Perspective
AdGuard Home is often seen as the “modern” Pi-hole.
- Why choose it? It has a much more modern web interface and, unlike Pi-hole, it handles encrypted DNS (DoH/DoT) natively without needing extra software. It also has better built-in client management.
- The Downside: Like Pi-hole, it still requires hardware and local maintenance.
3. The NextDNS Perspective
NextDNS bridges the gap between the two.
- Why choose it? If you want “enterprise-grade” features without the maintenance. It offers multiple “Profiles”โso you can have a strict profile for the kidsโ iPads, a performance profile for your gaming PC, and a standard one for your phone.
- The Downside: Once you hit 300,000 queries per month, the filtering stops (unless you pay roughly $20/year).
Verdict: Which should you use?
- Use NextDNS if: You want a professional, multi-device setup that works on 5G/LTE just as well as home Wi-Fi, and you don’t want to manage hardware. It is the best choice for 90% of users.
- Use AdGuard Home if: You want to self-host and enjoy a beautiful UI with native encryption support on your local network.
- Use Pi-hole if: You are a dedicated “Homelab” enthusiast who wants the most lightweight, open-source, and privacy-focused setup possible.
Pro-Tip: You can actually use NextDNS CLI on your server. It acts as a local proxy that encrypts your traffic before sending it to the cloud, giving you the best of both worlds, local caching speed and cloud-based management!
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