FAQs
What is a Domain Name?
Simply put, a domain name is your website’s unique address on the internet. It’s what people type after “www.” in a web browser or after “@” in an email address—like yourbrand.com
. Just like a street address helps people find your home, a domain name helps users find your website.
How to Choose a Great Name?
A great name sticks. It should be short, easy to remember, catchy, and most importantly—aligned with your brand’s personality and purpose. Think of it as the first impression your brand makes—so make it count!
What Happens If You Don’t Renew Your Domain?
If you forget to renew your domain, it doesn’t disappear right away—but the clock starts ticking.
- First 30 days: Your domain enters a grace period. You can usually still renew it without extra fees.
- Day 31 onward: Your domain becomes available for others to buy. A third party could scoop it up.
- After ~45 days: If no one buys it, the domain enters a redemption period, where recovering it becomes harder—and more expensive.
- Eventually: It gets deleted and goes back into the open market.
In short: don’t risk losing your digital identity—set up auto-renewals!
How to Renew Your Domain Name?
Your domain name isn’t yours forever—unless you keep renewing it! To continue using your domain and all its connected services, you’ll need to renew it before it expires.
Simply log in to your domain registrar’s account, check the expiry date, and make the renewal payment. Each registrar may have slightly different rules, so be sure to review their terms and reminders.
✅ Pro tip: Enable auto-renewal so you never lose your domain by accident!
What is a Domain Name Registrar?
A domain name registrar is a company that lets you register, manage, and renew your domain name for a set period of time. Think of it as the place where your domain “lives” on the internet.
You don’t buy a domain name forever—you lease it, and your registrar helps you keep control of it by handling renewals and DNS settings.