A double-edge-triggered digital low dropout regulator (DLDO) is proposed with a built-in adaptive voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) clock (AVC) for a system-on-chip (SoC) application. To achieve a fast transient response, the main comparator generates the comparison result at the rising edge of the AVC, and this result is sampled by the coarse or fine bidirectional shifter register at the falling edge of the AVC. Furthermore, the clock frequency can be boosted from 8 MHz at the steady state to 50 MHz by the AVC when the output current suffers from a sudden change, and it can also be adjusted in real-time according to the output voltage, which avoids the oscillation phenomenon and decreases the power consumption during the recovery process. To further lower the power consumption, the self-clock comparator replaces the conventional static comparator in the transient detector. The post-simulation results show that the proposed DLDO consumes a quiescent current of 95.13 μA in the steady state, and drives a maximum load current of 25 mA at the supply power of 0.6 V with an active area of 0.053-mm2 in a 180 nm CMOS process. When the load current jumps from 0.5 mA to 25 mA at the edge of 100 ps, the undershoot voltage and overshoot voltage are only 335 mV with the recovery time of 2.7 μs and 47.6 mV with the recovery time of 2.1 μs at the total on-chip capacitor of 50 pF, respectively, resulting in two competitive figures of merits (FoMs) than the previous works.