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Add a site

Follow these steps to onboard your website or application to Cloudflare. Once your domain is active, your web traffic will proxy through Cloudflare, which speeds up and protects websites and services on your domain.

Cloudflare will become the primary DNS provider for your domain, meaning your DNS records are managed at Cloudflare, and we authoritatively answer all DNS queries.

Prerequisites

To onboard a website or application to Cloudflare, you need to own the domain name (example.com).

If you do not already own a domain and plan to use Cloudflare for your authoritative DNS, we highly recommend purchasing your domain name through Cloudflare Registrar. This simplifies your setup process by automatically using Cloudflare for authoritative DNS.

If you are onboarding an existing domain to Cloudflare, make sure DNSSEC is disabled at your registrar (where you purchased your domain name). Otherwise, your domain will experience connectivity errors when you change your nameservers.

Provider-specific instructions

This is not an exhaustive list of how to update DS records in other providers, but the following links may be helpful:

Why you have to disable DNSSEC

When your domain has DNSSEC enabled, your DNS provider digitally signs all your DNS records. This action prevents anyone else from issuing false DNS records on your behalf and redirecting traffic intended for your domain.

However, having a single set of signed records also prevents Cloudflare from issuing new DNS records on your behalf (which is part of using Cloudflare for your authoritative nameservers). So if you change your nameservers without disabling DNSSEC, DNSSEC will prevent Cloudflare's DNS records from resolving properly.

1. Add site in Cloudflare

  1. Log in to the Cloudflare dashboard.

  2. Select Add a domain.

  3. Enter your website's apex domain (for example, example.com), choose how you would like to add your DNS records, and select Continue.

  4. Select a plan.

  5. Make sure we have all of your DNS records.

    Cloudflare can automatically scan for common records and add them to the DNS zone for you, or you can add records manually. These records show up under your domain on the DNS > Records page of the dashboard.


    1. Since this scan is not guaranteed to find all existing DNS records, you need to review your records, paying special attention to the following record types:

    2. If you find any missing records, manually add those records.

    3. Depending on your site setup, you may want to adjust the proxy status for certain A, AAAA, or CNAME records.

    4. Select Continue.

2. Update nameservers

Once you have added a domain (also known as a zone) to Cloudflare, that domain will receive two assigned authoritative nameservers.


Before your domain can begin using Cloudflare for DNS resolution, you need to add these nameservers at your registrar. Make sure DNSSEC is disabled at this point.

3. Complete SSL/TLS setup

To prevent insecure connections and visitor browser errors, make sure you have SSL/TLS protection.

4. Go beyond the basics

Many Cloudflare services will automatically protect and speed up your web traffic once your nameservers are updated. To customize how we process your traffic and to get more out of Cloudflare, refer to our basic tasks.