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information Where Do You Buy Your Domain Names?

Spaceship Spaceship
Where do you buy domain names? This was the question posed by one community member earlier today, and I think it's a question that deserves to be looked at in detail. There are a number of marketplaces, drop catching services, and auction houses that offer investors the chance to acquire valuable domain names every day, so what are they?

To more experienced investors, this may seem like a trivial question, as many are familiar with the wide range of services available to help you buy domains. However, for newer investors and those (like me) with a poor short-term memory, here is a list of places to buy domain names.

If you have your own suggestions, you are welcome to post a comment below.


Pending Delete Domains
On a typical day, over 100,000 domain names expire and enter the "pending delete" phase. This means that each domain name has five days before it is deleted from the zone file and made available to the public again. To investors, searching pending delete lists can be a very fruitful task that can result in the acquisition of some great names.

Pending delete lists are readily available to download from many drop catching websites, but if you don't want to search through thousands of domain names per day, you can use services such as ExpiredDomains.net (and others) to filter results to suit your own criteria.

Once you've found a pending delete domain name that you would like to try and acquire, you'll usually need to use a drop catching service (or software) to register the domain on your behalf as soon as it deletes from the zone file and becomes available for registration. Services such as Pheenix, DropCatch, SnapNames, and NameJet all provide drop catching services.


NamePros.com
NamePros.com has an extremely active user base of sellers posting new for sale listings and auctions daily. There are often good deals to be had by browsing through the listings. At the moment, as you'd expect, there are a lot of "Chinese premium" domains and brandable names available for sale.


Marketplaces & Auctions
There are a number of marketplaces and auction venues that sell domain names. I've included what I believe are the most popular below, but if you have any other recommendations, feel free to post a comment.

Sedo
Sedo has been an active domain name marketplace since 2001 and caters to both end-users and domain name investors. Their inventory is vast, and whilst a lot of the domains are expensive due to the lure of end-users, there are deals to be found. During the four-letter .COM boom that happened last year, many four-letter .COMs were acquired at Sedo for low buy-it-now prices that later proved to be profitable for some.​

Flippa
A marketplace that started out as a place to buy and sell websites now operates a popular domain-only category lead by @FlippaDomains. Popular investors such as @Zandibot started out by selling domains on Flippa. In 2015, Flippa acquired domain brokerage company Domain Holdings that sold $21.7MM worth of domains in the 4th Quarter of 2015.​

GoDaddy
With closeouts, expired auctions, and aftermarket domains, GoDaddy has an extremely active marketplace that has recently been made far easier to monitor thanks to the release of GoDaddy's Investor app that allows you to monitor and bid on auctions from your iOS or Android device.

SnapNames
Now owned by Web.com, SnapNames is a marketplace that offers pre-release auctions, backordering services, and auction events. I've personally found SnapNames to be a reliable drop catching service and auction venue that I've used hundreds of times to find some excellent names.

NameJet
One of the most popular auction platforms with Western and Chinese buyers. After originally being a marketplace for expiring domains, NameJet opened up their system to allow private auctions. I find that there is a lot of competition between buyers on domain names at NameJet, but that is expected with a high-quality inventory.​


Private Deals
Some of the best domain names you can acquire are not found on any public auction service or expired domain list. These names are often in the hands of private individuals, private investors, or companies that are willing to let domains go for a fair price. I recently acquired CM88.com and DN88.com from two small businesses for around $300 each. On an auction site, these would usually cost at least $1,000-1,500 each (based on recent statistics).

There have been a lot of private acquisitions of short .COM domains in the past year from mainly Chinese investors and brokers working on their behalf.


Hand Registration
Some investors have success from hand registering domains and selling them for a small profit. I couldn't recommend this practice as I've never successfully done it, but in a list of ways to acquire domains, hand registering must be mentioned.


Domain Brokers & Newsletters
Media Options and Brannans are two of the brokerage services that offer newsletters. These newsletters contain lists of domains that are for sale through the respective brokerage services, often at reseller prices.
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
James-The problem with NameJet is that imo an auction house should works with you both ways -as a buyer and a seller as GoDaddy does. Try and place a name for sale on NameJet and see what happens. Great article-thank you.
 
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@ben pedri names at NameJet are always, as far as I'm aware, one set price - so $298 would be the price they paid, not $298 plus a $69 fee. I've never had to pay added fees when buying from NameJet.
 
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I get my domains from the following places, in that order (largest quantity of names from pending delete/dropping names, followed by GoDaddy expiring domains).

1. Pending delete.
2. GoDaddy expiring domains.
3. NameJet pre release/expiring domains.
4. Hand registrations.
5. Aftermarket purchases.
6. NamePros.
7. Name.com/NameSilo.com expiring auctions.

In terms of quality, nearly all of what I consider my best domains were aftermarket/private purchases.

I think it's often difficult to buy high quality names at decent prices at most venues. At GoDaddy, even mediocre names often get bid up to low/mid $xxx, and great names get bid up towards end-user prices at times. It's much better at NameJet, although the competition/prices are definitively increasing there too. For dropping names, a lot of them go to public auctions where bidders who did not backorder the domain join in and push the prices up considerably. Also, I have noticed a lot of dropping names don't get caught by snapnames/dropcatch/pheenix, but just appear as newly registered with various random registrars, with ztomy.com name-servers, and under the ownership of "New Ventures Services."
 
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When we hear about a domain ( I mean when it's presented in marketplaces ), while it's still registered and will expire in few days or weeks?
That's a near expiration domain, expired domain, or an expiring domain name. All three are synonymous.

Dropcatching - when we dropcatch or catch drops domains in its life-cycle?
Dropcatching takes place at the moment a domain becomes available for registration again after having been previously registered. It is when you, a program, or a service registers a domain name immediately after it becomes available for registration again.

Backordering - when we backorder a domain in its life-cycle?
Backordering can take place at anytime, even if a domain has not expired, and refers to placing an order to dropcatch the domain as soon as it becomes available for registration again. If the domain never expires and becomes available for registration, then the backorder will never be used.

Aftermarket ( what is "beforemarket" )?
The aftermarket is where domains are listed for sale on marketplaces by their current registrants. I presume beforemarket is when the registry charges premium prices on domains available for registration.

Deleted domain / dropped domain
Deleted and dropped domains are domains that were previously registered but are now available for registration.

Expired domain / expiry domain
Dropping domains, expiry, and expired domains are domains that have expired and are going through the deletion life cycle but have not yet become available for registration.

gtld-lifecycle.jpg
 
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@ben pedri yes, I believe the $69 backorder fee is built into the price :) - $69 is the base price (unless it's a pending delete domain, in which case I think it's $39)
 
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@ben pedri yes, I believe the $69 backorder fee is built into the price :) - $69 is the base price (unless it's a pending delete domain, in which case I think it's $39)
Great thanks for the article ,often I ask myself the same questions what are pros doing right now and where are they getting their domains ,I actually like Brannans ,sometimes when davids customers need cash you can score a real good deal. Keep up the great work.. ben
 
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Great article.

Thanks James!
 
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I believe Afternic should be mentioned in this post as it's one of the biggest marketplaces.
 
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how about ?

4.cn
22.cn
4w.am
eName.com
West.cn ( West.top )
Yumi.com
Wangwang ( new platform )
 
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Thanks for precise and valuable information. Brandable domains are making rounds so we can buy domain names from Brandable Sites too.
 
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I always like to remember ebay.com.
Sometimes is good for pick undervalued domains

I did consider eBay, but decided against including it. I don't consider it to be a great marketplace for names and don't check it often...

I believe Afternic should be mentioned in this post as it's one of the biggest marketplaces.

Thanks Doron - yes, that should be on the list. An oversight on my part; Afternic has some great deals every so often.

James-The problem with NameJet is that imo an auction house should works with you both ways -as a buyer and a seller as GoDaddy does. Try and place a name for sale on NameJet and see what happens. Great article-thank you.

Thanks. I think NameJet is doing a great job with their inventory. The names that I see on there are domains that are desirable right now - sometimes the reserve prices are a little steep but that happens.

I have no real preference between GoDaddy and NameJet; whoever has the best name at the best price will get my money.
 
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Nice write up! The 'Private Deals' paragraph is certainly inspiring but how exactly does one go about finding these small businesses?
I've thought about this before but I don't have a clue where to start :-/

There's no real formula to it :) - you just have to go searching... Common phrases, common company names, etc.
 
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there are thousands of good domains still available ( never registered )
 
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thousands of domains are available for registration !!!

if you are an end user then buy
if you are an investor , then register
 
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Hey james I see on llllsales . com that names of 4 letter dot coms sold for 298 ,I notice that you see a couple here and there sell for less than 300 or maybe a couple with q in them. On those block of sales do they include the 69 in them or does the buyer actually pay 298 plus 69 ,,I know its a dumb question and the obvious is that its 367 total ,but I want to be sure. Thanks for your help ,,,Ben
 
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So these are not backorder auctions that these are traded on,all of the name I have bought on namejet cost me 69 to backorder if I won the domain so what your telling me is that its built into the price?
 
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The ename.com/22.cn/west.cn/net.cn is Chinese registrar, not suitable for the western.
 
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Good reminder of information!
 
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James-The problem with NameJet is that imo an auction house should works with you both ways -as a buyer and a seller as GoDaddy does. Try and place a name for sale on NameJet and see what happens. Great article-thank you.
I agree, I have sent countless names to them and never had a single one chosen.
 
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3d-teleportation.com

just registered

 
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I always like to remember ebay.com.
Sometimes is good for pick undervalued domains
 
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