Check Domain Availability — Is This Domain Taken?
Want to know if a domain name is available to register? A WHOIS lookup is the most accurate way to check. If the lookup returns no results, the domain is likely available. If it shows registration data, the domain is taken — but you can see when it expires.
Tips
No WHOIS result = probably available
If a WHOIS lookup returns "No match" or "Domain not found", the domain is likely available to register. Go to your preferred registrar to confirm and purchase.
Check multiple TLDs
If .com is taken, check .io, .co, .dev, .app, or country-specific TLDs (.co.uk, .com.ng). Many businesses successfully build on non-.com domains.
Avoid trademarked names
Even if a domain is available, registering a trademarked brand name can result in a UDRP complaint and forced transfer. Always check trademark databases before registering.
Expiring domains have SEO value
Domains with existing backlinks and history retain SEO value after registration. Tools like ExpiredDomains.net list recently expired domains — WHOIS helps verify their history.
WHOIS Domain Lookup
DomainLook up WHOIS data for any domain — registrar, expiry date, and nameservers.
About this tool
What is WHOIS Domain Lookup?
WHOIS is a public database of domain registration records. When a domain is registered, the registrar stores information about it — who registered it, when, when it expires, and which nameservers it uses — in a format accessible via the WHOIS protocol.
The WHOIS Domain Lookup tool queries this database for any domain you enter and returns the registration details in a readable format. It's used for domain research, ownership verification, availability checking, and security investigations.
How to Use the WHOIS Lookup
- Enter the domain name — just the domain (
example.com), withouthttps://or paths. - Run the lookup. The tool queries the WHOIS registry for that domain's TLD (top-level domain) and returns whatever records are publicly available.
- Read the results. Key registration fields are displayed in a structured format.
What WHOIS Records Include
Registrar — the company where the domain was registered (GoDaddy, Namecheap, Google Domains, Cloudflare, etc.).
Registration date — when the domain was first registered. A domain registered many years ago is generally more established than one registered recently.
Expiration date — when the domain registration expires. Domains that aren't renewed become available for anyone to register. Checking expiry is useful when you're interested in acquiring a domain or want to confirm an active domain isn't lapsing.
Nameservers — the DNS servers handling the domain. Nameservers indicate where the domain's DNS is managed (Cloudflare, AWS Route 53, the registrar itself, etc.).
Registrant contact — historically, WHOIS included the registrant's name, email, address, and phone number. Since GDPR and similar privacy regulations, most registrars now replace personal contact details with privacy-protected placeholder information. Business registrations and country-code TLDs (.us, .uk) vary in what they expose.
Domain status — status codes like clientTransferProhibited (transfer lock is on), serverHold (domain suspended by the registry), or pendingDelete (domain in the deletion process and approaching availability).
Common Uses
Checking who owns a domain — verify the registrar and registration age of a domain you're dealing with. While registrant identity is often privacy-protected, the registrar, dates, and nameservers are almost always visible.
Buying or negotiating for a domain — find out when a domain expires, who registered it, and whether it has a transfer lock. Expiry date and registration age inform negotiation.
Checking domain availability — if a WHOIS lookup returns no records, the domain may be unregistered and available for purchase. Confirm with a domain registrar before assuming.
Security and fraud research — newly registered domains (days or weeks old) are frequently used in phishing and spam campaigns. A WHOIS lookup can quickly surface whether a suspicious domain was recently created.
Domain expiry monitoring — check the expiration date of your own domains or domains you depend on, and ensure auto-renewal is active.
WHOIS Privacy Protection
Most registrars offer WHOIS privacy (also called domain privacy or proxy registration) as an add-on or default. This replaces the registrant's personal contact details with the registrar's privacy service contact information in the public WHOIS record. The domain is still registered to the actual owner — only the public-facing contact details are masked.
Privacy
WHOIS lookups query public registry databases. No domains entered or records retrieved are stored or logged.
Discussion
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