AI Domain Name Generator

Describe your project in a sentence — the AI invents brandable .com names and checks availability automatically.

Found your domain? You'll need hosting next.
Register the domain, then launch your site — plans from ~$3/month with a free domain included.

Why AI naming beats brainstorming

The hard part of naming isn't creativity — it's the collision with reality. You think of a great name, check it, it's taken; repeat twenty times and you settle. This tool inverts the loop: the AI generates 30 candidates engineered for availability (invented words, rare letter combinations, subtle multilingual roots), the registry check runs automatically, and you start from a list where availability is already solved. If fewer than a couple of names come back available, a second, more aggressive generation round fires automatically.

What the AI optimizes for

Each suggestion is scored 1–10 across five dimensions: availability likelihood (the dominant weight), brandability, SEO hint, length, and international pronunciation — names are screened to be sayable in English, Spanish, French, German and Romanian. Tags on each result (invented, short, keyword, creative) help you filter for the style your brand needs.

From name to launch

When you find the one: register it immediately via the links in the results (available names disappear fast), grab the matching social handles, and if you're building a site, hosting with a free first-year domain is usually the cheapest start. Want to sanity-check the name's resale floor? The appraisal tool gives you a transparent estimate with the factors spelled out.

Frequently asked questions

How is this different from other AI name generators?

Two ways. First, the AI is explicitly optimized for availability: it avoids dictionary words and common compounds (which are virtually all taken) in favor of invented, brandable names. Second, every suggestion is verified against the live Verisign registry before you see it — and if too few names are available, the AI automatically retries with more creative constraints.

Why does it only suggest .com domains?

Because .com remains the default in users' minds and commands the highest brand trust and resale value. An invented brandable word — think Hulu, Roku, Klarna — almost always has its .com available, which beats settling for a compromised name on an alternative TLD.

What makes a good AI prompt for naming?

Describe what the product does, who it serves, and the tone you want — e.g. 'a calm budgeting app for freelancers' beats 'finance app'. You can also cap the name length (e.g. max 6 letters) for shorter, punchier results.

Are invented names bad for SEO?

No. Exact-match domains carry minimal ranking weight today; Google ranks content and links, not keywords in your domain. A distinctive invented name actually wins long-term because branded searches become yours alone — nobody else ranks for it.