How premium domain pricing works.
A practical guide for founders who want to understand why domain prices vary, how offers are evaluated, and why some names use inquiry-first pricing instead of public buy-now pricing.
Premium domains are priced by usefulness, not only by length
Short domains often carry value, but length is only one factor. A domain can be valuable because it fits a real buyer category, explains a product quickly, improves credibility, supports search intent, or gives a company a stronger brand foundation.
The best way to think about pricing is simple: how much business clarity, trust, and market advantage could this name create for the right buyer?
What affects domain value?
Why some names are inquiry-only
Not every domain should show a public price. Some names are better handled by inquiry because the strongest buyer may depend on use case, marketplace path, negotiated terms, or whether the buyer wants a direct buy-now checkout option.
Inquiry-first pricing can also prevent a strong domain from being judged too quickly without context. A buyer can ask about the name, receive current availability, and get the appropriate marketplace checkout path if there is a fit.
Retail price, wholesale value, and end-user value
Domain value can look different depending on who is buying. A reseller may evaluate liquidity and resale margin. A startup or operating business may evaluate brand advantage, search clarity, credibility, and time saved compared with naming from scratch.
- Wholesale value: what another domain investor may pay.
- Retail price: the listed or negotiated marketplace price.
- End-user value: what the domain may be worth to a buyer who can use it directly.
How buyers should think about budget
A serious buyer should compare the domain price against the cost of customer acquisition, rebranding, paid search, naming delays, weaker credibility, and lost memorability. A better domain can be a brand asset, not just a web address.
If a name is not publicly priced, include a realistic budget range when you inquire. That helps determine whether the domain is a fit and whether a secure checkout path can be prepared.
What makes an offer stronger?
Should every domain have a public price?
No. Public pricing can help when a domain is positioned for immediate buy-now purchase. Inquiry-only pricing can be better when the domain has multiple buyer categories, high strategic value, or a price that depends on the buyer’s intended path.
For DomainPointe, the practical approach is a mix: clear buy-now paths where useful, and inquiry-first handling for names that need more context.
Ask about a DomainPointe name.
Send the domain you are interested in and receive availability, purchase options, and the appropriate secure marketplace checkout path.
Contact DomainPointe