Domain Age Checker

Check how old any domain is — see registration date, age in years/months/days, expiry, registrar, status codes, and full WHOIS data in one click.

Examples:

What is domain age?

Domain age is the time between a domain's first registration date and today. It is measured from the creation date recorded in the domain's WHOIS or RDAP entry — the moment the registry first issued the name to a registrant. A domain registered on 2010-04-15 and looked up today is about 16 years old — regardless of how many times ownership has changed.

Domain age is not the same as website age. A 20-year-old domain may have been parked the entire time, while a 6-month-old domain can already host a thriving site. Search engines and acquisition buyers care about domain age because it is one of the few long-term, hard-to-fake signals about a name.

How this domain age checker works

Query.Domains looks up the domain's authoritative WHOIS / RDAP entry through our high-availability lookup network and parses the Creation Date (or Registered On) field. We then compute the elapsed time in years, months, and days using the timezone-stable difference between dates. No third-party scraping, no estimation — the date you see is the one the registry returned.

The result also includes:

  • Expiry date — when the current registration term ends.
  • Last updated — when the WHOIS record was last modified (often a renewal or contact update).
  • Registrar — the company currently managing the registration.
  • Status codes — EPP status flags such as clientTransferProhibited or pendingDelete.
  • Nameservers — the DNS servers authoritative for the domain.

Why domain age matters

SEO

Google has been clear that domain age alone is not a direct ranking factor — but it correlates with several signals that are: trustworthy backlinks accumulated over time, content history, brand consolidation, and signals against spam. New domains can rank fast on quality content, but on competitive head terms, a domain that has been operating consistently for a decade has compounding advantages.

Domain acquisition and resale

On the secondary market, age is a major value driver. A two-letter .com registered in 1996 will trade at a premium an identical name registered last year cannot match. Brokers use age as a fast filter before deeper appraisal.

Trust and due diligence

When evaluating a vendor, partner, or affiliate site, domain age is a quick credibility check. A site claiming a "20-year track record" registered three months ago is an obvious red flag.

Domain age vs website age — the difference

People often conflate these. Domain age is the registration age. Website age is when the site actually published content. You can verify website age via the Wayback Machine — the first capture is a strong proxy for when the site went live. The two values can differ by years if the domain was parked, redirected, or used for email only.

Why some domains do not show a creation date

You may occasionally see "Unavailable" instead of a creation date. The most common reasons:

  • Country-code TLDs (ccTLDs) with thin or redacted WHOIS — e.g. some EU ccTLDs only return a registrar name, not a creation date, due to GDPR.
  • Privacy-protected entries where the registrar redacts most fields.
  • Brand-protected gTLDs where the operator restricts public WHOIS.
  • Brand-new registrations where the WHOIS server has not propagated yet (usually catches up within a few hours).

When this happens, the raw WHOIS section above will still show whatever fields the registry returned, which often includes a registrar name and status — useful even without the date.

Best practices when using domain age

  1. Check both age and Wayback history. Combined, they tell you how the domain has been used over time.
  2. Look at the status codes. A pendingDelete or redemptionPeriod status changes how you should treat the result.
  3. Prefer continuous registration. If a domain dropped at any point, the SEO trail may have been reset by Google.
  4. Don't pay solely on age. Age is one signal — combine with backlink profile, branding, and traffic data.

Domain age checker FAQ

What is a domain age checker?

A domain age checker looks up a domain's WHOIS or RDAP record and reports how long ago it was first registered. The result is the time between the registry creation date and today.

Is domain age the same as website age?

No. Domain age is when the domain name was first registered. Website age is when content was actually published. Many domains are parked or redirected for years before a site goes live; others change hands with the existing site preserved. To check website age, use the Wayback Machine.

Why is domain age important for SEO?

Google has stated that age alone is not a direct ranking factor, but older domains tend to rank better on competitive terms because they accumulate signals that are: trusted backlinks, consistent content history, brand mentions, and lack of spam flags. Age correlates with these signals more than it causes ranking directly.

Why does some domains show "Unavailable" for the creation date?

Some registries — especially country-code TLDs under privacy regulation like GDPR — do not publish creation dates in WHOIS. Some registrars redact fields under registrant privacy, and very new registrations may not have propagated yet. The raw WHOIS section often still shows useful information like registrar name and status codes.

Does ownership change reset domain age?

No. The registry creation date stays the same when a domain is sold, transferred, or renewed. What can change is the "Updated Date" field. However, if a domain is allowed to expire and re-register, that is a fresh registration with a new creation date.

Is the data live?

Yes. We fetch directly from the authoritative WHOIS or RDAP server every time you check a domain. There is a short cache window for popular lookups, but the values reflect the registry record at the moment of your query.

Can I check multiple domains at once?

For one-by-one age checks, use this tool. For checking dozens or hundreds of names at once, use our Bulk Domain Search tool, which streams results across many TLDs in parallel.