Outcome: You’ll turn on encrypted DNS on Android so your ISP can’t easily read your domain lookups.
Who this is for: Android users (Android 9+) who want a quick privacy upgrade without installing extra apps.
Time required: 2 minutes.
Quick Answer
Go to Settings > Network & Internet > Private DNS, choose Private DNS provider hostname, enter dns.google or one.one.one.one, save, then confirm at dnsleaktest.com.
Here’s one small Android setting that gives a real privacy win: Private DNS. It encrypts DNS queries so your network provider can’t trivially inspect plain DNS requests.
Prerequisites
- Android 9 (Pie) or later
- Internet connection for setup and testing
- A valid provider hostname
Step-by-step: Enable Private DNS on Android
- Open the Private DNS screen.
On most phones: Settings > Network & Internet > Private DNS. You can also use Settings search and type “Private DNS.”
Expected: You see options like Off, Automatic, and Private DNS provider hostname. - Set a trusted provider hostname.
Select Private DNS provider hostname, then enter one provider:
–dns.google(Google Public DNS)
–one.one.one.one(Cloudflare)
Tap Save.
Expected: Connection resumes normally after saving. - Verify it’s active.
Visit dnsleaktest.com and run Extended Test.
Expected: Resolver results should match your chosen DNS provider instead of your ISP default DNS.
Expected result checks
- Web browsing still works after enabling the hostname
- DNS leak test no longer shows ISP DNS servers
- Setting remains system-wide on your Android device
Common mistakes
- Entering a full URL (like
https://dns.google) instead of hostname only - Typos in hostname, causing internet to fail
- Forgetting to test, so you don’t know if it actually switched
- Assuming this replaces a VPN entirely (it doesn’t)
Quick troubleshooting
- No internet after saving: Reopen Private DNS and fix hostname spelling, or switch to Automatic.
- Still showing ISP DNS: Toggle Airplane mode, reconnect Wi-Fi/cellular, then run test again.
- Work/school Wi-Fi issues: Some managed networks block strict private DNS; use Automatic while on that network.
- Feels slower: Switch between Google and Cloudflare and retest.
Reference links
- Android Help: Private DNS settings
- Android Developers: Private DNS documentation
- Cloudflare setup: 1.1.1.1 on Android
Related posts
- Hide DNS Tracking on Android: Turn On Private DNS in 3 Steps
- Hidden Android Feature: Notification History to Rescue Dismissed Alerts
- No-App Android Trick: Live Captions for Every Video and Call
Next step CTA: After this, enable your phone’s private/randomized Wi-Fi MAC address and review app network permissions for stronger everyday privacy.