Compare first-year register and renewal prices across .com, .ai, .io, .app and dozens more — with the cheapest registrar surfaced for each TLD.
A domain's wholesale price is set by the registry — the organization that operates the TLD. Verisign sets .com wholesale at $10.26, and every registrar in the world buys at the same wholesale rate. Identity Digital sets .online at a heavily discounted first-year price ($1–$3) and a much higher renewal price ($30+). Cocira sets .ai at $80–$100 wholesale per year. Each TLD is its own market, with its own pricing strategy.
Registrars (Namecheap, GoDaddy, Cloudflare, Porkbun, Dynadot, etc.) add a margin on top of wholesale. The margin is where consumer pricing diverges. Cloudflare's registrar charges at-cost (zero margin) for Cloudflare DNS users; GoDaddy charges $5–$15 of margin and bundles privacy/SSL upsells on top; Namecheap sits in the middle and runs heavy first-year promos.
This page shows the cheapest registrar's price per TLD, separating first-year (the promo or the regular registration) from renewal (what you'll pay every subsequent year). The two columns disagree more than people expect, and that disagreement is the most important fact when picking a TLD for a long-lived project.
.com, .org, .net, .co, most ccTLDs): first year = renewal. Registrars may discount $1–$3 with a coupon, but the wholesale floor is the same year over year..online, .site, .store, .tech, .live, .fun): first year is a teaser — sometimes 95% off renewal. The registry expects you to forget and auto-renew at full price..ai, .io, .dev, .app): usually no first-year discount; the price is what it is. Sometimes registrars run small promotions (5–10% off)..de, .uk, .eu, .fr): stable but require local presence. Cheaper than the new gTLD pricing trap and usually under $15/year.The renewal multiplier shows renewal ÷ first-year. A multiplier of 1.0 means stable (first year = renewal). A multiplier of 5.0 means renewal is five times the teaser price. Some practical thresholds:
The right way to compare TLDs for a long-term project is total cost across an ownership window. A simple formula: year-1 + 4 × renewal. Examples for a typical project:
The "cheap" TLD often becomes the most expensive after year one. The "expensive" TLD often stays expensive. The boring TLD (.com) is almost always the cheapest cumulative choice.
We normalize all prices to USD for comparability. Some registrars bill in EUR, GBP, INR, or local currency depending on your IP — exchange rates fluctuate by 1–2% over weeks, and bank conversion fees add another 1–2%. For high-precision international purchases (large bulk orders or business expense planning), check the registrar's actual billing currency.
Promotions rotate weekly. The first-year prices on cheap TLDs in particular drift; .online may be $0.99 one week, $2.49 the next. We refresh on demand (click the "Refresh prices" button) and cache results for a few minutes to reduce upstream load. If prices look off, refresh.
A short, opinionated guide to common registrars: