DNSExit Remote Access
Stay reachable when the network underneath you gets awkward.
Use Dynamic DNS when your public IP changes, Public Tunnel when you cannot port forward, and Static-IP Relay when you need a stable endpoint behind CGNAT or other blocked inbound access.
Dynamic DNS
Keep a hostname pointed at your current public IP when the ISP changes it.
Explore Dynamic DNSPublic Tunnel
Publish local web apps through an outbound-only tunnel without opening router ports.
Explore Public TunnelsStatic-IP Relay
Reach SSH, VPN, RDP, cameras, or other TCP services through a stable relay endpoint.
Explore Static-IP RelayChoose by the problem, not by the acronym.
Dynamic DNS is enough if inbound access already works.
Public Tunnel is the easier fit for browser-based services.
Static-IP Relay is the stronger fit for TCP services behind CGNAT.
Common Public Tunnel use cases
Home server without port forwarding
Reach a self-hosted dashboard or web app when the router cannot accept inbound traffic.
View use caseWebhook testing
Receive callbacks from public services while developing against a local app.
View use caseShare a local web app
Send a preview link before you deploy a demo, review build, or temporary site.
View use caseLearn before you choose
What is CGNAT?
Understand why some home connections cannot receive direct inbound traffic at all.
Read guidePublic Tunnel vs port forwarding
Compare direct router exposure with an outbound-only tunnel path.
Read comparisonPort forwarding not working?
Check the common failure points before deciding the router is the whole story.
Read guideWhat is a reverse tunnel?
See how a local service becomes reachable without waiting for inbound traffic first.
Read guideCompare Remote Access options
DNSExit as an ngrok alternative
Compare Public Tunnel and Static-IP Relay for local apps, webhooks, home labs, and small teams.
Read comparisonDNSExit as a Cloudflare Tunnel alternative
Use Remote Access when you want Dynamic DNS, domain DNS, email, and tunnels in one account.
Read comparisonDNSExit as a No-IP alternative
Start with Free Dynamic DNS, then add Public Tunnel or Static-IP Relay when DDNS alone is not enough.
Read comparisonCommon questions
Do I still need Dynamic DNS?
Yes, when inbound access already works and only the public IP changes. Remote Access is for the cases where a hostname alone is not enough.
Which product should I try first?
Choose Public Tunnel for browser-based services. Choose Static-IP Relay when the service is TCP-based or you need a stable endpoint behind CGNAT.
Does this help behind CGNAT?
Yes. Public Tunnel can expose local web services, while Static-IP Relay is the stronger fit when no usable public IPv4 exists.
Is signup open?
Yes. Signup is open, and DNSExit prepares the endpoint that fits each request.
Get started with Remote Access.
Tell us what you need to reach remotely so we can prioritize the first tunnel and relay workflows.