.NET
Dot NET Domains
Dot NET $14.05/year
Dot NET Pricing
TLD | 1 Year | 2 years | 3 years | 4 years | 5 years | 6 years | 7 years | 8 years | 9 years | 10 years |
Sole .NET registration | $14.05 | $28.00 | $42.00 | $56.00 | $70.00 | $84.00 | $98.00 | $112.00 | $126.00 | $140.00 |
.NET with hosting | $13.50 | $27.55 | $41.50 | $55.50 | $69.50 | $83.50 | $97.50 | $111.50 | $125.50 | $139.50 |
TLD Details
TLD | Registrar-Lock | Transfers | Edit WHOIS | ID Protect | Registration Period |
.NET | yes | yes (EPP) | yes | yes | 1-10 years |
Dot NET Domains
When the Dot NET universal top-level domain name extension was initially launched in 1985, together with the first domain extensions on the web, it was intended to be used by Internet Service Providers or infrastructure establishments. Considering the fact that there were no special requirements about the usage of the top-level extension, though, dot NET domains were bought and used for various purposes and by many people. This extension represents a wonderful substitute of dot COM, notably if the wanted domain with the latter TLD is not available for registration.
Securing a .NET domain with our firm is as easy as 1-2-3 and takes no more than a couple of minutes, given that we work with an ICANN-approved registrar firm. You can book such a domain for a period between 1 and 10 years, or, if you already have a domain, you can transfer it to our company and we will renew it once the transfer process is finalized. Transfers are available for all domain names, which are at least sixty days old, provided that they are not locked and that you have obtained an EPP transfer key – security measures set up by the dot NET Registry to prevent unauthorized transfers. You can easily update the WHOIS details of the domain through your Control Panel interface, or, if you don't wish this information to be accessible at all, you can get a Whois Privacy Protection service, so nobody will be able to get your true contact details.
The .NET domain extension supports internationalized names, so you can choose if you want to aim at a specific country or territory using a domain name in the native language, or the global Internet community – using a generic English name.