Many investors dream of one day making a million dollar domain name sale. The odds are against you, with only 156 sales at this price point recorded on NameBio over all time. I take a look at those sales, and how the names are being used.
The Million Dollar Sales Data
I searched NameBio for sales of $1 million or more, all extensions, for any date. On the day I collected the data, there were 156 sales, with a total volume of $432.8 million. That represents an average price of about $2.8 million.
There may be additional sales added since the date in early August 2022 when I collected the data from NameBio, but here is the link if you want to go through the list yourself: all $1 million or more sales on NameBio.
Keep in mind that many sales are not included on NameBio. A number of high-value sales are covered by non-disclosure agreements (NDA). Some brokers and marketplaces do not disclose sales, even if there is no NDA.
Million Dollar Sales By Year
There has been some discussion that the number of large sales is increasing. I plot the number of million dollar sales by year below. While last year was very strong, in general I do not see a clear trend.
Keep in mind that what gets included in NameBio has changed over the years, making it challenging to use NameBio data for long term studies.
Also, during the last few years George Kirikos and a few others have used company financial reports to discover unrecorded domain name sales. These subsequently got added to NameBio after verification. That has increased the number of sales in the past few years in particular.
Some sales are reported well after the date of the sale, which is a possible bias against the current year. I did not adjust the 2022 data to account for the fact that we are only two-thirds of the way through the year. It appears we are in another very strong year, although probably less strong than 2021.
Almost All COM
All but 5 of the million dollar sales were in the
Breakdown By Price
Here is the breakdown by price for the million dollar sales recorded on NameBio.
The highest-value sale was
Sales Venue
The majority of the sales, 93 of the 156, were listed as private on NameBio. Here is the breakdown of the venues with multiple sales.
The sales are spread over many brokers and sellers – as well as the large number listed as private, there were 26 identified sellers with a single name on the list, under other on the graph.
Most Very Short
Most of the million dollar domain name sales were very short, 7 characters and less.
The longest name was 15 characters,
What Type of Names Sell?
Here are some observations on the type of names that sold:
By visiting each site, I checked the current use of each of the domain names. Most of the names were used in some meaningful way, with 63.5% developed and another 11.5% used in redirection.
In another 7.1% of cases there was only a splash screen, for example announcing coming soon. There were 6.4% of the names for sale again, and 11.5% were not in use the day I checked.
One of the more interesting splash screen names was
It is not surprising that most of the names are in use, since at a 5% interest rate, a $1 million dollar price tag means the effective cost per year is $50,000. That is if one does not account for any appreciation, or depreciation, in asset value.
Some of the sites and redirections point to well-known businesses. For example,
Those who remember the early days of the internet will recall search engine
A few redirections were less obvious but clever. For example,
The name
A few that I found particularly interesting included
Sectors
For each of the developed or redirected names, I assigned a single word or phrase to represent the main use of the name. Here is a word cloud I generated from my results using WordCloud Generator from MonkeyLearn.
Under banking, I included both bank services in general and mortgages, and many of the names were used in that sector. I included both high fashion and clothing sales more generally under fashion.
Among the sectors most represented in the million dollar sales are banking, travel, eCommerce, adult, gambling, gaming, internet services, investment, marketing, monetized reference sites, and NFTs.
A Few Final Observations
While it should be kept in mind that many of these sales were a long time ago, product and service match names are well represented in the million dollar sales.
While there was a fair amount of diversity within the sectors represented, many have something to do with banking, mortgages, investment, or crypto.
A few sectors seem under-represented, including education or training, and health.
While most were English-language sites, a number were Chinese, and a couple Japanese.
Considering how little time NFTs have been around, it is somewhat surprising to see multiple sales on the list, including the top two places, are NFT related. It should be noted that the original plans for
A lot of the buyers are very big well-established companies.
The majority are in use by direct consumer-facing operations.
I suspect to get to this price level has a lot to do with the negotiation skills of the broker or seller.
If interested in more recent, but less lofty, high-value domain name sales, earlier this year I took a look at $25,000 plus
Special thanks for NameBio for their valuable sales data, and an easy to use and powerful interface.
The Million Dollar Sales Data
I searched NameBio for sales of $1 million or more, all extensions, for any date. On the day I collected the data, there were 156 sales, with a total volume of $432.8 million. That represents an average price of about $2.8 million.
There may be additional sales added since the date in early August 2022 when I collected the data from NameBio, but here is the link if you want to go through the list yourself: all $1 million or more sales on NameBio.
Keep in mind that many sales are not included on NameBio. A number of high-value sales are covered by non-disclosure agreements (NDA). Some brokers and marketplaces do not disclose sales, even if there is no NDA.
Million Dollar Sales By Year
There has been some discussion that the number of large sales is increasing. I plot the number of million dollar sales by year below. While last year was very strong, in general I do not see a clear trend.
Keep in mind that what gets included in NameBio has changed over the years, making it challenging to use NameBio data for long term studies.
Also, during the last few years George Kirikos and a few others have used company financial reports to discover unrecorded domain name sales. These subsequently got added to NameBio after verification. That has increased the number of sales in the past few years in particular.
Some sales are reported well after the date of the sale, which is a possible bias against the current year. I did not adjust the 2022 data to account for the fact that we are only two-thirds of the way through the year. It appears we are in another very strong year, although probably less strong than 2021.
Almost All COM
All but 5 of the million dollar sales were in the
.com
extension. A pair of names, cruise/cruises, sold in .co.uk
, and there was a single million dollar sale in each of .de
, .xxx
and .org
.Breakdown By Price
Here is the breakdown by price for the million dollar sales recorded on NameBio.
The highest-value sale was
voice.com
at $30 million in 2019, followed by the sale of NFTs.com
at $15 million this year. The next two sales were of the same name, sex.com
that sold for $14 million in 2005 and $10 million in 2010. Connect.com
sold for $10 million in 2022. The sale of fund.com
in 2008 just missed the $10 million, with a sales price of $9.99995 million.Sales Venue
The majority of the sales, 93 of the 156, were listed as private on NameBio. Here is the breakdown of the venues with multiple sales.
The sales are spread over many brokers and sellers – as well as the large number listed as private, there were 26 identified sellers with a single name on the list, under other on the graph.
Most Very Short
Most of the million dollar domain name sales were very short, 7 characters and less.
The longest name was 15 characters,
HealthInsurance.com
. The shortest was Z.com
, one of the few released single-character .com
. It is used by Japan’s internet company GMO.What Type of Names Sell?
Here are some observations on the type of names that sold:
- There were no alphanumeric names on the list, and just six numeric names, four 2N and two 3N.
- There were no hyphentated names on list.
- The vast majority were either 2 or 3 letter names, or single English words.
- There were some two-word names, although most expressed a single concept such as
HealthInsurance.com
,PersonalLoans.com
,DataRecovery.com
andDomainName.com
. A few were genuine two-word names, such asMyWorld.com
andMarketingToday.com
. - There was one 4-word name on list,
AsSeenOnTV.com
. - While the majority of words were singular, plurals were not that rare. Plurals like
NFTs.com
,toys.com
,clothes.com
,CreditCards.com
,coupons.com
, andautos.com
all sold for $2 million or more. - Some names included a suffix, such as
gambling.com
,investing.com
andflying.com
. - There were a handful of country names sold,
Korea.com
,England.com
,Britain.com
andRussia.com
.Chinese.com
also sold, as well as the stateCalifornia.com
. - A couple of astronomical terms were on the list,
galaxy.com
andMercury.com
.
By visiting each site, I checked the current use of each of the domain names. Most of the names were used in some meaningful way, with 63.5% developed and another 11.5% used in redirection.
In another 7.1% of cases there was only a splash screen, for example announcing coming soon. There were 6.4% of the names for sale again, and 11.5% were not in use the day I checked.
One of the more interesting splash screen names was
DuDu.com
which has a countdown indicating the site will be operational in just over 1200 days. The site is from Adventor Management Limited and has an image of the Horsehead Nebula in Orion. Hopefully it will be worth our wait.It is not surprising that most of the names are in use, since at a 5% interest rate, a $1 million dollar price tag means the effective cost per year is $50,000. That is if one does not account for any appreciation, or depreciation, in asset value.
Some of the sites and redirections point to well-known businesses. For example,
toys.com
redirects to ToysRUs, delta.com
is in use by Delta Airlines, loans.com
redirects to Bank of America, wise.com
is in use by the payment processor of the same name, FB.com
redirects to Facebook, zoom.com
redirects to Zoom.us, freedom.com
redirects to Freedom Mortgage, WallStreet.com
redirects to The Motley Fool, and vista.com
is in use by Vistaprint.Those who remember the early days of the internet will recall search engine
AltaVista.com
, with that name now redirecting to Yahoo. Tandberg.com
redirects to Cisco, I presume as a result of a company acquisition. topix.com
redirects to Publishers Clearing House, which also own the great domain name PCH.com
.A few redirections were less obvious but clever. For example,
rock.com
redirects to Rocket Mortgage, mortgage.com
redirects to CitiBank, who also own citi.com
.The name
super.com
has a splash saying they are now SuperGG.com
. James Iles recently mentioned this rebranding in the NamePros Blog Super.com Rebrands to SuperGG.A few that I found particularly interesting included
auction.com
for real estate auctions, chill.com
handles CBD products, DXL.com
sells large-size clothing, TM.com
redirects to Test Masters, candy.com
is in use for digital trading cards, and ASAP.com
is a site to help find local restaurants.Sectors
For each of the developed or redirected names, I assigned a single word or phrase to represent the main use of the name. Here is a word cloud I generated from my results using WordCloud Generator from MonkeyLearn.
Under banking, I included both bank services in general and mortgages, and many of the names were used in that sector. I included both high fashion and clothing sales more generally under fashion.
Among the sectors most represented in the million dollar sales are banking, travel, eCommerce, adult, gambling, gaming, internet services, investment, marketing, monetized reference sites, and NFTs.
A Few Final Observations
While it should be kept in mind that many of these sales were a long time ago, product and service match names are well represented in the million dollar sales.
While there was a fair amount of diversity within the sectors represented, many have something to do with banking, mortgages, investment, or crypto.
A few sectors seem under-represented, including education or training, and health.
While most were English-language sites, a number were Chinese, and a couple Japanese.
Considering how little time NFTs have been around, it is somewhat surprising to see multiple sales on the list, including the top two places, are NFT related. It should be noted that the original plans for
voice.com
were in a different area.A lot of the buyers are very big well-established companies.
The majority are in use by direct consumer-facing operations.
I suspect to get to this price level has a lot to do with the negotiation skills of the broker or seller.
If interested in more recent, but less lofty, high-value domain name sales, earlier this year I took a look at $25,000 plus
.com
sales from 2021 earlier this year in the NamePros Blog.Special thanks for NameBio for their valuable sales data, and an easy to use and powerful interface.