Check-Host.cc

DNS Test from Turkey

1 node in Istanbul · TurkIX Istanbul

Turkey — 1 Node

Cities
Istanbul
ISPs / ASNs
Netlen Internet AS44620
Datacenters
Netlen Internet
Internet Exchanges
TurkIX Istanbul — Turkish Internet Exchange, primary national peering point in Istanbul
DE-CIX Istanbul — DE-CIX's Istanbul platform, connecting regional and international carriers
ISTIX — Istanbul Internet Exchange, additional local peering fabric

DNS Testing from Turkey

A DNS check from our Istanbul node queries your domain's authoritative nameservers directly from AS44620 (Netlen Internet) IP space and records the response. This confirms that your DNS is resolving correctly from Turkish network infrastructure. If you use GeoDNS to direct Turkish users to a regional origin or CDN edge — for example, a Middle Eastern or European server — this check verifies that the correct record is being returned for Turkish source IPs.

Turkish ISP recursive resolvers are separate from this check — our DNS test queries your authoritative nameservers directly, bypassing any cached or ISP-managed resolver. Turkey has historically had instances of DNS manipulation at the ISP level for nationally blocked services, but this check queries the authoritative tier directly from our node IP, which is unaffected by ISP-level DNS filtering. A successful authoritative response confirms your nameservers are reachable from Turkish infrastructure.

AS44620 (Netlen) is RIPE-registered Turkish address space. Most major GeoDNS providers correctly classify it as TR / Middle East. If a DNS check from our Istanbul node returns an unexpected geographic record — for example, a US IP instead of a European or Middle Eastern record — your GeoDNS policy is not matching Turkish ASNs correctly. Comparing against our Israeli and German nodes will show whether the classification is off for Turkey specifically or for the entire RIPE East region.

Turkey Network Infrastructure

Istanbul is Turkey's internet hub and one of the most strategically positioned network cities in the world. It sits on the geographic boundary between Europe and Asia, and cable routes between the two continents physically pass through or near the city. Terrestrial fiber crossing the Bosphorus links European and Asian network segments, making Istanbul a natural transit point for traffic moving between Central Europe, the Middle East, and South and Central Asia. DE-CIX opened an Istanbul platform specifically because of this geographic leverage, giving carriers a neutral peering point at the Europe-Asia crossroads.

The Turkish internet backbone is anchored by Turk Telekom (AS9121), which operates the dominant fixed-line infrastructure and holds significant transit market share. TTNET is its internet subsidiary. Vodafone Turkey (AS15897), Turkcell (AS47331), and a range of commercial ISPs and hosting providers compete below the Turk Telekom tier. Our probe node runs on Netlen Internet (AS44620), a Turkish colocation and ISP with data center infrastructure in Istanbul. Netlen operates within the Istanbul carrier ecosystem and peers at TurkIX and DE-CIX Istanbul.

DE-CIX Istanbul provides a neutral peering fabric that sits alongside TurkIX and ISTIX. The presence of a DE-CIX platform in Istanbul has improved peering efficiency for international carriers that already peer at DE-CIX Frankfurt or Madrid — they can extend the same peering policies to Istanbul without a separate bilateral arrangement. This matters for latency: a CDN with Istanbul peering can serve Turkish users directly rather than routing through Frankfurt and back, saving 80–100 ms in round-trip time.

Istanbul to Frankfurt runs approximately 43–50 ms on well-routed paths. Istanbul to Moscow is around 50–60 ms. Istanbul to Cairo runs approximately 38–45 ms. Istanbul to Dubai is roughly 50–65 ms. These figures reflect Istanbul's physical position between Europe and the Middle East — the city has shorter RTTs to Moscow and Cairo than most Western European capitals do. Istanbul to New York is approximately 120–135 ms via trans-Atlantic routing through European transit.

Our probe node in Istanbul (AS44620, Netlen Internet) is located in Netlen's data center in Istanbul. Results from this node reflect connectivity through a mid-tier Turkish commercial ISP with local peering at Istanbul exchanges. For targets that have CDN or hosting presence in Turkey, results will be significantly faster than for targets served only from Western Europe. The node is useful for diagnosing whether a service is properly peered for Turkish users or whether all Turkish traffic is routing the long way through Frankfurt.