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Appraise.net - Professional Domain Appraisals - FREE Month for NamePros Members

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Leo Angelo

Domain Investor | Appraise.net FounderTop Member
:heavy_check_mark: Appraise.net
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๐ŸŽฏ What Makes Appraise.net Different:

AI-Powered Analysis:
  • Estimated value ranges with Buy/Hold/Sell recommendations
  • Advanced SLD disambiguation
  • Multilingual appeal assessment across global markets
  • Strengths & weaknesses for negotiation leverage
Strategic Tools At Appraise.net:
  • Deal Analyzer - Is that BIN price fair?
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  • Comparable Sales - Recent similar transactions
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Flexible Processing:
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  • Custom pricing strategies based on your parameters

๐Ÿ“Š Weekly: "Was It A Good Deal?"

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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
AfternicAfternic
Let's analyze the most recent Namebio posted sale, Mitra.ai, which sold for 18500 via Namecheap.

I didn't know the meaning of mitra in various cultures, while many of you probably did. This is actually where Appraise.net excels, setting it apart from other appraisal engines and, in part, explaining why it takes longer, about two minutes for a real-time appraisal. We believe the SLD disambiguation is essential for appraising most domains.

The sale was below the appraised low value, indicating it may have been purchased by a domain investor. Was it auction?

Without further ado, this is the Mitra.ai Appraise.net's appraisal:

Mitra.ai​

25,000 - 90,000 USD
buy
medium confidence

Word Segmentation Analysis​

Original: mitra
Segmented: Mitra 93% confidence
Word Components:
"mitra"
Hindi/Sanskrit: friend; also Vedic deity Mitra (95%)
Indonesian: partner/ally (95%)
Spanish: miter (bishopโ€™s hat) (90%)
Portuguese: miter (bishopโ€™s hat) (85%)
English: common surname/brand name (not a dictionary word) (80%)
Persian (cultural): Mitra/Mithra as a theonym/name (70%)
Multilingual Appeal: Yes
Target Markets:
Hindi/India, Indonesian, Spanish, Portuguese, English (global brand)
Notes:
Mitra is a short, positive, two-syllable word meaning friend/partner in major Asian languages (Hindi/Sanskrit, Indonesian), and a recognizable word in Spanish/Portuguese (different meaning). Strong cross-market brandability. Works well as an AI assistant/companion brand.

Mitra.ai Official Certificate​

Download your professional appraisal certificate
View CertificateDownload JPG
Certificate ID: 2025-43EFA-7E08BF

Analysis Factors​

Length:excellent
Keywords:friend, partner, ally, assistant, mitra
Brandability:excellent
Tld:.ai
Memorability:excellent
Search Volume:medium
Commercial Potential:high
Syllable Count:double
Single Word Category:not_applicable
Numeric Category:not_applicable
Alphanumeric Category:not_applicable
Triple Letter Category:not_applicable
Pattern Category:not_applicable
Premium Two Word Category:not_applicable
Registry Rarity:common
Traffic Potential:medium
Multilingual Bonus:significant

Strengths & Weaknesses​

Strengths​

  • Short, two-syllable, globally pronounceable brand
  • Positive meaning (friend/partner) in Hindi/Sanskrit and Indonesian
  • AI extension aligns with AI assistant/companion positioning

Weaknesses​

  • Not an English dictionary word; relies on brand interpretation in English
  • Spanish/Portuguese meaning (miter) is less commercially aligned and may create semantic mismatch

Market Analysis​

Mitra is a highly brandable 5-letter term with strong meanings in large markets (India, Indonesia). In the AI era, .ai carries significant premium, especially for assistant/companion concepts where 'friend/partner' semantics fit. The domain benefits from cross-cultural recognition and existing usage as a surname/brand, offering potential type-in and defensive demand. The .ai market (Tier 2A) remains hot; one-word, pronounceable .ai names with positive connotations commonly trade in the mid five figures, with upside for broad-appeal, multilingual terms. Search volume is moderate but brand potential is high. No special registry rarity, but strong TLD-keyword synergy for AI assistant/ally themes.

Additional Notes​

Valuation reflects .ai Tier 2A premiums (500โ€“1000% vs. generic baselines) and a significant multilingual bonus due to strong, positive meanings in Hindi/Sanskrit and Indonesian. Best use cases: AI assistant, customer support, collaboration, or partner platforms targeting India/SEA markets while remaining globally brandable.
 
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Hi

ai powered disambiguation


imoโ€ฆ
 
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Hi

ai powered disambiguation


imoโ€ฆ
Thanks for noting that! The AI disambiguation is actually one of the most valuable features - you can see it working in the Mitra.ai appraisal above.

Notice how it disambiguates "Mitra" across multiple contexts:
  • Language disambiguation: Sanskrit/Hindi (friend/deity) vs Indonesian (partner) vs Spanish/Portuguese (miter) vs Persian (theonym)
  • Cultural weight assessment: 95% confidence for the Hindi/Indonesian meanings vs 70% for Persian usage
  • Market relevance sorting: Identifies which meanings matter most for domain value
This prevents the common appraisal mistake of either missing valuable meanings OR incorrectly assuming a word has value in markets where it doesn't resonate.

Other real examples:
  • Bolt.com - disambiguates between fastener/lightning/speed/fleeing - each affecting different industry verticals
  • Springfield.com - geographic (30+ US cities) vs generic (spring + field) vs cultural (Simpsons) references
The AI essentially asks "which interpretation(s) create actual commercial value?" rather than just finding dictionary definitions. It's particularly useful for cross-linguistic domains where a string might be meaningful in unexpected markets.

IMO this matters because a domain's value often hinges on these ambiguities - the difference between a $5k single-market domain and a $50k multi-market powerhouse.
 
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^
 
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๐Ÿš€ Our API documentation is now publicly available! Integrate domain valuations directly into your platform or workflow. Check it out: appraise.net/api/docs
 
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News about the affiliates program coming soon.
 
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๐ŸŽ‰ Big Update: Affiliate Program Now Live

Hey everyone! Quick update on what's new at Appraise.net:

We've launched an affiliate partnership program for domain professionals who want to earn while helping their community make smarter appraisal decisions.

Program highlights:
โœ… 20% recurring commission on all subscription referrals
โœ… Custom branded coupon codes for your audience
โœ… Real-time earnings dashboard with detailed analytics
โœ… Tiered commissions - earn up to 30% at higher volumes
โœ… No approval limits - if you have an engaged audience, we want to work with you

Who should apply?
- Active domain investors with portfolios
- Content creators (YouTube, blogs, podcasts)
- Community leaders and influencers
- Anyone who regularly advises others on domain acquisitions

We review all applications individually and prioritize quality partnerships over quantity. Looking for affiliates who genuinely use and understand the platform.

Apply here: https://appraise.net/affiliate

---
Still offering: NamePros members can still get their first month free with the coupon code mentioned in the original post.

Questions about the affiliate program? Drop them below or DM me!
 
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Thanks for noting that! The AI disambiguation is actually one of the most valuable features - you can see it working in the Mitra.ai appraisal above.

Notice how it disambiguates "Mitra" across multiple contexts:
  • Language disambiguation: Sanskrit/Hindi (friend/deity) vs Indonesian (partner) vs Spanish/Portuguese (miter) vs Persian (theonym)
  • Cultural weight assessment: 95% confidence for the Hindi/Indonesian meanings vs 70% for Persian usage
  • Market relevance sorting: Identifies which meanings matter most for domain value
This prevents the common appraisal mistake of either missing valuable meanings OR incorrectly assuming a word has value in markets where it doesn't resonate.

Other real examples:
  • Bolt.com - disambiguates between fastener/lightning/speed/fleeing - each affecting different industry verticals
  • Springfield.com - geographic (30+ US cities) vs generic (spring + field) vs cultural (Simpsons) references
The AI essentially asks "which interpretation(s) create actual commercial value?" rather than just finding dictionary definitions. It's particularly useful for cross-linguistic domains where a string might be meaningful in unexpected markets.

IMO this matters because a domain's value often hinges on these ambiguities - the difference between a $5k single-market domain and a $50k multi-market powerhouse.
Mitra, in Italian language, is both a fire guns [ i.e. AK-47 ] or the Pope's cap [ Catholic cult ] and both the meaning could make this domain strong, expressing the powers of this object [ guess what? I didn't need to web search because my cultural heritage ]

I don't see this language disambiguation in your AI analysis and, just because of this, my doubt about this kind of tools are stronger than ever.

But still, thank you for updating this community about this new tool on the market.
 
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๐Ÿ”ฅ Yesterday's Top Domain Sale: Skins.com

๐Ÿ’ฐ Sold for: $1,459,450
๐Ÿ“Š Our AI Appraisal: $1,200,000 - $3,000,000 โœ…

See the full analysis: https://appraise.net/p/2025-namebio-skins-com

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Mitra, in Italian language, is both a fire guns [ i.e. AK-47 ] or the Pope's cap [ Catholic cult ] and both the meaning could make this domain strong, expressing the powers of this object [ guess what? I didn't need to web search because my cultural heritage ]

I don't see this language disambiguation in your AI analysis and, just because of this, my doubt about this kind of tools are stronger than ever.

But still, thank you for updating this community about this new tool on the market.
Thanks for the linguistic expansion. The bishop's hat Italian and Spanish meaning is interesting.
<Synonym of friend/business partner>.ai is likely what the domain investor - who relisted it - had in mind.
This engine focuses on the most commercial potential, as well as the match with the TLD.
Ai clergy? Anything is possible.
 
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Wow, first time I see such accurate appraisal, congratulations, hope to get more credits from bug reports. :xf.love:
I was against appraisals but your website shows real potential for my domains, considering that I sold some and they fit as per the appraisal.
 
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Is it not overestimating domains in the $10k range by a lot? Sure, it is good at appraising ultra premiums, but the mid-range - not so much.
 
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Is it not overestimating domains in the $10k range by a lot? Sure, it is good at appraising ultra premiums, but the mid-range - not so much.
Totally hear the frustration, mid-range is genuinely the hardest tier to move and it can feel like the appraisal is off when sales don't materialize at that number.

Worth separating two things though. Appraise.net returns retail valuation, what the best-fit end-user buyer would reasonably pay. That's not the same as what a domain sells for on the aftermarket in 30 days. Strong domainer sales consistently land at 10-20% of true retail, so a $10K appraisal translating to a $1K-$2K quicker sale isn't the tool overestimating, it's the expected ratio. The valuation is the ceiling; your pricing strategy decides where on the curve you sit.

Subscribers stay in control of that, you can set your pricing strategy as a percentage of retail directly in My Profile on the site, whether that's patient end-user pricing closer to 80-100%, balanced in the middle, or velocity-focused at 10-20%.

Mid-range feels worse than ultra-premium because the end-user pool is smaller and harder to surface, not because the valuations are inflated. The buyer exists, finding them at that tier is just a slower grind. Consistency over time is what makes the math work.
 
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Well, the entire range is inflated for 90% of the mid-tiers.
Totally hear the frustration, mid-range is genuinely the hardest tier to move and it can feel like the appraisal is off when sales don't materialize at that number.

Worth separating two things though. Appraise.net returns retail valuation, what the best-fit end-user buyer would reasonably pay. That's not the same as what a domain sells for on the aftermarket in 30 days. Strong domainer sales consistently land at 10-20% of true retail, so a $10K appraisal translating to a $1K-$2K quicker sale isn't the tool overestimating, it's the expected ratio. The valuation is the ceiling; your pricing strategy decides where on the curve you sit.

Subscribers stay in control of that, you can set your pricing strategy as a percentage of retail directly in My Profile on the site, whether that's patient end-user pricing closer to 80-100%, balanced in the middle, or velocity-focused at 10-20%.

Mid-range feels worse than ultra-premium because the end-user pool is smaller and harder to surface, not because the valuations are inflated. The buyer exists, finding them at that tier is just a slower grind. Consistency over time is what makes the math work.
Well, the entire range is off for mid-range coms imo. The problem is that people sitting on ultra-premiums already know exactly what their names are worth. The danger with Appraise.net is that it overvalues crappy domains, which leads beginners to hold on to them in vain. You can basically slap any two words together (hand-regs), and you will see $2k-$20k, which is simply not the case.

I like the idea, but you really need to improve the prompts for domains that are not ultra-premiums. Maybe include who actually would want to buy the domain and how many entities like that are possibly out there?

Also, the site feels very "vibe coded" / "AI-slop-y", and I believe you can do better if you spend a bit more time on it. Lots of elements are cut off, stylesheets are missing, etc. It currently does not feel that professional.

Again, I really hope you take it the right way. I would love for it to work. But the product is just not there yet. It is a good start, but needs lots of work.
 
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I feel like asking a flagshop model like GPT 5.5 thinking/pro, you get way more accurate appraisals for a domain. It does not overshoot like the model you are using is.
 
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The "beginners hold in vain" concern cuts both ways. Beginners who anchor on retail and refuse to sell at 10-20% will sit forever, true for 99%+. But the same beginners pricing at GoDaddy minimums leave money on the table when an end-user does show up. The fix isn't a lower number, it's better education on retail vs. realized and on pricing strategy.

On the UI, I'd rather know specifics than guess. If you can screenshot the cut-off elements or missing styles, we continuously address and reward bugs and suggestions.
"Vibe coded" is doing a lot of work in that sentence without saying much. Happy to fix concrete issues, cut-off elements, missing styles, send screenshots to [email protected], and they'll get addressed. Aesthetic preferences are harder to act on without specifics.
 
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