Your domain is your address online. Getting it registered, configured, and pointing where it should is simpler than you think.
Let's get your domain sortedYou want a website, but you're stuck at step one. Who do you buy a domain from? Is GoDaddy the right choice? What's the difference between .com and .ca? Should you get both? And what happens after you buy it?
Or maybe you already have a domain but you're not sure where it's registered. You got an email about a renewal and you're not confident it's legitimate. Your old web developer set it up and now you can't access it.
Domain names aren't complicated, but the industry makes them feel that way on purpose. Upsells, confusing dashboards, auto-renewing add-ons you never asked for. All you want is your business name as a website address. It shouldn't be this confusing.
Domain search, registration, and configuration. Registered in your name, under your account. You own it, full stop.
Your domain pointed to your hosting, email configured, records set up properly. The behind-the-scenes plumbing that makes everything work.
Clear renewal dates, fair pricing, and reminders before anything expires. No auto-renewing add-ons or mystery charges.
Your domain is in your account, under your name. If you ever want to move to a different provider or a different web developer, it's yours to take.
Check availability, explore options (.com, .ca, alternatives), and pick the best fit for your business.
Domain gets registered in your name, DNS records set up, email and hosting pointed correctly.
Renewal reminders set. You know where your domain is, how to access it, and who to contact if anything changes.
Registered in your name
You own it, full stop. No lock-in, no surprises.
Good fit if...
Need email with your domain? Business email
If your customers are in Canada, .ca is the stronger choice. It signals that you're a Canadian business and Google gives .ca domains a slight preference in Canadian search results. Getting both and redirecting one to the other is a good idea if the budget allows.
Yes. A WHOIS lookup and some detective work will track down where it lives. From there, it can be recovered or transferred to an account you control.
There are usually good alternatives. A different extension (.ca instead of .com), a slight variation, or sometimes the current owner is willing to sell. Options get explored before settling.
Typically $15-25 per year for a .ca or .com. Premium domains (short, common words) cost more. The registration is separate from any setup or configuration fees.
Yes. Transfers are straightforward and usually take a few days. Everything stays live during the process.
Share the domain name you want or the one you're having trouble with.