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SSL Certificates and Domain Verification

How SSL certificates work and troubleshooting verification issues.

Edward Boatman avatar
Written by Edward Boatman
Updated today

Lingo automatically provisions SSL certificates for custom domains to ensure secure connections.

How SSL certificates work

When you add a custom domain:

  1. You configure DNS to point to Lingo

  2. Lingo verifies you own the domain

  3. An SSL certificate is automatically generated

  4. HTTPS is enabled for your custom domain

Certificate provisioning

Automatic provisioning

  • Certificates are generated via Let's Encrypt

  • No manual certificate upload required

  • Certificates auto-renew before expiration

Timing

  • Initial provisioning: Minutes to a few hours

  • Depends on DNS propagation speed

  • Most domains are active within 1 hour

Domain verification

Before issuing a certificate, Lingo verifies domain ownership:

CNAME verification

  • Your CNAME record pointing to Lingo confirms control

  • This is the primary verification method

TXT record verification

  • Some setups require a TXT record

  • Proves ownership without affecting other DNS settings

Troubleshooting

Certificate not provisioning

  1. Verify DNS records are correct

  2. Check for typos in domain name

  3. Wait for DNS propagation (up to 48 hours)

  4. Ensure no CAA records block Let's Encrypt

Verification failing

  1. Confirm CNAME points to the correct target

  2. Check for conflicting A or AAAA records

  3. Remove any proxy settings that might interfere

  4. Try using a DNS lookup tool to verify records

Certificate expired

  • Certificates should auto-renew

  • If expired, check that DNS records are still correct

  • Contact support if auto-renewal fails

Security notes

  • All custom domains use HTTPS

  • HTTP requests redirect to HTTPS automatically

  • Certificates use modern TLS standards

Learn more

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