Find the lowest first-year price for any name across the cheapest TLDs — and see the renewal cost so you don't get hit by a year-two surprise.
"Cheap" is the most overloaded word in the domain industry. A registrar advertises .online at $0.99 first year — true. They renew it at $59.88 — also true. They charge $9.99 for WHOIS privacy that GoDaddy gives away free — annoyingly true. The headline price is almost always a teaser; the real cost is what you'll pay for years two, three, four, and the inevitable transfer back to a saner registrar after the first renewal cycle.
This finder shows you both numbers: the cheapest first-year register price across the TLDs you select, and the cheapest renewal price for those same TLDs. The two numbers diverge a lot more than most people realize, and the renewal column is where the real decision lives.
A short field guide to the cheap-domain landscape, with what to expect:
.com — never the cheapest, but the renewal is stable (~$10–$15) and the resale market keeps it relevant. If "cheap" means "won't surprise you in year three", .com is the answer..org / .net — slightly more than .com on first year, often the same on renewal. Good for nonprofits / infrastructure..xyz — frequently $1–$2 first year, renewals around $10–$12. The most genuinely cheap mainstream TLD; used by Alphabet (abc.xyz) and many crypto projects, so it has more brand acceptance than people expect..online / .site / .store / .tech — Radix / Identity Digital generic gTLDs. Aggressive first-year prices ($0.99–$3) but renewal fees in the $30–$60 range. Only use these if the renewal cost is acceptable as a long-term commitment..live / .fun / .space — same pattern: cheap teaser, expensive renewal. Useful for short-term campaigns or events..click / .link — Uniregistry budget TLDs, single-digit first year and around $10–$15 renewal. Usable for redirects..io / .ai — never cheap. .io ~ $40–$50/year stable; .ai ~ $80–$200/year. We exclude these from the cheap groups by default; toggle them on if you want to compare..de, .uk, .eu, .in, .us) — typically $5–$15 stable. Often genuinely cheap and reliable, but each has registration restrictions (residency, language, presence requirements). Imagine two domains: yourbrand.online at $1 first year, $60 renewal, vs yourbrand.com at $12 first year, $12 renewal. After five years:
The "cheap" choice costs four times more across a realistic ownership window. And if you build the brand on .online and later try to migrate to .com, you pay the migration cost on top — emails to update, internal links to redirect, business cards to reprint, customers to re-educate. The headline price was a trap.
The exception: domains you genuinely don't intend to own past year one. Promo campaigns, link-shortener TLDs, throwaway test domains. For those, the teaser pricing is fine.
contact@yourbrand.com to reach you.mybrand, not mybrand.com. The tool adds TLDs automatically.A short note for entrepreneurs: it's tempting to register the cheapest possible domain because it feels like a small commitment. But once you put the domain on a business card, on a Stripe invoice, in a paid ad, in your investor pitch — the cost of changing it is much higher than the difference between $1 and $12. Get the renewal-stable TLD if you have any plan to keep the project longer than a season.