NameSilo

Club Drop push?

Spaceship Spaceship
Watch

Ringr

VIP Member
Impact
45
Hey guys,

I have a domain at Club Drop that I got back in July. I want to transfer it from Club Drop to GoDaddy, mainly because of cost reasons. I mean, Club Drop wants $30/yr for registration. Is there any way I can transfer my domain from my Club Drop account to my GoDaddy account?

Thanks,
Andy
 
0
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
AfternicAfternic
yes.
simply unlock the domain from within enom, and initiate a transfer to GD.
it doesnt matter wich partener registrar of enom's club drop you used, you can unlock the domain from Enom's interface.
 
0
•••
Will I have to do any fax type stuff or anything in order to initiate a transfer with GD?
And how much will it cost?
 
0
•••
no faxing is required, you will get an email that asks you to authorize the transfer once you initiate the transfer at GD.
at GD it usually costs $8.95, but they have 'specials' usualy for transfering to them that make the total less than that, usually $7.95, you need to check GD for their specials.
you might also want to conisder other registrars like namecheap.com etc...
 
1
•••
Thanks for all of your input Seeker. This is kind of a dumb question: but how do I initiate a transfer? The only thing I seen on eNom about parking is "Push/Move this domain into a different eNom account".

Thanks,
Andy
 
0
•••
you simply go to your prefered gesitrar....
(may I suggest NOT GD, namecheap will work greatly, and being an enom reseller the transfer will be done very quickly, but any restgitrar will do).

in your GD example:
log in:
in the choice in domains , chose, 'domains' --->'transfer' (get free email), (look up).
after that, just keep saying NO to the idiotic offers.
then, check out. You are done.
 
0
•••
Dynadot — .com Registration $8.99Dynadot — .com Registration $8.99
Appraise.net

We're social

Unstoppable Domains
Domain Recover
NameMaxi - Your Domain Has Buyers
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the page’s height.
Back