Domain Name Generator
Turn a few keywords into hundreds of domain ideas — every result checked live against the registry.
From one keyword to a registrable shortlist
Naming is a numbers game: the more quality candidates you evaluate, the better your final pick. This generator multiplies your keywords into every meaningful combination — keyword+keyword, prefix+keyword, keyword+suffix — across the extensions you care about, then checks each one against live registry data. No "idea lists" full of taken names: you get a table split into available and registered, with one-click registration for the winners.
A practical naming strategy
Start with 2–4 keywords that describe your product, market, or feeling you want the brand to carry. Run the default prefixes/suffixes first — they're chosen from patterns that real startups use. Then iterate: drop the keyword that produces clunky names, add a synonym, switch TLDs. When results look thin, escalate to the AI generator, which invents names instead of combining yours, or try the combination generator to pair one primary brand word against a custom word list.
Evaluate before you register
Found several available candidates? Run the built-in appraisal to rank them by estimated value — length, premium keywords and pronounceability all factor in. Check the matching social media handles before committing: a great domain with no matching Twitter/Instagram handle is a branding headache later.
Frequently asked questions
How does the keyword domain generator work?
You enter one or more keywords; the generator combines them with each other and with proven prefixes (get, try, my, go, use) and suffixes (app, hub, lab, hq, pro) across the TLDs you select. Every generated candidate is then checked for availability via authoritative RDAP — you only spend attention on names you can actually register.
Which prefixes and suffixes work best for brandable domains?
Action prefixes like get- and try- signal a product (getdropbox.com famously preceded dropbox.com). Suffixes like -hq, -app and -labs read naturally for SaaS and agencies. Short, pronounceable combinations beat long descriptive strings for memorability.
Should I generate names across multiple TLDs?
Generate wide, register smart. Seeing .com, .io and .dev availability side by side tells you whether a brand family is free. If the .com is taken but .io is free, weigh carefully: the .com owner gets your mistyped traffic forever.
Why are all the obvious combinations taken?
With 150M+ .com registrations, two common dictionary words joined together are almost always registered. The fix is creative distance: rarer word pairs, invented spellings, or the AI generator which produces brandable made-up names with much higher availability rates.