Dynadot

information Million Dollar Sales, Part One: Where Are They Now?

Spaceship Spaceship
If you visit DNJournal, you’ll notice that there is a section called “YTD Sales Charts”, which lists the highest sales of the year to date. There’s also a fantastic archive of domain sales dating back to 2004, and is one of the most comprehensive and complete archives of the domain industry as a whole.

Every so often, DNJournal publishes a domain sale priced at $1 million or more. In this mini series, we’ve taken a look back at all the domain names that DNJournal has listed as selling for over $1 million from 2004 to 2016, to see what they’re currently used for.

Part one is Sex.com through to Candy.com. For your own reference, we shall include a table showing each domain name with their sales price, and the year the name was sold at the bottom of each article in the series.


Sex.com - $13 million - 2010

One of the most famous domain names of all time, with a checkered history. A book was also written about the domain and the legal action that surrounded the name. As you would expect, the website the domain is hosting now is definitely NSFW, but it seems to still be a popular destination with a global Alexa ranking of 945.


Fund.com - $9,999,950 - 2008

In March 2008, a company called Clek Media announced they had brokered the sale of Fund.com to the company Fund.com, Inc. The business surrounding the domain name thrived until 2011, when according to Wikipedia, Fund.com lost 99% of its value. Currently the domain is being offered for sale by Igloo.com


Porn.com - $9.5 million - 2007

Another NSFW domain name is the $9.5 million Porn.com. This domain, with a global Alexa ranking of 725, was sold in 2007, but could have been sold again in 2013. According to DomainHistory.net, the name transferred from Moniker to Fabulous.com under privacy at some point in 2013. This could have just been a registrar change, or it could have been sold.


Porno.com - $8,888,888 - 2015

Three of the top four largest domain sales of all time are from the adult industry. This sale is from Rick Schwartz (@Rick Schwartz), and was first announced on TheDomains.com in 2015. Rick originally bought the name for $42,000 from a college student who bought the name for $5,000 a week before. Since then, Rick has apparently earned well in excess of $10 million from ads and redirects on the domain.


We.com - $8 million - 2015

This sale was first announced by NamePros in 2015. At the time, the domain’s new owner wasn’t known. It was confirmed that the new owner was from China, and we speculated that the domain could have been bought by Tencent - owners of the popular WeChat application. Since then, the name has become the new home of Wealth Evolution, a peer to peer (P2P) loan company based in Beijing.


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Diamond.com - $7.5 million - 2006

Online jewellery retailer Ice.com bought the diamond.com domain name from Odimo Inc in 2006, and was used to to host a site educating visitors about diamonds, as well as offering diamond jewellery for sale.

According to TheDomains.com, Diamond.com was being offered for sale by GoDaddy in 2015. The domain currently doesn’t host a site, but looks to still be owned by the original buyer.


Z.com - $6,784,000 - 2014

A very rare one-letter .COM was sold by Nissan Motors to GMO Internet, one of Japan’s largest ISP operator. Z.com is one of just three one-letter .COM domains available, with the other two being Q.com and X.com. Currently, Z.com hosts a forex and commodities trading website, and is still owned by GMO Internet.


Slots.com - $5.5 million - 2010

Slots.com was purchased by Canadian billionaire Calvin Ayre, owner of Bodog; an entertainment brand that offers online gambling and sports betting. Currently the domain hosts a fairly basic website that links to gaming websites, along with a lot of text about online casinos and slots games.


Toys.com - $5.1 million - 2009

Sold in 2009 in a bankruptcy auction, Toys.com was bought by Toys R Us, outbidding National A-1 Advertising. The company then set up a website on the domain name, but 2015, the domain started forwarding to the Toys R Us main website.


Clothes.com - $4.9 million - 2008

In May 2008, Zappos bought the domain name Clothes.com for $4.9 million from IdeaLab. The purchase was brought to light after the company was acquired by Amazon in an all-stock deal worth $1.2 billion. As of writing, Clothes.com is still owned by the Zappos brand, but the website doesn’t resolve.


IG.com - $4.7 million - 2013

IG Group of London, England invested $4.7 million into buying this two-letter .COM domain. The sale was brokered by Tessa Holcomb of Igloo.com and Marcus Kocak, former Director of Domain Acquisitions at NetNames. IG.com was in use by iG, a Brazilian company before being sold. Around the same time, IG Group acquired IG.co.uk and IG.de. IG.com is now used to host IG Group’s popular trading platform.


HG.com - $3,770,000 - 2016

Announced very recently was the sale of HG.com. The news was first broken by DN.com’s blog, dnqueen.net. According to them, the domain was bought by a company called WanJiaHuanGou, and the name is currently forwarding to their existing website, wjhgw.com. The company that now owns HG.com also owns several other domain names including 65.com, 068.com and 682.com.


Mi.com - $3.6 million - 2014

Another two-letter .COM was sold in 2014, again with a multi million dollar price tag. This was acquired by Xiaomi, a Chinese based smartphone maker, which had revenues of $20 billion in 2015.

At the time, co-founder of Xiaomi, Li Wanqiang, said: “The new domain is simpler and more accessible to an international audience.” Since buying the name, Mi.com has become Xiaomi’s official website, with the majority of the company’s products also using “Mi” in their product names.


Whisky.com - $3.1 million - 2014

Horst Luenig of The Whisky Media Corporation bought Whisky.com for $3.1 million in 2014 from The Castello Brothers. The name now hosts the company’s website that gives some incredibly in-depth information about Whisky. This name has a great meaning to NamePros, since Horst took part in our first ever Inside Interview to explain why he paid $3.1 million to own this domain.


Vodka.com - $3 million - 2006

Vodka, as it turns out, is $100,000 cheaper than Whisky! Bought by Russian Standard in 2006, Vodka.com was sold by Roy Messer, the owner of FreeStuff.com in a transaction that was brokered by Sedo.

According to DNJournal, Messer and the Sedo broker were invited to St Petersburg, Russia to meet Roustam Tariko, the billionaire entrepreneur who owns Russian Standard Vodka. It’s a great story that’s well documented on DNJournal.


Candy.com - $3 million - 2009

This is another domain name that was sold by Domain King, Rick Schwartz. Sold to G&J Holdings, the domain has been put to great use since then. The site has been fully developed into an online store, offering thousands of candy products.

The name is number one on Google in the USA for the popular search term “candy”, and the domain currently has a USA Alexa ranking of 72,728. If you’re interested in reading more about this deal, Rick has the details on his blog.


Domain NameSales PriceYear of Sale
Sex.com$13 million2010
Fund.com$9,999,9502008
Porn.com$9.5 million2007
Porno.com$8,888,8882015
We.com$8 million2015
Diamond.com$7.5 million2006
Z.com$6,784,0002014
Slots.com$5.5 million2010
Toys.com$5.1 million2009
Clothes.com$4.9 million2008
IG.com$4.7 million2013
HG.com$3,770,0002016
MI.com$3.6 million2014
Whisky.com$3.1 million2014
Vodka.com$3 million2006
Candy.com$3 million 2009



This article is part of a series: View Series
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
This type of lists are always an interesting read. Thanks!
 
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So now the question is: Which domain will top this list someday?
 
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So now the question is: Which domain will top this list someday?

i reckon that one of the auction lots at namescon 2017 could break records if the uk pub chains start to outbid each other

some uk pub chains have over 1000 pubs in their portfolio

but there are some great short single one word .com's in that auction lot
 
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If you visit DNJournal, you’ll notice that there is a section called “YTD Sales Charts”, which lists the highest sales of the year to date. There’s also a fantastic archive of domain sales dating back to 2004, and is one of the most comprehensive and complete archives of the domain industry as a whole.

Every so often, DNJournal publishes a domain sale priced at $1 million or more. In this mini series, we’ve taken a look back at all the domain names that DNJournal has listed as selling for over $1 million from 2004 to 2016, to see what they’re currently used for.

Part one is Sex.com through to Candy.com. For your own reference, we shall include a table showing each domain name with their sales price, and the year the name was sold at the bottom of each article in the series.


Sex.com - $13 million - 2010

One of the most famous domain names of all time, with a checkered history. A book was also written about the domain and the legal action that surrounded the name. As you would expect, the website the domain is hosting now is definitely NSFW, but it seems to still be a popular destination with a global Alexa ranking of 945.


Fund.com - $9,999,950 - 2008

In March 2008, a company called Clek Media announced they had brokered the sale of Fund.com to the company Fund.com, Inc. The business surrounding the domain name thrived until 2011, when according to Wikipedia, Fund.com lost 99% of its value. Currently the domain is being offered for sale by Igloo.com


Porn.com - $9.5 million - 2007

Another NSFW domain name is the $9.5 million Porn.com. This domain, with a global Alexa ranking of 725, was sold in 2007, but could have been sold again in 2013. According to DomainHistory.net, the name transferred from Moniker to Fabulous.com under privacy at some point in 2013. This could have just been a registrar change, or it could have been sold.


Porno.com - $8,888,888 - 2015

Three of the top four largest domain sales of all time are from the adult industry. This sale is from Rick Schwartz (@Rick Schwartz), and was first announced on TheDomains.com in 2015. Rick originally bought the name for $42,000 from a college student who bought the name for $5,000 a week before. Since then, Rick has apparently earned well in excess of $10 million from ads and redirects on the domain.


We.com - $8 million - 2015

This sale was first announced by NamePros in 2015. At the time, the domain’s new owner wasn’t known. It was confirmed that the new owner was from China, and we speculated that the domain could have been bought by Tencent - owners of the popular WeChat application. Since then, the name has become the new home of Wealth Evolution, a peer to peer (P2P) loan company based in Beijing.


Diamond.com - $7.5 million - 2006

Online jewellery retailer Ice.com bought the diamond.com domain name from Odimo Inc in 2006, and was used to to host a site educating visitors about diamonds, as well as offering diamond jewellery for sale.

According to TheDomains.com, Diamond.com was being offered for sale by GoDaddy in 2015. The domain currently doesn’t host a site, but looks to still be owned by the original buyer.


Z.com - $6,784,000 - 2014

A very rare one-letter .COM was sold by Nissan Motors to GMO Internet, one of Japan’s largest ISP operator. Z.com is one of just three one-letter .COM domains available, with the other two being Q.com and X.com. Currently, Z.com hosts a forex and commodities trading website, and is still owned by GMO Internet.


Slots.com - $5.5 million - 2010

Slots.com was purchased by Canadian billionaire Calvin Ayre, owner of Bodog; an entertainment brand that offers online gambling and sports betting. Currently the domain hosts a fairly basic website that links to gaming websites, along with a lot of text about online casinos and slots games.


Toys.com - $5.1 million - 2009

Sold in 2009 in a bankruptcy auction, Toys.com was bought by Toys R Us, outbidding National A-1 Advertising. The company then set up a website on the domain name, but 2015, the domain started forwarding to the Toys R Us main website.


Clothes.com - $4.9 million - 2008

In May 2008, Zappos bought the domain name Clothes.com for $4.9 million from IdeaLab. The purchase was brought to light after the company was acquired by Amazon in an all-stock deal worth $1.2 billion. As of writing, Clothes.com is still owned by the Zappos brand, but the website doesn’t resolve.


IG.com - $4.7 million - 2013

IG Group of London, England invested $4.7 million into buying this two-letter .COM domain. The sale was brokered by Tessa Holcomb of Igloo.com and Marcus Kocak, former Director of Domain Acquisitions at NetNames. IG.com was in use by iG, a Brazilian company before being sold. Around the same time, IG Group acquired IG.co.uk and IG.de. IG.com is now used to host IG Group’s popular trading platform.


HG.com - $3,770,000 - 2016

Announced very recently was the sale of HG.com. The news was first broken by DN.com’s blog, dnqueen.net. According to them, the domain was bought by a company called WanJiaHuanGou, and the name is currently forwarding to their existing website, wjhgw.com. The company that now owns HG.com also owns several other domain names including 65.com, 068.com and 682.com.


Mi.com - $3.6 million - 2014

Another two-letter .COM was sold in 2014, again with a multi million dollar price tag. This was acquired by Xiaomi, a Chinese based smartphone maker, which had revenues of $20 billion in 2015.

At the time, co-founder of Xiaomi, Li Wanqiang, said: “The new domain is simpler and more accessible to an international audience.” Since buying the name, Mi.com has become Xiaomi’s official website, with the majority of the company’s products also using “Mi” in their product names.


Whisky.com - $3.1 million - 2014

Horst Luenig of The Whisky Media Corporation bought Whisky.com for $3.1 million in 2014 from The Castello Brothers. The name now hosts the company’s website that gives some incredibly in-depth information about Whisky. This name has a great meaning to NamePros, since Horst took part in our first ever Inside Interview to explain why he paid $3.1 million to own this domain.


Vodka.com - $3 million - 2006

Vodka, as it turns out, is $100,000 cheaper than Whisky! Bought by Russian Standard in 2006, Vodka.com was sold by Roy Messer, the owner of FreeStuff.com in a transaction that was brokered by Sedo.

According to DNJournal, Messer and the Sedo broker were invited to St Petersburg, Russia to meet Roustam Tariko, the billionaire entrepreneur who owns Russian Standard Vodka. It’s a great story that’s well documented on DNJournal.


Candy.com - $3 million - 2009

This is another domain name that was sold by Domain King, Rick Schwartz. Sold to G&J Holdings, the domain has been put to great use since then. The site has been fully developed into an online store, offering thousands of candy products.

The name is number one on Google in the USA for the popular search term “candy”, and the domain currently has a USA Alexa ranking of 72,728. If you’re interested in reading more about this deal, Rick has the details on his blog.


Domain NameSales PriceYear of Sale
Sex.com$13 million2010
Fund.com$9,999,9502008
Porn.com$9.5 million2007
Porno.com$8,888,8882015
We.com$8 million2015
Diamond.com$7.5 million2006
Z.com$6,784,0002014
Slots.com$5.5 million2010
Toys.com$5.1 million2009
Clothes.com$4.9 million2008
IG.com$4.7 million2013
HG.com$3,770,0002016
MI.com$3.6 million2014
Whisky.com$3.1 million2014
Vodka.com$3 million2006
Candy.com$3 million 2009

Thanks.
 
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Interesting to note how long it took to actually be used as a business vs ads, blogs.
 
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Fund.com - $9,999,950 - 2008
Currently the domain is being offered for sale by Igloo.com

upload_2016-12-5_22-9-59.png

Does this mean they sold the domain...? or is it a sales tactic?

WHOIS is still DirectNic private. Last public WHOIS available from 2013 was the Fund.com CFO.

July 2016, it was parked via DirectNic. Last update shows September 2016.
 
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recently : Vivo.com 2.1 million
 
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Stand 30 October 2016

List of most expensive domain names


This is a list of some of the highest prices paid for domain names.

The list is limited to domains that sold for $3 million or more.


Shopping.com 680 Million $

Rent.com 440 Million $

CreditCards.com sold for 133 Million $

Dictionary.com 100 Million $

BodyBuilding.com 100 Million $

Poker.com 35 Million $

Golf.com 24 Million $



  1. Insurance.com $35.6 million in 2010
  2. VacationRentals.com $35 million in 2007
  3. PrivateJet.com $30.18 million in 2012
  4. Internet.com $18 million in 2009
  5. 360.com $17 million in 2015
  6. Insure.com $16 million in 2009

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/list-most-expensive-domain-names-michael-ehrhardt-?trk=mp-reader-card
 
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Show attachment 44636
Does this mean they sold the domain...? or is it a sales tactic?

WHOIS is still DirectNic private. Last public WHOIS available from 2013 was the Fund.com CFO.

July 2016, it was parked via DirectNic. Last update shows September 2016.

Interesting. When I wrote this (a couple of weeks ago), I'm sure it was for sale, since there was a contact form on the page
 
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Stand 30 October 2016

List of most expensive domain names


This is a list of some of the highest prices paid for domain names.

The list is limited to domains that sold for $3 million or more.


Shopping.com 680 Million $

Rent.com 440 Million $

CreditCards.com sold for 133 Million $

Dictionary.com 100 Million $

BodyBuilding.com 100 Million $

Poker.com 35 Million $

Golf.com 24 Million $



  1. Insurance.com $35.6 million in 2010
  2. VacationRentals.com $35 million in 2007
  3. PrivateJet.com $30.18 million in 2012
  4. Internet.com $18 million in 2009
  5. 360.com $17 million in 2015
  6. Insure.com $16 million in 2009

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/list-most-expensive-domain-names-michael-ehrhardt-?trk=mp-reader-card

The list I'm using here is from DNJournal, and accounts for domain only sales, which have been confirmed by DNJournal independently
 
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Dudu. .com which was sold on 5/1/2012 at SEDO* for $1 million today shows:
403 Forbidden page
 
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The list I'm using here is from DNJournal, and accounts for domain only sales, which have been confirmed by DNJournal independently

there are a few different lists as wikipedia list includes insurance as most expensive domain and also includes fb.com

i think dn journal list is cash only domain only sales?
 
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Thanks for the list and summary of usage and ownerships.
 
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Show attachment 44636
Does this mean they sold the domain...? or is it a sales tactic?

WHOIS is still DirectNic private. Last public WHOIS available from 2013 was the Fund.com CFO.

July 2016, it was parked via DirectNic. Last update shows September 2016.

I think there were some rumors that fund.com did not sell for $10 million previously.

Now it was listed with a reserve of $2 million.

What is the true market value of it today, in your opinion?
 
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Super good post.

Thanks man.
 
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