Unstoppable Domains — Expired Auctions

analysis .accountant - gTLD (Generic Top-Level Domain)

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Today, I'll be analyzing the .accountant gTLD to see if I can uncover helpful data-points for someone elses research into the .accountant extension.

  1. Registrant will be required to agree to the Registry’s “Abuse and Rights Protection” Terms and Conditions as part of the Registration process for the second-level domain including clauses relating to the APM Seal.
  2. The Terms and Conditions will require the Registrant to include the APM Seal in a prominent place on its website.
  3. Following the registration, the Registry will automatically email the Registrant’s Administrative, Technical, and Billing contacts with an additional notification that the APM Seal needs to be included on the Registrant’s homepage. The Registrant has 120 days from the date of registration (the “Grace Period”) to effectuate the fixing of the APM seal.
  4. During the Grace Period, the domain registration will be flagged in WHOIS or a linked system as being in the APM Seal Grace Period.
  5. When the APM Seal has been activated, the second-level domain will have the APM Seal marked as active in WHOIS or a linked system.
  6. If the Registrant does not activate the APM Seal before the Grace Period expires, the site will be flagged as being out of the Grace Period for the APM Seal activation and the Registry will notify the Registrant’s Administrative, Technical, and Billing contacts with an additional notification that this APM Seal activation is out of its Grace Period. The contacts will further be notified that the APM Seal must be included on the page and that the Registrant is granted a further 30 days before the site is flagged as being in breach of the Registration terms.
  7. Should the Registrant fail to comply and activate the APM Seal within the period specified in the Acceptable Use Policy, the Registry will conduct an investigation on that domain. If after the investigation it is determined that the domain is in breach of the Acceptable Use Policy the Registry reserves the right to suspend and cancel the domain.
  8. Exceptions:if a Registrant has a second-level domain that is:
    1. Used for forwarding to another domain
    2. The domain is not used for a website
    3. The domain is currently not in use, or
    4. There is another reason why the seal cannot technically be included
Source

Note: If the domain investor or new owner the domain is resold to develops it into a website, it is required to have the APM Seal somewhere prominently, otherwise, the domain investor or new owner are subject to the domain being reclaimed. This is definitely something a reseller should make a buyer aware of during the negotiation process or on their sales lander, for transparency.

With the above in mind, let's dive right in...

Cheapest .account registration​

The lowest first-year registration rate is $13.99 at DomainTyper.com.

Note: TLD-List.com has the lowest registration cost as $17.00.

.accountant domains registered today​

Sources indicate there are roughly 1,300 “.accountant” domains registered.

Note: ZoneFiles.io as of June 2025 shows 1,384 .accountant domains registered.

Publicly reported .accounts sales​

A review of the major aftermarket venues (Sedo, Afternic, DNJournal, NameBio) shows just 1 publicly recorded sale of “.accountant” domains.

If you’re tracking potential resale activity, you might:
  • Set up sale-alert keywords on NameBio or DNJournal for “.accountant.”
  • Regularly scan Sedo/Afternic’s “recently sold” lists for that string.
  • Engage with niche forums (NamePros) where private deals sometimes surface.
Beyond resale data, if you’re evaluating investment or exit strategies for “.accountant” names, consider:
  • Actively marketing to accounting firms via targeted email outreach (identify buyers who’d pay premium for an exact-match name).
  • Bundling .accountant domains into service packages (e.g., branding + hosting + email), which can command higher premiums than the name alone.
  • Watching comparable professional-service TLDs (.lawyer, .consulting) for emerging price benchmarks, often these lead .accountant by 6–12 months in liquidity.

5 niche markets for .accountant domains​

Here are 5 verticals where a “.accountant” name will really resonate.
  • Medical Practices
    • Physicians, clinics and specialty practices need an accountant who speaks healthcare-specific language, overhead analysis, billing oversight, managed-care contract reviews and practice valuations. A .accountant domain signals that you’re the specialist they need.
  • SaaS & Tech Firms
    • Software-as-a-Service companies face complex revenue recognition, R&D credits, equity comp and IPO prep. Branding yourself on a .accountant TLD instantly conveys tech-friendly financial expertise to startup founders and VCs alike.
  • Construction & Contracting
    • Job-costing, progress-billing, overhead allocation and multi-state payroll tax compliance make construction accounting uniquely challenging. A .accountant domain positions you as the go-to for builders, subcontractors and specialty trades.
  • Real Estate Investors & Brokers
    • From 1031-exchange planning to lodging-tax compliance, real-estate pros need accountants who know property-driven cash-flow, asset protection and deal structuring. A .accountant name flags you as their niche advisor.
  • Restaurants & Hospitality
    • Slim margins, perishable inventory and tip-credit reporting demand tight books and forecasting. Branding on .accountant tells restaurateurs you’ve mastered POS integration, payroll complexities and credit-card reconciliations.

What a .accountant domain hack might look like​

Domain hacks work by letting the part before the “.” combine with the TLD to form a natural phrase or call-to-action. With .accountant you’re basically extending your word into “Word + accountant.”
  • Action verbs (call-to-action)
    • hire.accountant “Hire an accountant”
    • find.accountant “Find an accountant”
    • become.accountant “Become accountant” (or “become an accountant”)
  • Possessives and pronouns
    • your.accountant “Your accountant”
    • my.accountant “My accountant”
    • our.accountant “Our accountant”
  • Adjectives and qualifiers
    • expert.accountant “Expert accountant”
    • top.accountant “Top accountant”
    • local.accountant “Local accountant”
  • Specialized services
    • tax.accountant “Tax accountant”
    • forensic.accountant “Forensic accountant”
    • chartered.accountant “Chartered accountant”
  • Niche-industry hooks
    • crypto.accountant “Crypto accountant”
    • startup.accountant “Startup accountant”
    • film.accountant “Film accountant”
Note: By picking a single, punchy word that pairs naturally with “accountant,” you turn the URL itself into a tagline. Someone landing on hire.accountant instantly knows what to do. Someone on expert.accountant gets a trust signal before they click.

5 places to mine leads for “.accountant” domains

When you’re running an outbound push to sell or pitch .accountant names, zero in on where the buying-power lives:
  • LinkedIn Sales Navigator
    • Filter by industry (“Accounting”), titles (“Partner,” “CFO,” “Accounting Manager”) and geography. Export contact lists or use InMail to pitch domain hacks like “tax.accountant.”
  • AICPA & State CPA Society Member Directories
    • Many state associations offer searchable member rosters. You can harvest firm names + email/phone and tailor your outreach (“own.your.accountant”).
  • Accounting Software User Communities
    • User forums and Slack/Discord channels for QuickBooks, Xero, FreshBooks. Post a value-led pitch (“Stand out with yourname.accountant”) or scrape member lists for cold emails.
  • Local Chambers of Commerce & Business Directories
    • Chamber membership lists (often public) and directories like Manta or Yellow Pages let you pull small-to-mid-sized practices hungry for branding upgrades.
  • Accounting Conferences & Trade Show Attendees
    • Events like AICPA Engage or QuickBooks Connect publish attendee/exhibitor lists. Follow up post-show with a “let’s talk about domain branding” pitch, your timing is perfect because they’re already in buying mode.
Note: Consider buying opt-in email lists of bookkeepers/accounting firms, testing targeted Google Display ads (“your.accountant”) to warm leads, and partnering with bookkeeping software resellers to bundle a .accountant domain in their on-boarding.

Legal considerations when selling a .accountant domain to a business​

When you pitch a .accountant domain to a business that already owns a trademarked name, you’re walking a tightrope between marketing savvy and intellectual-property landmines.
  • Trademark Clearance and Distinctiveness
    • Before cherry-picking a name like “yourname.accountant,” confirm it doesn’t tread too close to an existing mark. Conduct a full trademark-office search plus a marketplace sweep. Picking an arbitrary or fanciful label minimizes risk; generic or descriptive terms invite refusals and challenges.
  • Likelihood of Confusion & Infringement
    • If your hack domain echoes a registrant’s protected mark in sound, look or commercial impression, you risk infringement claims. Courts gauge the “likelihood of confusion” by comparing similarity, relatedness of services and consumer sophistication. Even non-competing classes can trigger disputes if the mark is famous enough to be diluted or tarnished.
  • Cybersquatting & UDRP/ACPA Exposure
    • Grabbing a trademark-identical .accountant without authorization can run afoul of the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act (ACPA) and UDRP policy. Bad-faith registrations, like targeting trademark owners for ransom, can lead to mandatory transfers and statutory damages.
  • Fair Use & Nominative Use Defenses
    • Some domains qualify as “nominative fair use” if you’re objectively referring to your own services (e.g., “smith.accountant” where Smith is your surname). But to invoke it safely, you must show:
      • (a) use of only what's reasonably necessary to identify the mark
      • (b) no suggestive or sponsorship-implying usage
      • (c) no tarnishment of the original mark’s goodwill.
  • Dilution, Tarnishment & Brand Reputation
    • Famous marks enjoy anti-dilution protection even outside direct competition. A .accountant hack that links them to inappropriate content or sub-par services could be challenged as tarnishment or blurring, even absent confusion among consumers.
  • Cease-and-Desist & Pre-emptive Licensing
    • Expect that any unsolicited pitch to trademark holders may trigger a cease-and-desist. To neutralize resistance, consider drafting a non-exclusive licensing proposal up-front, outlining usage scope, royalties and quality controls, to demonstrate good faith and avoid costly litigation.
  • International Registrations & Territorial Rights
    • Trademarks are territorial. A U.S. owner of “Acme” has no default exclusive rights in all ccTLDs or gTLDs worldwide. But if you’re targeting multinational brands, check Madrid Protocol filings and key national databases to spot unregistered regions where you can safely register and pitch.
  • Ongoing Monitoring & Enforcement Obligations
    • Once you own or license a hack-domain, you inherit the duty to police its use. Implement routine watch-services to spot identical or confusingly similar registrations, and be ready to send takedown or UDRP notices to protect both your rights and those of licensors.
Note: Pair your creative .accountant hacks with ironclad due diligence, airtight fair-use justification or licensing terms, and a proactive enforcement plan. That way you pitch with confidence, never as an unwitting infringer.

Potential strategy for .accountant domains​

Here’s a distilled playbook, built off our cost, market-size, niche, lead-gen and legal scans, for squeezing the most upside out of .accountant:
  • Pick a focused set of 8–12 high-value hacks
    • Action-verbs: hire.accountant, find.accountant, become.accountant
    • Generic qualifiers: expert.accountant, local.accountant, your.accountant
    • Service niches: tax.accountant, forensic.accountant, startup.accountant
    • Why this mix? You cover bottom-of-funnel calls to action, trust-building badges and vertical hooks, all of which map to real buyer needs. At ~$14/yr each, you can lock these up for under $200 on the lower end of the spectrum.
  • Pre-clear trademarks and defensibility
    • Run USPTO + key international office searches on each hack term.
    • Avoid any that too closely mirror a famous accounting brand.
    • For names that pass but still sound branded (e.g. your.accountant), draft a simple licensing/light-use agreement you can show prospects to head off cease-and-desist threats.
  • Build simple lead-capture microsites
    • One-page landing (Unbounce, Carrd or a lightweight WordPress theme):
      • Headline = the hack (“Hire an accountant”)
      • 2–3 bullet benefits + a short form (“Get matched in 24h”)
    • Integrate Calendly or Typeform to qualify leads.
    • Add Google Analytics + heat mapping to optimize conversion.
  • Targeted outbound & paid traffic
    • InMail campaigns on LinkedIn Sales Navigator (Partners/CFOs in your geography).
    • Email blasts to AICPA/State-CPA lists, offering “yourname.accountant” branding deals.
    • Sponsored posts in QuickBooks/Xero user-groups pitching “stand out with your.accountant.”
    • Geo-targeted Google Ads (“tax accountant,” “find accountant”) pointing at tax.accountant..
  • Offer tiered monetization paths
    • DIY Retail: one-time domain sale + basic setup for $499–$999 per hack, depending on scarcity.
    • Branding + Hosting Bundle: domain + email + landing page + SSL + upkeep for $49/mo.
    • White-label Partner Program: let local bookkeeping firms co-brand and resell your entire hack portfolio for a revenue share.
  • Exit benchmarks & timing
    • Use the 25% rule on any hosted or service revenue tied to each hack to set your asking price (e.g., if startup.accountant bundle pulls in $5K/yr, aim for a $1.25K domain flip).
    • Watch .lawyer/.consulting trends, liquid markets there often precede .accountant by 6–12 months. When you see comparable hacks trading at $2K+, list yours on Sedo/Afternic.
    • After 12–18 months of steady lead flow, package your top 3 performing hacks as a “mini-rollup” and pitch to regional accounting franchises.
  • Ongoing portfolio tuning
    • Quarterly: drop non-performers, add 2–3 fresh niche hacks (e.g., crypto.accountant once crypto firms start hiring accountants again).
    • Monitor UDRP filings monthly to guard your names, and renew aggressively on your best converters.
Note: By combining ultra-cheap registrations with a surgical domain-hack lineup, light-touch site builds, laser-targeted outreach and flexible monetization, you’ll turn a handful of .accountant names into a cash-flowing portfolio and prime flipping assets. From here you can scale by adding similar TLDs (.tax, .finance) or deepening service bundles under .accountant itself.

Questions for you​

  • Do you already invest into .accountant domains?
    • If so, how have they been going for you?
  • Are you thinking about investing into .accountant domains?
    • If so, what niche will you be targeting and why?
Remember, at the end of the day, a domain name is truly only worth what a buyer and seller agree on.

What works for one may not work for another and vice versa.

have a great domain investing adventure!
 
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