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analysis .be - Belgium - ccTLD (Country-Code Top-Level Domain)

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Today, I'll be deep-diving into the .be ccTLD to see if I can find some helpful data-points that could be added to someone elses research into the .be extension.

.be is the ccTLD for Belgium. It is managed by DNS Belgium vzw/asbl.[1]
Rules and Restrictions
DNS Belgium will not accept domain names that are already registered, names that have been removed but are still in quarantine,names that have been withdrawn or blocked by DNS Belgium on the basis of a court order or injunction.

The registrant represents and warrants the following:
  • all statements (in which in particular the contact data of the registrant are explicitly meant) made during the registration process and the term of the registration are complete and accurate;
  • registering the domain name will not infringe or otherwise violate the rights of a third party;
  • the domain name is not registered for an unlawful purpose;
  • the domain name is not used in violation of any applicable laws or regulations, such as a name that helps to discriminate on the basis of race, language, sex, religion or political view;
  • the domain name is not contrary to public order or morality (e.g. obscene or offensive names);
  • the domain name is not registered with contact data that have as goal to shield the real identity of the registrant.[3]
Source

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

Average registration cost of a .be ccTLD​

According to recent registrars’ price comparisons, the cheapest .be registration is offered at $ 5.50 USD/year, with most providers charging between $ 6 and $ 15 annually. Higher-end registrars may charge up to $ 39.99 USD for .be renewals.

Note: TLD-List.com shows the cheapest .be registration at $5.19.

Number of .be ccTLDs registered today​

As of early 2025, there are approximately 1.25 million active .be domains in the global DNS system.

Note: ZoneFile.io as of May 2025 states their are 1.25 million .be registrations.

Publicly reported .be ccTLD sales​

While no centralized database exists for .be specifically, aggregated public reports show over 900 reported .be sales.

Note: NameBio.com shows 911 reported .be sales.

.be sale prices​

Public .be sales begin in the low hundreds (e.g., €120 for generic keyword hacks) and top out in the mid-five figures; luxury .be brand/name hacks can fetch €25 000–€50 000. Median public .be sale price, based on online marketplace data, falls around €2 000–€3 000.

Note: NameBio.com shows a sales range from $100 to $51,270.

Top 5 niche markets for .be domains​

Based on reported secondary-market .be sales, the most common end-use keywords align with:

1. Local tourism and city guides (e.g., visit.be, travel.be)
2. E-commerce and shopping portals (e.g., buy.be, sale.be)
3. Food & beverage (e.g., wine.be, brussels.be)
4. Tech startups & AI (e.g., ai.be, tech.be)
5. Creative & lifestyle (e.g., photo.be, art.be)

20 popular “BE” acronyms​

• BE – Belgium
• BE – British English
• BE – Build Environment
• BE – Bit Error
• BE – Business Engineering
• BE – Base Excess (medical)
• BE – Business Excellence
• BE – Beta Epsilon (fraternity)
• BE – Best Effort (networking)
• BE – Board Eligible (medical)
• BE – Beneficiary (finance)
• BE – Belly Expansion (fitness)
• BE – Bachelor of Education
• BE – Bovine Encephalopathy
• BE – Branch on Equal (assembly)
• BE – Best Estimate (accounting)
• BE – Black English
• BE – Biomedical Engineering
• BE – Basic Event (safety)
• BE – Bucket Elevator (agriculture)

Creative “.be” hacks using “BE” as an acronym​

• YouTube’s own URL shortener uses youtu.be.
• wantto.be (Want To BE), may.to.be (MAY you always BE…)
• honey.be (Honey _BE_uts sweet), readto.be (Read To BE)
• bookto.be (Book To _BE_come smarter), time.to.be (Time To BE)

Primary target demographics for .be domains​

• Age: 20–64 years (60% of Belgian population).
• Location: Residents and businesses in Belgium’s 10 provinces and Brussels.
• Language: Dutch/Flemish and French speakers (98% bilingual capacity).
• Interests: Local commerce, tourism, tech startups, creative industries, government services.

Primary language spoken in .be geographical area​

Dutch is spoken by 59% as a first language; French by 40%; German by 1%6.

Population of .be geographical area​

Belgium’s population is 11,758,603 (mid-2025 estimate).

5 lead sources for outbound .be domain campaigns​

• LinkedIn Sales Navigator (prospecting Belgian companies)
• UpLead (Belgium-focused email & mobile dials)
• Cognism (AI-powered Belgian B2B database)
• Kaspr (LinkedIn enrichment for Belgium contacts)
• ZoomInfo (global contacts, + Belgium segment)

Legal aspects when selling to trademark holders​

Risk of trademark infringement: likelihood of confusion standard.

• UDRP / ACPA claims for cybersquatting require:
• Identical or confusing domain/trademark
• No legitimate interest by registrant
• Bad-faith registration/use (e.g., resale at profit).
• Cease-and-desist letters must cite infringement basis, demand transfer.
• U.S. ACPA lawsuits can seek domain turnover and statutory damages.

Potential .be domain investment strategy​

• Register short, brandable .be domains that resonate with Belgian identity (e.g., belgium.be, brussels.be).
• Capture geographic hacks (.brus.selk), vertical niches (tech.be, eco.be).
• Monitor Belgian market trends (AI, e-commerce, tourism).
• Re-sell to local businesses & startups via targeted outbound campaigns.
• Maintain a portfolio of .be/generic string hybrids for trademark safety.

Communication challenges in non-English regions​

• Translation/localization: Must adapt messaging to Dutch/French nuances, not just direct translation.
• Cultural adaptation: Belgium’s Flanders & Wallonia have distinct media habits & values.
• Negotiation style: Business cultures in Dutch vs. French regions vary in formality.
• Legal compliance: Belgian advertising regulations differ by language area (French Code vs. Flemish Media Act).
• Buyer trust: English outreach may face credibility issues; local language boosts conversions.

Questions for you​

  • Have ever or are you currently investing into .be domains?
    • If so, how has it been going for you?
  • Thinking about investing into .be domains after reading this article?
    • If so, what niche are you going to target 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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do.be (not mine) is on Sedo's GreatDomains auction, current bid is 1050€ (above reserve), ends in about an hour and a half
 
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Once again, fantastic research!

I am from Belgium. I have to add a few things:
1) here in Belgium, .be is at least equally popular as .com, maybe even more widely used.

2) several registrars such as Infomaniak offer .be domains for a really really low price.

3) you say domains are forbidden if they would be contrary to public order or morality. I've never heard this before and also never saw this being applied. Because, who determines what "morality" is? That's like the word "normal" ; people don't all agree on what is "normal" or who sets a "norm". It seems like "morality" is another term like that. I can say anyways that I have seen .be domains being used for gambling websites and adult websites, and that some political websites promoting ideologies that trigger controversy can still use .be domains without a problem (I think about both far-right parties and communist parties alike, as well as websites belonging to far-right organisations and individuals, as well as to websites of communist organisations). Also, even when non-Christian religions are heavily criticised by a minority of Belgians (especially by conservatives and the far right), Jewish and Islamic organisations in Belgium can use .be domains without a problem.
I must say I never heard before that certain names would be not accepted by the registry, and I certainly never heard of such rule being applied. Maybe only in very extreme cases, such as websites calling for terrorist attacks or trading videos of child abuse, in those cases the registry may suspend the .be domain used by such sites. But then those sites would be taken offline by court order anyways. So de facto you have to really do something criminal to lose a .be domain ; expressing radical opinions (be it on the far left or far right) will not lead to suspension of a .be domain.
4) as domains discriminating against political views are not allowed, this would anyways mean that de facto .be domains can be used by any political ideology that is not illegal. And we have a broad political spectrum, going from radical far-right parties and organisations on one side, to radical left-wing parties and organisations on the other side. I never heard of any of those parties, even though some people label their ideology "extreme", losing their .be domain.

4) In addition to .be, Belgium has several local domains. The cities of Ghent and Brussels have their own extention (.gent and .brussels), and the region of Flanders has its own extention (.vlaanderen , which is Dutch for "Flanders"). The latter extention isn't that popular, but in Ghent and Brussels some local sites and commerces indeed use .gent and .brussels

5) I am unsure if the name, address, email address and phone number of the registrant are "redacted for privacy" in the WHOIS database for .be domains. It may even depend on what registrar you use. I am unsure about this, even though Belgium is a European Union member state, thus GDPR should be applied in this country.



PS: for those who are a bit overworrying easily: in Flanders, there is a political movement that wants Flanders to become an independent country. In that case it is unsure what would happen with the .be extention. Would it be phased out like ccTLD's such as .dd and .yu in the past? Would the remaining part of the country (Wallonia and Brussels) keep the name Belgium and thus the .be extention, and would they allow anyone (also citizens of the newly created country Flanders) to register and own .be domains?

However, this is for those who are thinking a bit too far ahead... The independence of Flanders and thus the separation of Belgium is unlikely in the near future, despite one separatist party in Flanders getting 20% of the votes during recent Flemish elections. Other parties in Flanders are not in favor of separating from Belgium, and the French-speaking parties are against it ; knowing such separation would require a 2/3 majority in parliament to change the constitution, it is safe to say it's very unlikely to happen. Unless Flanders would declare independence without following the legal process, but in that case it'd be a break-away state that is considered as a separatist zone within Belgium by the international community. I doubt Flanders wants to be the next Transnistria :xf.laugh:



I've so far always bought .com domains for my websites, but I would certainly consider .be or .eu as a new domain should I start a new website. Especially if that website were aimed at a local audience. Because as said, .be is very popular here in Belgium.
 
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in Flanders, there is a political movement that wants Flanders to become an independent country.
At the same time, Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever personally supports the idea of a reunification of Belgium and the Netherlands.
 
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At the same time, Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever personally supports the idea of a reunification of Belgium and the Netherlands.

That could be. But he's a very intelligent politician. He knows that this idea, even if he likes it personally, is virtually impossible to realise as there isn't sufficient public support for it.

His political party N-VA has in its statutes that they aim the creation of a fully independent Flemish state. But while that is still in the party statutes, Bart De Wever has stated that a confederal Belgian state is sufficient for him as this would give a lot of autonomy to Flanders, while realising that a totally independent Flemish state at this moment (and in the forseeable future) is an unrealistic target.

A party and politician can have certain personal ideals, but can simultaneously acknowledge that they are not realistic at the moment. Bart De Wever (whose ideology is very different from mine by the way) is a very intelligent person, he knows that certain things he and/or his party would like are not possible in the forseeable future. N-VA now tries to promote the idea of a confederal Belgian state, because they acknowledge that a full separation of Belgium is just not realistic as we speak.

Only the radical right-wing party Vlaams Belang is still saying Flanders should be independent, without any compromises. But that party has the problem that their racist and very conservative agenda makes other parties refuse to form a coalition with them. We have the "cordon sanitaire" in Belgium, which is an agreement between the mainstream big parties that nobody will govern with Vlaams Belang.
Vlaams Belang also says that if necessary Flanders will unilaterally declare independence. First of all the majority of Flemish people do not support this idea. Secondly, an unilateral decleration of independence usually means other UN members will not recognise the breakaway state. Flanders would thus be seen in the same way as Transnistria, South Ossetia, Northern Cyprus or Somaliland.



I don't see my country separate anytime soon, and even N-VA is no longer aiming for that. This means the .be extention is unlikely to disappear in the forseeable future.
 
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Once again, fantastic research!

I am from Belgium. I have to add a few things:
1) here in Belgium, .be is at least equally popular as .com, maybe even more widely used.

2) several registrars such as Infomaniak offer .be domains for a really really low price.

3) you say domains are forbidden if they would be contrary to public order or morality. I've never heard this before and also never saw this being applied. Because, who determines what "morality" is? That's like the word "normal" ; people don't all agree on what is "normal" or who sets a "norm". It seems like "morality" is another term like that. I can say anyways that I have seen .be domains being used for gambling websites and adult websites, and that some political websites promoting ideologies that trigger controversy can still use .be domains without a problem (I think about both far-right parties and communist parties alike, as well as websites belonging to far-right organisations and individuals, as well as to websites of communist organisations). Also, even when non-Christian religions are heavily criticised by a minority of Belgians (especially by conservatives and the far right), Jewish and Islamic organisations in Belgium can use .be domains without a problem.
I must say I never heard before that certain names would be not accepted by the registry, and I certainly never heard of such rule being applied. Maybe only in very extreme cases, such as websites calling for terrorist attacks or trading videos of child abuse, in those cases the registry may suspend the .be domain used by such sites. But then those sites would be taken offline by court order anyways. So de facto you have to really do something criminal to lose a .be domain ; expressing radical opinions (be it on the far left or far right) will not lead to suspension of a .be domain.
4) as domains discriminating against political views are not allowed, this would anyways mean that de facto .be domains can be used by any political ideology that is not illegal. And we have a broad political spectrum, going from radical far-right parties and organisations on one side, to radical left-wing parties and organisations on the other side. I never heard of any of those parties, even though some people label their ideology "extreme", losing their .be domain.

4) In addition to .be, Belgium has several local domains. The cities of Ghent and Brussels have their own extention (.gent and .brussels), and the region of Flanders has its own extention (.vlaanderen , which is Dutch for "Flanders"). The latter extention isn't that popular, but in Ghent and Brussels some local sites and commerces indeed use .gent and .brussels

5) I am unsure if the name, address, email address and phone number of the registrant are "redacted for privacy" in the WHOIS database for .be domains. It may even depend on what registrar you use. I am unsure about this, even though Belgium is a European Union member state, thus GDPR should be applied in this country.



PS: for those who are a bit overworrying easily: in Flanders, there is a political movement that wants Flanders to become an independent country. In that case it is unsure what would happen with the .be extention. Would it be phased out like ccTLD's such as .dd and .yu in the past? Would the remaining part of the country (Wallonia and Brussels) keep the name Belgium and thus the .be extention, and would they allow anyone (also citizens of the newly created country Flanders) to register and own .be domains?

However, this is for those who are thinking a bit too far ahead... The independence of Flanders and thus the separation of Belgium is unlikely in the near future, despite one separatist party in Flanders getting 20% of the votes during recent Flemish elections. Other parties in Flanders are not in favor of separating from Belgium, and the French-speaking parties are against it ; knowing such separation would require a 2/3 majority in parliament to change the constitution, it is safe to say it's very unlikely to happen. Unless Flanders would declare independence without following the legal process, but in that case it'd be a break-away state that is considered as a separatist zone within Belgium by the international community. I doubt Flanders wants to be the next Transnistria :xf.laugh:



I've so far always bought .com domains for my websites, but I would certainly consider .be or .eu as a new domain should I start a new website. Especially if that website were aimed at a local audience. Because as said, .be is very popular here in Belgium.
That's some great added insights! Thanks for all that :)
 
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