Recent sale. $3500 for https://t.co/j2ejeu42qb, BIN on Afternic, Inbound. Picked this one up in an auction on Godaddy, $300 if I remember correctly. Hold time a few months.
#domains#domainsale#domainsales
Year end present via Spaceship. Sold https://t.co/YEHOfNyJHg for $1800. Negotiated from minimum, hold time less than a year. Acquired domain wholesale from another domainer here on X. Probably sold for too little, but needed some year-end cash flow. Third sale of the month (a .net and .services sold earlier).
#DomainsForSale
#domainname
#domain
#domainsold
With an eye on the rise of the price of gold, the domain https://t.co/zS6DEEqcdw is available for Canadian based businesses and entrepreneurs. Targeted and reasonably priced, it is listed on Afternic.
#domains#DomainNames#domainforsale#domainnameforsale#goldmarket
The domain name universe appears almost infinite. With hundreds of thousands of words in the English language and dozens of extensions to pair them with, it feels as though meaningful combinations should never run out. Yet anyone who spends serious time in domaining eventually discovers the opposite. While combinations are plentiful, quality is painfully scarce.
Most word pairings simply do not express a business. They might be grammatically correct, technically available, and even sound passable in isolation, but they fail at the one thing a strong domain must do: instantly communicate purpose.
A business name needs to carry intent, clarity, and direction. Words thrown together without semantic alignment rarely achieve that. This is why two-word domains that genuinely make sense feel obvious in hindsight and almost impossible to find in the present. They are not just combinations of words, they are compressed explanations of what a company does.
True business-expressive combinations are rare because language itself is restrictive. Not every adjective pairs naturally with every noun, and not every noun can support commercial meaning. The market has already absorbed the most intuitive matches over decades. What remains is a vast ocean of technically possible but commercially weak names.
This creates the illusion of abundance while masking a severe shortage of domains that founders would confidently build a serious company on.
As availability in major extensions dried up, alternate extensions emerged as an attractive escape route. New gTLDs and niche extensions promised creativity, affordability, and differentiation. In certain cases, they genuinely work. A well-matched extension can reinforce meaning, improve memorability, or fit a specific community or industry. Used carefully, these alternatives can support branding and even thrive in the short to medium term.
However, the long-term story is less optimistic. Alternate extensions tend to lag when it comes to universal trust, resale liquidity, and instinctive recall. Outside of tech-savvy circles, many users still default to established gTLDs and strong ccTLDs. This behavioral inertia matters. Over time, businesses gravitate toward what feels permanent and universally recognized. That gravity continues to favor legacy extensions, even when newer options are technically superior or more creative.
The reality is that domain scarcity is not about character limits or extension count. It is about meaning. High-quality domains are rare because meaningful language combinations are rare. Most available domains exist because they failed the silent test of clarity, credibility, and commercial instinct.
The market is not running out of names, it has already run out of the obvious ones.
Understanding this distinction changes how one looks at domains. Quantity becomes irrelevant. What matters is whether a name naturally carries a business inside it. When it does, it feels inevitable. When it does not, no extension, trend, or workaround can fix that in the long run..
Recently, the core domain name Indiana .com was sold through TLDBrokerage .com for $167,810. This domain, carrying a clear geographical identifier and broad commercial potential, has become a high-quality core asset for those deeply involved in the Indiana market, thanks to its exclusivity and high recognizability.
more:https://t.co/wJj5q0IUkR
Only now and then do I go back and read a @NamePros article completely three times. This article by @Sullys_Blog is superb. Better with each reading. https://t.co/xY3s20uPdG
Just accepted as an Atom premium domain; https://t.co/vx4e2mZD23. Brandable, affordable, installment payments available.
#domainnameforsale#domainnames#aidomain
Another smaller sale, but they keep the lights on (and the renewals paid). This one is a pure geo, North African large city. Won't publicly reveal name until the LTO is done. Buyer got a good deal... we are repricing our Asian and African .org pure geos higher. This one was bought before we repriced.
Just approved for the Atom Premium Marketplace; https://t.co/EwPN2ubAj4, https://t.co/wzYlezn83b and https://t.co/KH7AaYGuqZ. All reasonably priced, with instalments available.
#domainnameforsale#domainnames
Funny how these things work. A sales drought for a few weeks (except for small wholesale sale), then within 12 hours we sell two domains on Afternic. One was a .digital for $500 and the other a LTO (pure geo .org) for $1000 . Will post details when payments clear.
Experimenting with marketing platforms (again). We have started adding a few domains to https://t.co/bZJFj3Elaz. https://t.co/fM8zYlhhVj, https://t.co/0SnjtwcR60 and https://t.co/RuRk6aCgHM were just added, with more coming. Looking at BrandBucket and Nameshift as well.
@nglaix The ones we have sold weren't the ones I expected to go. The ones I thought would go... crickets. Weird business sometimes. We develop them, so we don't worry too much about immediate sales. Looking at the long game.