Dynadot

information Introduction to Finding Domain Names on Auction Sites

Spaceship Spaceship
For many successful investors, expired domain name auctions are a key part of their acquisition strategy. Some months ago I got a request from a relatively new investor to write about domain auctions – where to buy, terms of service, pitfalls, strategy, tips, etc. It is a topic that has been under-represented in NamePros Blog articles, and I agreed to write a future article.

I am no expert on domain auctions, and at times it seemed writing a domain auction article was an overwhelming task. This article is step one, and covers the main places to buy domain names in auction. Future article will look at selling domain names in auction, and at acquiring names from closeouts. I may also write about auction strategy in a deeper way.

I was finally prompted to get this domain auction article out because a fairly new site has made it much easier to search for domains in auction – Domain360.

The Domain Name Expiration Process

If a domain name is not renewed, there is, for most extensions, an auto-renew grace period, during which the registrar is required to renew the domain name. The registrar is later refunded this charge if the name does not get renewed.

The auto-renew period is followed by a redemption grace period when the name can still normally be recovered by the registrant, but at a substantially higher redemption fee.

After that, the domain goes into a, 5 day for many extensions, pending delete period. If a name exits that period, it becomes available to be registered again at new registration rate.

Domain names that are about to expire are often placed in auction. Although technically they should be called expiring domain auctions, the term expired domain auctions is frequently used.

I covered the domain name expiration process a few years ago in Finding Expiring and Recently Expired Domain Names.

The Main Expiring Domain Name Auction Sites

There are a number of sites that have auctions for expiring domain names. Some of the major ones are:
Park.io specializes in certain, mainly country code, domain names.

There are other places that auction domain names, such as Sedo, DAAZ, DNWE, Atom, NamePros, a number of other registrars, etc., but I am in this article covering auctioning of expired/expiring domain names. I will cover in a later article how and where to auction your own domain names.

What Name Goes Where?

So you see a domain you want to bid on that is about to expire. How do you know which auction site it will appear on? Andrew Allemann of DNW (@DomainNameWire) has written an article Expired domains: where each registrar sends their domains.

NameSilo, Dynadot and Sav auction their own expiring inventory, while Namecheap auctions names registered at Namecheap, and I presume Spaceship, and possibly a few other registrars. GoDaddy has agreements with a number of other registrars in addition to their own large expiring inventory. NameJet/SnapNames have agreements with a number of registrars.

For example, a name registered at Fabulous or NetworkSolutions goes to NameJet/SnapNames, a name registered at Moniker or the Tucows network of registrars will end up at GoDaddy, and a name registered at Sav, NameSilo, Namecheap or Dynadot ends up at that registrar’s marketplace. I think there is at least one change since the time that Andrew’s article was published, with Porkbun expired names now going through the Dynadot expiration process, although also accessed from Porkbun.

Some Registrars Not Part of Expired Auction Ecosystem

It appears that some large registrars are not part of any of the expired domain auction services, including, please correct me if I am wrong, registrars like Alibaba, Hostinger and Squarespace with large numbers of registrations. If you are seeking a name registered at one of those registrars, it is best to either put in a drop catch order for the name, or manually catch it yourself the day it drops.

Finding What Is About To Expire

See the article Finding Expiring and Recently Expired Domain Names for guidance on how to set filters in ExpiredDomains.net to get lists of names about to expire or recently expired.

Drop Catch Auctions

Various registrars, and specialized services such as DropCatch, offer services to try to register an expired domain name the instant it becomes available. When more than one person requests the same name, it will normally go into an auction.

Auction Ending Times

Expiring domain auctions will have a stated end time, normally extended when new bids come in late in the auction. GoDaddy expired auctions are staggered, closing throughout the day. Namecheap recently announced a change of policy so that all auctions there will end at 11 AM ET, which is 3 PM UTC. Most sites allow proxy bids.

May Require Auction Membership

Some sites require you to purchase a domain auction membership for example, see the Join Auctions button at GoDaddy. Auctions, although the costs are usually minimal, a few dollars per year. Others, like Dynadot, don’t require a paid membership to access auctions.

Read the Terms of Service

Maintaining the integrity of auction sites is important for all. Be sure to read the terms of service carefully, so you will not break any rules, or have a surprise. Note that how bids are financially covered and deadlines.

Don’t Forget Registration Fee

When bidding on an expired domain name, don’t forget that the cost of a year, or two years in the case of .ai, registration added.

If planning to buy many closeout or auction names at GoDaddy, the registration cost savings will make Discount Domain Club membership worthwhile. Note that membership includes the cost of a GoDaddy Auction membership, as well as Domain Academy and the associated tools.

Watch for Premium Renewals

If bidding on an extension that has registry premium renewal fees on some name, make sure that you check this for any name before placing a bid.

What Did That Name End At?

If your bid was unsuccessful, you often want to see how the name closed. NameBio covers the main auction sites, and, starting a few years ago, updates listings in real time, so you can look there. If you have a membership, you can even see names that closed below $100.

Featured Names Lists

There are a number of daily services that list names in auction or closeouts. A couple of well-known ones are DomainSmoke, run by Dennis Tinerino, and DSAD run by Shane Cultra and team. The domain discoveries at the NameBio Blog includes names from some of the auction sites.

Overwhelmed?

With so many auction sites, and a mammoth number of domain names expiring every single day, it seems pretty overwhelming. Remember there is no need to chase down every potential name, or use every auction service.

Domain360

Fortunately, the task of finding names on auction, and closeout, sites recently became much easier with the advent of Domain360.com, developed by Senthil Rajendren, @Domain360.com here on NamePros, @SenthilRajendrn on X.

As the screen capture below shows, Domain360 aggregates auction and closeout listings from GoDaddy, Dynadot, Namecheap, Sav, Sedo, Park.io and DropCatch.

Image-Splash-Domain360.png

Domain360.com shows auction and closeout listings from various sites, with the most active current listings at the top.

I like the symbol and color coding of the marketplace icons, so I can readily see where that name is listed. Also, in the second line of each listing it shows the number of bids, current price and time until the auction ends. Clicking any name takes you to a fuller rundown at the marketplace.

Domain360 is free to join (and you can access some features as a guest). I’ve been trying it out for the last few weeks. Below is a quick rundown of some of the features.

Once you have set up an account, if you click the star beside any domain name it will be added to your Watchlist.

The real power of Domain360 is in the filtering capabilities. You can filter according to a terms that the name starts, ends or contains, the marketplace, extensions, length, number of bids, age, etc.

Image-Domain360-Filter.png

An example illustrating filtering capability in Domain360.com. Here I set it to look for names starting with ‘my’, in auction at GoDaddy, Dynadot or Namecheap, in the .com or .org extensions. I unchecked numbers and hyphens, so only names with all letters. To reduce to a more manageable list, I required at least 3 years aged and no longer than 10 letters. I also set a minimum appraised worth value of $2000.

You can filter based on many other extensions than the ones shown in the graphic, selecting from a long scrolling list, although after the most important extensions the ordering seems random making it challenging to search for some extensions.

Note that valuation seems to be according to the valuation metric used by that marketplace, for example GoDaddy valuator at GoDaddy, but Dynadot Appraisal value at Dynadot.

I played some with the words setting, but it seems to be according to terms, not just actual dictionary words.

I was not looking for formerly developed names, but there are a number of filter items related to that including number of backlinks, traffic, and also the year the name was first archived on Archive.org, as well as the number of times the site was archived.

There is a checkbox for Geo Domains or not.

To make changes in the filtering, you set new values then hit the Apply Filters button on bottom right.

If you have a long list of names, it is handy to be able to use the Sort pulldown menu to order the list by age, length, valuation, auction end time, traffic, or number of bids.
Image-Sort-Domain360.png

Keep in mind that Domain360 will show you all auction listings at a site, not only expired auctions, for marketplaces like Dynadot that contain a mix of auction types.

If you have an account at Domain360, they send out a daily list of the most active auctions. It will also include any auctions from your watchlist that are closing that day.

The Domain360 site is responsive, and presentation attractive. Senthil Rajendren @Domain360.com is rapidly developing the site, and has already incorporated a number of features requested by early beta users.

Domain360 is also helpful for browsing closeouts, and I will cover that in a forthcoming NamePros Blog article on purchasing closeout domain names.

I urge any domain investor who buys at auctions or closeouts to try Domain360. I love the name he selected – it is a 360 degree view of the world of domain auctions and closeouts. Thanks to Senthil Rajendren @Domain360.com for producing this great resource for the domain community.

Updates:
Apr. 3, 2025 I deleted the sentence about the Age value updating problem, as the developer has now fixed that.
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Thank You 🙏
 
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Ty Mr. Bob. :)
 
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Truly humbled by your kind words and the incredibly detailed, beautifully written article.
Honestly, even if I had written it myself, I couldn't have done it better.

Thank you so much for the support and encouragement!
 
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@Bob Hawkes
The "age" filter issue is all fixed now, thanks a ton for pointing it out!
Really appreciate your sharp eye and attention to detail.
 
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Maybe it's silly question but I have something to ask... Imagine someone continuously renew his domains but don't get much offers to sell then if he intentionally drop his valuable names is there any chance those domain will be sold on auctions in high price?

If so then who will get the money?
 
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The registrar, who auctions it, will get the money. Once you don't renew, the domain is not yours.
So always renew your valuable ones and don't bother about domains which you dropped ;)
 
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Maybe it's silly question but I have something to ask... Imagine someone continuously renew his domains but don't get much offers to sell then if he intentionally drop his valuable names is there any chance those domain will be sold on auctions in high price?

If so then who will get the money?
As @Domain360.com replied, once you stop paying the domain is not yours (all domains are essentially rentals), and even though you created or found the name, and held it for years, you will not be the one to make money when it sells at auction. It may seem unfair, but keep in mind that the registrar is required to lock up money by the required auto renewals. While they get that back, there is still a business cost to that. And of course the vast majority of names that go to auction are never sold, so the auction sites and registrars need to make money from those that do sell.

Still, it would be nice to see the previous registrant receive some percentage from names that sell for more than a certain amount, but I doubt we will see it. I vaguely recall there was once one registrar that did give a small amount for dropped domains that were auctioned – does anyone else recall that and know the registrar and if still in place?

-Bob
 
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Truly humbled by your kind words and the incredibly detailed, beautifully written article.
Honestly, even if I had written it myself, I couldn't have done it better.
Thank you for your kind words, and it was my pleasure to get to know Domain360 in researching this article. Thank you once more for so quickly bringing such an elegant and helpful site to the domain world.

@Bob Hawkes
The "age" filter issue is all fixed now, thanks a ton for pointing it out!
Really appreciate your sharp eye and attention to detail.
Thanks for rapidly looking into this. I have done an edit to the article taking out the sentence.

-Bob
 
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Thank you for your kind words, and it was my pleasure to get to know Domain360 in researching this article. Thank you once more for so quickly bringing such an elegant and helpful site to the domain world.


Thanks for rapidly looking into this. I have done an edit to the article taking out the sentence.

-Bob
Thank you for your kind words, and it was my pleasure to get to know Domain360 in researching this article. Thank you once more for so quickly bringing such an elegant and helpful site to the domain world.


Thanks for rapidly looking into this. I have done an edit to the article taking out the sentence.

-Bob
Thank you so much!

Update: just added a new feature named “Collections”, which will have most used and popular search filters, as a clickable menu.
 
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Namecheap lists NameSilo names as "partner". It was hard to tell if it was a drop - or a cross-marketed auction listing. Perhaps this means it was just a cross-list put up for sale by a domainer

Screenshot 2025-04-03 at 8.10.22 PM.png
 
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This is one of the best advice for new as well as experienced domainers!
 
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Maybe it's silly question but I have something to ask... Imagine someone continuously renew his domains but don't get much offers to sell then if he intentionally drop his valuable names is there any chance those domain will be sold on auctions in high price?

If so then who will get the money?
you seem want put your domain in auction , by the way you can put it before expired domain there lot platform for that
 
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I vaguely recall there was once one registrar that did give a small amount for dropped domains that were auctioned – does anyone else recall that and know the registrar and if still in place?

Yep, it was Epik. And I don't think it was a small amount either - it was around 90% from memory (anyone correct me if I'm wrong). Not sure if they still do it.
 
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Thanks Bob, wonderful article.
I've been getting more involved in the auctions recently so all of this information was super helpful 🙏
 
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thanks bob as always (:
 
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This looks great! Only suggestion I have ATM is to remove the valuation column, especially if its specific to the auction house.

Why? Because valuations are all over the map and there is no standardized valuation methodology in the industry. I have names that get valuations from 4 figures to 6 figures depending on the place doing the valuations, I am sure I am not alone.

Valuations should always be private to the seller IMO.

Think about this: I have a 5 figure valuation at auction house 1 but I dont like transacting business there. However I do like auction house 2 but their valuation is 3 figures. I know the domain is not 3 figures and likely not 5 but the public will see that lower valuation and it may very well affect the auction in a negative way. Of course, it could go the other way, so to be save I'd say no valuations.
 
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This looks great! Only suggestion I have ATM is to remove the valuation column, especially if its specific to the auction house.

Why? Because valuations are all over the map and there is no standardized valuation methodology in the industry. I have names that get valuations from 4 figures to 6 figures depending on the place doing the valuations, I am sure I am not alone.

Valuations should always be private to the seller IMO.

Think about this: I have a 5 figure valuation at auction house 1 but I dont like transacting business there. However I do like auction house 2 but their valuation is 3 figures. I know the domain is not 3 figures and likely not 5 but the public will see that lower valuation and it may very well affect the auction in a negative way. Of course, it could go the other way, so to be save I'd say no valuations.
Thank you!
But the valuation is coming from the marketplace’s listing page.

It is public and available at the auction pages of the marketplaces.

So, even if we hide it, it is still visible on the marketplace’s auction page.

Also, IMHO, many domainers prefer to sort by valuation and browse listings.
 
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Thank you!
But the valuation is coming from the marketplace’s listing page.

It is public and available at the auction pages of the marketplaces.

So, even if we hide it, it is still visible on the marketplace’s auction page.

Also, IMHO, many domainers prefer to sort by valuation and browse listings.

True. Sorry, didnt realize that.
 
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