NameSilo

Good 4 letter .coms

SpaceshipSpaceship
Watch

jacal1

Established Member
Impact
47
It seems like 4 letter .coms that are not pronounceable (and without "bad" letters - q, z, x, etc.) are like lottery tix - you have to hope its an acronym for a company or organization that would want to buy, no?

Anyone able to value, in a general way, 4 letter, non-pronouncables, that have good letters? I have a few and want to sell...and I'm also curious.

Aren't they easy to get stuck with?
 
0
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Unstoppable Domains โ€” AI StorefrontUnstoppable Domains โ€” AI Storefront
There are about 50,000 LLLL.com left - and all have at least one jquvxyz. The lower numbers of available names that you see do not include short term "tasting". If yours do not have any of those letters then they have value. Even if they have one or two and the other letters are good then you probably have good names. The better the letters, the more the value.

I think you should consider holding them for a few years if they have good letters, but if you need to sell them start with two or three and learn the market, rather than trying to move the whole lot quickly.
 
0
•••
you can check sedo, tdnam and afternic for the pricing on 4 letter names. I will try to
list some of the prices sold recently on my http://LLLh.com site
 
0
•••
I grabbed soqp.com for reg fee the other day.

(typo of soap and typo of *ok stretching it* soup)

Decent?
 
0
•••
I sold some LLLL.com (not pronounceable and without "bad" letters ) here to other Domainers pricing at $30 - 50.

Only one of my LLLL.com in this category luckly get an end user and sold at $650 in provate transfer.

I also have some nice pronounceable LLLL.com.s, I would hold on them unless get end users
 
0
•••
Dynadot โ€” .com TransferDynadot โ€” .com Transfer
CatchedCatched
Escrow.com
Spaceship
Rexus Domain
CryptoExchange.com
Catchy
CatchDoms
DomainEasy โ€” Payment Flexibility
DomDB
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the pageโ€™s height.
Back