Why You Need a Domain

A domain is the address of your website and corporate email on the internet. Without it there is no website, no business email, and no real online presence.

Which Zones We Cover

For four national zones we act as a direct accredited registrar:

  • .ee (Estonia) — accredited by the Estonian Internet Foundation
  • .fi (Finland) — accredited by Traficom
  • .lv (Latvia) — accredited by NIC.LV
  • .is (Iceland) — accredited by ISNIC

For all other zones (.com, .net, .org, .eu, .de, .uk and hundreds of other gTLDs) we work through our registrar partner P.D.R. Solutions.

Full list of zones with pricing

How to Find an Available Domain

On our website. Enter the name you want and the system will check availability across multiple zones at once.

Directly in the billing panel. If you already have an account, you can order a domain straight from the control panel without leaving it.

AI generator. Describe your business or project and the system will suggest name ideas. Useful when the obvious names are already taken.

Classic search. If you know exactly what you want, just type the name and check.

What to Consider When Choosing a Name

A domain is a long-term decision: the only way to change it is to register a new one. It is worth taking the choice seriously.

Length and readability. Shorter names are easier to remember. Avoid words that people often spell differently, and names that are hard to read aloud or easy to mistype.

Allowed characters. A domain may contain letters (a-z), digits (0-9), and hyphens. A hyphen cannot appear at the beginning or end of the name. A hyphen in the third and fourth positions simultaneously is reserved for IDN domains. Spaces and special characters are not allowed.

Reserved names. Some names are blocked at the registry level: geographic names, well-known brand names, technical words. If a domain is unavailable for no obvious reason, it is most likely reserved or blocked by the registry.

Zone-specific rules. Each registry has its own requirements: registrant eligibility, local presence, mandatory identification. Details are available in our Domain Services Agreement (section 7).

Direct links to registry policies:

Domain Contact Details

When registering a domain, you provide contact information: name, address, phone number, and most importantly, an email address. This is where renewal notices, registry communications, and other critical messages are sent. If any details change, they must be updated within 7 days.

For businesses: create a dedicated shared address such as domains@, hostmaster@, or admin@, accessible to several responsible employees. This kind of mailbox is not tied to any one person and will not disappear if someone leaves the company.

For individuals: use an email address you actually read and plan to keep for a long time. A Gmail account or similar is a better choice than an address on the domain you are registering, which may itself expire.

After registration, the registry typically requires you to confirm the contact email within 15 days. If you do not confirm it, the domain may be suspended.

Keep Your Contact Details Up to Date

Make sure your contact information stays current. If your email, phone number, address, or company name changes, update the details in the control panel. We recommend reviewing them at least once a year — for example, when a renewal reminder arrives.

Do Not Leave Renewal to the Last Minute

An expired domain does not simply stop working. The freed name is instantly picked up by automated services that monitor expiring domains. Popular names can be gone within minutes. Buying your own domain back from a reseller costs significantly more than a regular renewal, if it is possible at all.

After the registration period ends, the domain goes through several stages:

Grace Period. Most gTLDs — up to 45 days, .lv and .fi — 30 days, .ee — 15 days. The domain can still be renewed at the regular price, but DNS may already be suspended.

Redemption Period. Usually 30 days. Restoration is possible for an additional fee, which is significantly higher than the standard renewal cost.

Deletion. Once the Redemption Period ends, the domain is released and becomes available for anyone to register.

How We Notify You

We send expiration reminders in advance:

  • 30 days before expiration
  • 14 days before expiration
  • 2 days before expiration

Notifications are sent to the email address in the domain contact record; invoices are issued to your billing account. Both addresses must be kept current.

Have questions? Contact our support team.

Hjälpte svaret dig? 0 användare blev hjälpta av detta svar (0 Antal röster)