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    Home»Cloud Computing»Amazon Route 53 launches Accelerated recovery for managing public DNS records
    Cloud Computing

    Amazon Route 53 launches Accelerated recovery for managing public DNS records

    AdminBy AdminNovember 30, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read1 Views
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    Amazon Route 53 launches Accelerated recovery for managing public DNS records
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    Voiced by Polly

    Today, we’re announcing Amazon Route 53 Accelerated recovery for managing public DNS records, a new Domain Name Service (DNS) business continuity feature that is designed to provide a 60-minute recovery time objective (RTO) during service disruptions in the US East (N. Virginia) AWS Region. This enhancement ensures that customers can continue making DNS changes and provisioning infrastructure even during regional outages, providing greater predictability and resilience for mission-critical applications.

    Customers running applications that require business continuity have told us they need additional DNS resilience capabilities to meet their business continuity requirements and regulatory compliance obligations. While AWS maintains exceptional availability across our global infrastructure, organizations in regulated industries like banking, FinTech, and SaaS want the confidence that they will be able to make DNS changes even during unexpected regional disruptions, allowing them to quickly provision standby cloud resources or redirect traffic when needed.

    Accelerated recovery for managing public DNS records addresses this need by targeting DNS changes that customers can make within 60 minutes of a service disruption in the US East (N. Virginia) Region. The feature works seamlessly with your existing Route 53 setup, providing access to key Route 53 API operations during failover scenarios, including ChangeResourceRecordSets, GetChange, ListHostedZones, and ListResourceRecordSets. Customers can continue using their existing Route 53 API endpoint without modifying applications or scripts.

    Let’s try it out

    Configuring a Route53 hosted zone to use accelerated recovery is simple. Here I am creating a new hosted zone for a new website I’m building.

    Once I have created my hosted zone, I see a new tab labeled Accelerated recovery. I can see here that accelerated recovery is disabled by default.

    To enable it, I just need to click the Enable button and confirm my choice in the modal that appears as depicted in the dialog below.

    Enabling accelerated recovery will take a couple minutes to complete. Once it’s enabled, I see a green Enabled status as depicted in the screenshot below.

    I can disable accelerated recovery at any time from this same area of the AWS Management Console. I can also enable accelerated recovery for any existing hosted zones I have already created.

    Enhanced DNS business continuity

    With accelerated recovery enabled, customers gain several key capabilities during service disruptions. The feature maintains access to essential Route 53 API operations, ensuring that DNS management remains available when it’s needed most. Organizations can continue to make critical DNS changes, provision new infrastructure, and redirect traffic flows without waiting for full service restoration.

    The implementation is designed for simplicity and reliability. Customers don’t need to learn new APIs or modify existing automation scripts. The same Route 53 endpoints and API calls continue to work, providing a seamless experience during both normal operations and failover scenarios.

    Now available

    Accelerated recovery for Amazon Route 53 public hosted zones is available now. You can enable this feature through the AWS Management Console, AWS Command Line Interface (AWS CLI), AWS Software Development Kit (AWS SDKs), or infrastructure as code tools like AWS CloudFormation and AWS Cloud Development Kit (AWS CDK). There is no additional cost for using accelerated recovery.

    To learn more about accelerated recovery and get started, visit the documentation. This new capability represents our continued commitment to providing customers with the DNS resilience they need to build and operate mission-critical applications in the cloud.



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