The price of three letter .net domains has not changed much during the last decade. Between resellers they go at high $xxx - low $xxxx. A good end-user sale would be in the high $xxxx range.
The price of three letter .net domains has not changed much during the last decade. Between resellers they go at high $xxx - low $xxxx. A good end-user sale would be in the high $xxxx range.
The price of three letter .net domains has not changed much during the last decade. Between resellers they go at high $xxx - low $xxxx. A good end-user sale would be in the high $xxxx range.
3L .net like this were commanding $3500 during the Chinese hype days. They have fallen hard since then, and are at some of there weakest lows right now. The market was much stronger prior to 2011, so not sure what you mean last decade, .net commanded much mor attention prior to gtlds.
I think you can flip it for a small gain, but when you consider commissions, and closing costs $200 is not much of a buffer.
Of cause there is a difference, this is a generalization. Hence the gap between high $xxx - low $xxxx to resellers. Then there are a number of outliers, for example, cdn.net etc. that reached six figures (end-user).
Of cause there is a difference, this is a generalisation. Hence the gap between high $xxx - low $xxxx to resellers. Then there are a number of outliers, for example, cdn.net etc. that reached six figures (end-user).
But a lot has changed in the past decade, in terms of demand, and price.
Cdn.net was done 6 years ago, prior to gtlds, and it’s a Frank Schilling sake, which is another outlier in itself. .net used to command some aftermarket value even in the forums, now they simply go unbid, the liquid stuff is beat up, I had a few chances to buy 3L.net bad ones albeit in the $300-400 range, but don’t even want to bother with them.