Find out when any domain was first registered, how old it is, and who the registrar is. Enter a URL and get the full registration history.
Enter a domain name and we’ll pull the registration date, domain age, registrar details, and expiry information.
Type any domain name , yours, a competitor’s, or a site you’re considering for acquisition or partnership.
Our tool pulls registration data from WHOIS databases, including creation date, last update, and registrar information.
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The exact date the domain was first registered. This tells you how long the domain has existed, regardless of ownership changes.
A calculated age from registration to today. Older domains generally have more accumulated authority, though age alone doesn’t guarantee rankings.
Which registrar manages the domain and when it’s set to expire. Useful for competitive research, acquisition planning, and ensuring your own domains don’t lapse.
Domain age is one of the most discussed , and most misunderstood , factors in SEO. Google’s John Mueller has said domain age alone isn’t a ranking factor. But that doesn’t mean older domains don’t have advantages. They do. The advantages just aren’t about the age itself.
An older domain has had more time to accumulate backlinks, build topical authority, and establish trust signals with search engines. A domain registered in 2005 that’s been continuously publishing content about financial planning has nearly two decades of link equity and content history. A brand-new domain starting today in the same space has zero.
That said, a 15-year-old domain that’s been parked with no content and no links has no advantage over a 6-month-old domain with great content and strong backlinks. Age is a proxy for accumulated signals, not a signal itself.
Domain age is one data point. Our competitive analysis goes much deeper , we map your competitors’ entire backlink profiles, content strategies, keyword positions, and domain authority over time. You get a clear picture of what it takes to close the gap.
Not directly. Google has confirmed that domain age by itself doesn’t influence rankings. However, older domains often have more backlinks, content history, and trust signals , which are ranking factors. Think of domain age as an indicator of opportunity, not a guarantee.
Absolutely. New domains can rank well if they produce high-quality content, earn relevant backlinks, and target keywords with manageable competition. The “Google Sandbox” (a delay for new domains) has never been officially confirmed, though many SEO professionals have observed slower initial traction for brand-new sites.
Only if the domain has genuine backlink authority and a clean history. An old domain that was used for spam, PBNs, or unrelated content can carry penalties. Always check the backlink profile and Wayback Machine history before purchasing.
Domain age is when the domain was first registered. Indexing age is when Google first crawled and indexed content on the domain. A domain could be registered for years but only start publishing content recently , the indexing age would be much shorter than the registration age.
Age is just one factor. We build the content, links, and technical foundation that turn any domain into an authority.