Skip to content
Banner


Dropped Domains, January 26: ParentingScoop.com, UnleashedRewards.com, InsuranceMystery.com and 135 More!

All of the 138 names below have just been deleted and are available for registration at the moment of writing. To provide even more good news, you can get dot coms at just $5.99 over at Unstoppable Domains each Friday by clicking HERE or on the banner above. You can also receive $5.99 registrations and $5.99 transfers each day if you become a Domainer Club member, email growth@unstoppabledomains.com to get in.

They’re losing money on each name they offer at this price, as $5.99 is basically half of the wholesale cost that they themselves have to pay, let’s not even mention employee costs, real estate costs, utilities, processing costs and all that good stuff. Offers like this are *very* rare, never before has a company been THIS consistent on the discount front!

I go through ~20,000 domains each day MANUALLY (AI is remarkably bad at it, as are other automated approaches… if you care about achieving solid STRs and actually making money, that is!) so as to pick a a handful for myself and have done so for several years. If you want to check out my personal portfolio and choose what to buy from a huge list, visit DadDomains.com. FOR THE TIME BEING (!!!), I am selling domains from the DadDomains portfolio at just $20 each if you pay through PayPal or $14 each if you pay through Bitcoin as long as you buy at least ten. There are thousands to choose from, shouldn’t be difficult! To claim domains at these prices, email deals@daddomains.com.

Let’s get right down to business, here are the domains:

ParentingScoop.com – This is a strong content brand name because it implies insider tips, gossip-free updates, and practical “here’s what actually works” parenting knowledge. “Scoop” gives it a newsy, digestible feel, perfect for a newsletter, blog, or short-form social channel. From a domainer’s standpoint, parenting is a huge and evergreen market, and this name is friendly, memorable, and easy to monetize through affiliate products, courses, and community subscriptions.

UnleashedRewards.com – A high-energy, benefits-forward domain that feels right at home in loyalty programs, gamified apps, credit card perks, or even employee recognition platforms. “Unleashed” adds motion and excitement, which helps differentiate it from bland “rewards” brands. As a resale target, it could appeal to fintech startups or marketing platforms that want a name that promises value and action.

InsuranceMystery.com – This is clever because it takes a traditionally boring industry and turns it into a story hook. It could be a consumer advocacy blog, a claims-help platform, or a content brand investigating confusing policies and shady fine print. For resale, the angle is excellent: insurance is huge, and anything that makes it approachable, entertaining, or investigative can attract a buyer.

InsuranceMysteries.com – The plural version feels more like a media brand or series, which is great for scaling content. It naturally suggests categories and episodes: “today’s mystery is denied claims,” etc. Owning both singular and plural is ideal, but on its own, the plural has stronger “publication” energy.

PostMasculinity.com – Very modern and culturally relevant, pointing directly at current conversations about identity, gender roles, and evolving social expectations. This could be a magazine, a podcast, an academic-adjacent blog, or a coaching and men’s wellness platform. As an investor, I like the timeliness, but it is also value-sensitive to culture, so the buyer pool is more niche and mission-driven.

InternetCuriosities.com – A classic “rabbit hole” domain that screams lists, discoveries, oddities, and viral content. This could be an easy-to-build media brand around weird websites, strange facts, and digital folklore. It’s broad, fun, and monetizable through ads, newsletters, and affiliate recommendations for tools and products.

SterlingCybersecurity.com – “Sterling” adds premium credibility and trust, which is crucial in cybersecurity. This reads like a consulting firm, managed security provider, or enterprise training company. For resale, B2B buyers love names that sound established and safe, and this one does.

MaximumHorticulture.com – A big, enthusiastic name for gardening nerds and professional growers alike. It suggests “level up your garden,” which fits courses, product reviews, greenhouse tech, or community hubs. It’s long, but it has clear niche authority, and horticulture buyers tend to be passionate.

ShipJumper.com – Short and dramatic, with a metaphor that fits startups, careers, and business pivots. It could be career advice for people leaving companies, a founder story platform, or even a logistics parody brand. The phrase is memorable and edgy, though some corporate buyers may hesitate because “jumping ship” implies leaving.

ShipJumpers.com – The plural shifts it from a single persona into a community or cohort brand. That makes it better for membership communities, newsletters, or group identity branding. It’s slightly more scalable than the singular.

WeekendPsychology.com – Perfect for bite-sized learning and self-improvement content. It suggests “psychology you can digest in a weekend,” which is exactly the kind of positioning that wins newsletters, short courses, and podcasts. From a domainer’s perspective, it’s a clean intersection of education and lifestyle, with strong monetization paths.

LiveSwingers.com – This is adult-coded and will have platform and advertising limitations, but it’s also very direct and memorable. If you’re an investor, treat it as a niche, high-risk asset aimed at adult community or dating segments, not mainstream resale. The value depends heavily on the buyer’s compliance needs and brand strategy.

AllImmune.com – Short, health-forward, and broad enough for supplements, wellness content, or immune-support education. “All” makes it feel comprehensive, but it can also be vague. Resale potential is decent if positioned as a brand, though in health niches the buyer usually needs credibility.

CrappyLawyer.com – Funny and harsh, which makes it perfect for satire, consumer complaint platforms, or legal commentary, but not for a law firm itself. The resale buyer is likely media, not service providers. As a domainer, it’s memorable, but it’s also polarizing.

PornoHug.com – Adult-coded and quirky, with a weird juxtaposition that could be comedic, novelty, or niche adult branding. Like most “porno” names, mainstream resale is limited and platform restrictions are a real factor.

LanguageHobby.com – This has a gentle, educational tone that fits language learning communities, newsletters, apps, and “learn a language for fun” content. The wording is friendly and non-intimidating, which is a plus in education. It’s not flashy, but it’s practical and brandable.

ChristianAwareness.com – Strong faith-based content and ministry branding. “Awareness” implies outreach, education, and community initiatives. The buyer pool is targeted but large, and faith domains can sell well when they’re clear and respectful.

ForeverSkater.com – Persona branding with strong identity and nostalgia. Great for skate culture media, apparel, community groups, or personal brands. “Forever” adds loyalty and lifetime commitment, which is exactly the vibe skate brands love.

ScorekeeperUniversity.com – A fun concept domain that could support training and certification for scorekeepers in sports, esports, or event management. It’s niche, but the specificity is the value – it sounds like a real program. For resale, it’s best if the niche is active enough to support a training platform.

DrillbitRenovations.com – Clear trade branding for a renovation company with a rugged, tool-forward identity. It’s long, but it sounds like a real contractor name and could fit a local business or franchise. Service domains often sell if they feel “sign-ready.”

DotComAdvertiser.com – Strong internet-era branding for digital ads and marketing. The “DotCom” prefix gives it nostalgic credibility and signals web-first business. It could fit an ad network, newsletter, or marketing agency specializing in online advertising.

BrokenHeadlights.com – Super visual and story-ready, which makes it great for automotive content, repair guides, a parts store, or even a metaphorical media brand. It’s memorable and slightly gritty, which can work well in car culture.

LocalAccomodation.com – This is tricky because “accommodation” is commonly spelled with two m’s, and this domain uses the misspelling. Misspellings can work if intentionally branded, but they usually reduce resale value because buyers worry about credibility and lost traffic. As an investor, I’d treat it as speculative unless the brand story embraces the quirky spelling.

SupremeJournal.com – Authority and publishing vibe. This could be a magazine, academic journal, legal publication, or even a premium personal journaling product brand. “Supreme” sounds premium, though it can also feel a bit grand, so the best buyer is one that wants bold positioning.

CrisisConsultation.com – Serious and high-intent, ideal for crisis management, PR, legal consultation, mental health hotlines, or emergency planning. Buyers in this space pay for credibility and clarity, and this name has both.

DixieWarlord.com – This is culturally loaded and likely polarizing, which limits mainstream resale. It could be used for fiction, gaming, or historical commentary, but many buyers will avoid it due to associations. As an investor, this is high-risk and niche.

SexPatriot.com – Provocative and politically charged, which narrows the buyer pool. It might fit satire, commentary, or niche adult-adjacent branding, but platform limitations and reputational concerns make it speculative.

AlohaSynergy.com – A friendly blend of Hawaiian warmth and corporate collaboration language. Great for retreats, coaching, coworking, wellness business events, or Hawaii-based consulting. “Synergy” is a bit corporate-cliche, but paired with “Aloha” it becomes charming.

DatePaper.com – Short and intriguing, with a clean modern feel. It could be a dating newsletter, a matchmaking “paper” concept, or a relationship advice publication. The name is minimal and memorable, and “paper” adds authority like a magazine.

FreedomQuickly.com – Motivational and action-oriented. It could fit finance, exit planning, debt payoff, relocation services, or self-help. The phrasing is a little unusual, but the intent is clear: fast liberation.

SubmissiveScene.com – Adult-coded but framed as a “scene” and community, which suggests education, safety, and culture rather than explicit content. Still, it has platform restrictions and a niche buyer pool. As a domain investor, treat it as specialized, not mainstream.

OpulentWedding.com – Strong luxury wedding positioning. It’s singular and clear, perfect for planners, venues, magazines, or marketplaces targeting high-end couples. Wedding markets spend heavily, and “opulent” signals premium budgets.

BasementOutpost.com – Quirky and vivid, great for gaming, hobby communities, DIY workshops, or indie retail brands. It has a “secret base” vibe, which is perfect for content and community identity.

RetroCooks.com – Nostalgic and fun, ideal for vintage recipe blogs, YouTube channels, cookbooks, or kitchen product brands with a retro identity. Strong niche with viral content potential.

AccountingLingo.com – Extremely practical and SEO-friendly. Accounting terms confuse people, and this could be a glossary site, training platform, or content hub. It’s the kind of domain that quietly earns and can sell to an education business.

DiscreetDistribution.com – B2B logistics meets privacy positioning. Could fit secure supply chains, specialty products distribution, or sensitive medical and legal logistics. It sounds professional and legitimate.

MindImprovers.com – A friendly, broad name for cognitive training, education, productivity, or mental health content. It suggests improvement without making medical claims, which helps branding and monetization.

LifeFucker.com – Profane and aggressive, which severely limits buyer pool and ad-friendliness. It could work for edgy satire or shock-humor media, but resale targets are narrow. As an investor, this is the definition of “only if you have a buyer in mind.”

AnyRecruitment.com – Broad and functional, suggesting a platform that recruits for anything. It’s a bit generic, but that can work for agencies. Resale potential is moderate if a staffing firm wants a simple all-purpose brand.

DeltaHostel.com – Sounds like a real hostel brand, and “Delta” gives it geographic neutrality while still feeling travel-related. Great for hospitality or a booking concept. Travel brands like names that feel established, and this one does.

PromotingCharity.com – Nonprofit marketing niche with clear intent. This could be a consultancy site, resource platform, or training content brand. Very direct, very useful.

DefinitiveDecorating.com – Strong home and decor authority branding. “Definitive” suggests expert-level guidance, great for content, services, or courses. It’s long, but it conveys confidence.

FreeIntroduction.com – Great lead magnet wording. This could be used for dating, coaching, trial offers, SaaS onboarding, or any funnel-driven business. The phrase naturally fits conversion marketing.

MediatorsIndia.com – Geographic plus profession, very practical. Could be a directory, association site, or lead-gen platform for mediation services in India. Clear intent often sells.

FetchingContent.com – Modern internet phrase that fits content aggregation, APIs, scraping tools, or a content marketing studio. It sounds technical and purposeful.

SimpleComplications.com – A clever contradiction that could fit philosophy content, design thinking, or a brand focused on simplifying complex topics. Memorable and concept-driven.

MatrixPolitics.com – Strong, edgy, and concept-heavy. Could be political analysis framed through systems thinking. The “Matrix” term is powerful but also widely used, so buyers may consider trademark context depending on intended branding.

GrumpyPineapple.com – Perfect quirky brand name for a cafe, merch, social media persona, or children’s content. Animals and fruit with emotions tend to brand well because they’re memorable and visual.

BeginnerJest.com – Great for humor training, improv beginners, comedy content, or a playful education brand. It’s niche, but it’s clean and brandable.

BestEndorsement.com – Marketing and testimonials angle. Could be a platform for reviews, influencer endorsement deals, or conversion optimization. Clear “proof” branding.

InfiniteRelationships.com – Big, idealistic, and suited for relationship coaching, matchmaking platforms, or content brands. It’s aspirational, though slightly abstract.

PornAtlantic.com – Adult-coded and niche, likely intended for adult media indexing or regional branding. As an investor, treat it as high-risk with restricted ad networks and buyers.

DotComFlippers.com – Very strong domain investor niche name. This could be a community, newsletter, course, or marketplace brand focused on buying and selling domains and sites. The term “flippers” is culturally correct and highly relevant.

MadDialogue.com – Dramatic and artsy, perfect for writing communities, debate platforms, podcasts, or fiction. It suggests intensity and conversation.

SoSupernatural.com – Friendly and meme-like. Great for paranormal content, podcasts, or a fun entertainment brand. The “So” makes it feel modern and social-media ready.

AdvisoryCareers.com – Clear professional niche for consulting and advisory job paths. Great for recruiting platforms, career coaching, or content hubs.

RookieDebut.com – Sports, gaming, and creator journeys all fit here. It suggests first-time launches, which is a strong narrative hook for content and community.

ProjectChangers.com – Could mean change-makers, project transformation, or people who pivot projects. It’s broad but positive, suitable for productivity, nonprofit, or business transformation branding.

ViaElectricity.com – Odd and intriguing, with a science-y, industrial flavor. It might fit an energy blog, an art project, or a quirky tech brand. Resale depends on a buyer liking the unusual phrasing.

HeraldInternet.com – News and announcement vibe with a classic “Herald” tone. Could be a tech news site, internet culture publication, or advocacy brand.

WisdomSharers.com – Community and education oriented. Great for coaching collectives, knowledge platforms, or mentorship networks.

RandomViolence.com – Heavy and sensitive. Could fit crime analysis or social commentary, but it’s not brand-friendly for most buyers and can be problematic. Resale is niche and reputationally risky.

FinishingPlaster.com – High-intent construction trade domain. Perfect for contractors, training, or supply businesses. Practical service domains often sell well.

FierceCostumes.com – Great for cosplay, Halloween, performance wear, or bold fashion. “Fierce” implies confidence and style, which helps marketing.

RockChasm.com – Short, rugged, and cinematic. Could be outdoor adventure branding, geology content, gaming, or a fantasy world name. Abstract but memorable.

MyInflux.com – Short and modern, with “influx” suggesting growth, traffic, or incoming leads. Could fit marketing tools, finance, or even tech metrics platforms.

InternetBookcase.com – Quirky but clear: a place to store, organize, or discover reading and bookmarks online. Great for a digital library concept, reading community, or content curation tool.

NarcissisticMedia.com – Strong critique angle for social platforms, influencer culture, or self-centered media ecosystems. Works best as commentary or academic-style content.

ModestMicrofinance.com – Niche finance with a humble, ethical tone. Microfinance is mission-driven, and “modest” signals responsible scale. A good fit for NGOs, education, or ethical finance content.

SuperDuperPrompts.com – Very current in the AI era. Prompt libraries and prompt tools are a huge niche, and “super duper” gives it playful internet personality. Great for a prompt marketplace or newsletter.

CultivatingComfort.com – Warm, soothing, and brandable for wellness, home products, therapy content, or lifestyle coaching. It suggests intentional comfort, which is a strong consumer promise.

DisciplinedSingles.com – A sharp niche dating concept aimed at people who value structure and self-improvement. Could be a dating community, coaching brand, or content platform. It’s specific enough to stand out.

HippiesOnline.com – Straightforward community branding with nostalgia. Could be a forum, merch, lifestyle content, or a directory of modern “back to nature” resources.

HardwarePlatforms.com – B2B tech term with broad scope – could be reviews, enterprise hardware stacks, IoT ecosystems, or marketplace content. Strong professional tone.

TheWeimaraner.com – Excellent breed-specific authority domain. Dog niche sites monetize well, and having “The” makes it feel like the definitive resource. Great resale target to breeders, clubs, or content creators.

SoftwarePug.com – Cute and memorable for a developer tool, SaaS product, or quirky tech brand. Animals in tech names are popular because they’re friendly mascots.

AbundanceRedefined.com – Motivational and coaching-friendly. It suggests a modern take on wealth, fulfillment, and lifestyle, ideal for courses and content.

WittyDating.com – Great for dating content with humor and personality. It’s light, brandable, and aligned with modern dating culture.

DominionGuardian.com – Powerful, fantasy-like authority. Could fit security products, gaming clans, or a protective service brand. “Guardian” is a strong trust word.

NutritionEnterprise.com – Corporate wellness and business-like health branding. Could fit consultancies, food startups, or educational platforms.

CelebrityPumpkin.com – Quirky, seasonal, and highly brandable for content. Could be a Halloween social channel, novelty product brand, or fun media project.

KnowledgeRestaurant.com – A great metaphor: serving knowledge like courses and “dishes.” Perfect for educational platforms that want to be playful and curated.

HostingIce.com – Short and odd, which can be good if positioned as “cool hosting.” Could be web hosting, event hosting, or hospitality. The name needs a narrative, but it is memorable.

ExoticSellers.com – Commerce-focused with a hint of specialty products. It could fit import marketplaces, rare goods, or niche e-commerce. The word “exotic” can be sensitive depending on context, so best positioned for products, not people.

ModernDepths.com – Stylish and editorial. Great for design, architecture, philosophy, or tech commentary that wants to feel serious and contemporary.

PassionatelySober.com – Strong recovery and lifestyle branding with positive energy. It suggests pride and community, perfect for content and support platforms.

SpiritualMycelium.com – Very niche and very trendy in wellness circles. Mycelium is a strong symbol for connection and growth, making this great for spiritual communities, retreats, or editorial content.

PoeticConversations.com – Elegant and content-ready, perfect for podcasts, interview series, writing communities, or relationship content with a thoughtful tone.

FakeManagement.com – Great critique brand for corporate culture, bad bosses, or “management theater.” Very modern satire potential.

SpillBusiness.com – Feels like gossip and transparency – “spill the tea” meets business. Great for workplace media, HR commentary, or creator brands.

SpringStudent.com – Seasonal and academic, fits scholarships, study programs, student travel, or learning challenges. Slightly generic but clean.

AcademyCandidates.com – Recruitment and admissions vibe. Could fit scholarship platforms, training academies, or job candidate networks.

HomesteadInvesting.com – Very strong niche crossover between rural living and financial strategy. Homesteading is huge, investing is huge, and this domain merges them into a clear concept.

MagicalManuscript.com – Storybook and publishing energy. Great for writers, fantasy communities, indie publishing, or a creative project.

DatingRoyalty.com – Premium dating brand with confidence. Could be coaching, a high-end matchmaking service, or a content platform focused on “dating like you’re royalty.”

GlamGlossary.com – Perfect beauty and fashion content brand. “Glossary” suggests definitions, tips, and education in a glamorous niche.

InvestmentAdvertising.com – High-intent B2B niche. Could be a firm specializing in finance ads, compliance marketing, or investor acquisition campaigns.

UnrealisticGirl.com – Edgy and narrative-driven, likely for satire, fiction, or personal branding. It can be polarizing, but memorable.

UndeniablePerformance.com – Strong coaching, sports, business productivity, or tech performance branding. It’s long but sounds premium and results-driven.

UsViewpoint.com – Short and political-media oriented. Could be civic commentary, polling interpretation, or a U.S. opinion publication.

xxxMonetize.com – Adult-coded due to “xxx,” and likely about monetization. This is niche and has platform limitations, but it is very direct for that specific buyer pool.

UltimateBarbering.com – Great niche authority domain for barbers, training courses, shops, or product brands. “Ultimate” signals comprehensive content and expertise.

IdealUpgrades.com – Perfect for home improvement, tech upgrades, productivity tools, or even subscription upsells. Strong commerce and affiliate potential.

SuccessLocator.com – Sounds like a tool or framework – finding the path to success. Great for coaching, career platforms, or even analytics branding.

PoliticalSwing.com – Strong elections and polling angle. “Swing” ties directly to swing voters and swing states, making it relevant for political analysis and media.

TallerGiraffe.com – Cute, quirky, and very brandable for kids content, novelty merch, or a playful startup. Sometimes the weird ones sell because they’re unforgettable.

SuperiorRebuilding.com – Strong contractor, restoration, and renovation branding. “Superior” implies quality, which is essential in services.

EntrepreneurshipFellows.com – Academic and program-oriented. Great for incubators, fellowships, scholarships, and training networks. Long but clear.

MoralGrandstanding.com – Very topical phrase and ideal for commentary, satire, or sociology content. It’s a known cultural term, which helps searchability and relevance.

CarpetingLab.com – Great for product testing, reviews, cleaning solutions, or even a flooring company that wants a scientific vibe. “Lab” adds credibility.

SimpleDepiction.com – Calm and design-forward. Could fit illustration, data visualization, minimalist art, or educational content that simplifies concepts.

BrotherhoodBasketball.com – Strong community and team identity branding. Could fit leagues, camps, coaching programs, or a content brand around basketball culture.

VictimWeb.com – Short but sensitive. Could fit support resources or legal services, but “victim” branding is delicate. Resale buyer must be mission-driven and careful.

AuctionAudits.com – Very specific and valuable for compliance, fraud prevention, or auction platforms. B2B niche with clear service positioning.

FakeDecorations.com – Could mean artificial decor, faux plants, or novelty items. It’s commercial, but “fake” can feel negative, so a buyer might prefer “faux.” Still, it’s clear.

EffortlessFounder.com – Excellent modern “build without burnout” positioning. Great for entrepreneurship coaching, newsletters, and communities.

BreakthroughOfficial.com – Bold, but slightly awkward because “official” implies verification. Could be used as a brand account hub, a media brand, or a flagship site for a product named Breakthrough.

CryptoChopsticks.com – Fun mashup that screams novelty brand, merch, or a quirky crypto content channel. It’s memorable because it’s absurd, which can be valuable.

FullBushes.com – Ambiguous and risky due to potential adult interpretations. Could be gardening and landscaping, but the phrasing invites the wrong assumption, which will hurt mainstream resale.

BlogIncomes.com – Very strong for creator economy content. People want to monetize blogs, and this is direct and evergreen. Great for courses, tools, or affiliate content.

AbcCure.com – Short and medical-sounding, but vague. “Cure” language can be sensitive in health marketing, so credibility and compliance matter. As a domain investor, I’d consider it speculative unless used for general wellness education.

CreditorsBankruptcy.com – Very legal and very high-intent. Bankruptcy and creditor topics generate serious leads. It’s long, but in legal SEO, long and specific often wins.

HardBusters.com – The meaning is a bit unclear, but it sounds like an action brand. Could be gaming, demolition, or “busting hard problems.” Resale depends on a buyer adopting the vibe.

StarlitSEO.com – Creative and memorable agency name. SEO agencies love names that feel friendly and distinctive, and “starlit” gives it a dreamy premium tone.

TransformationalAdventure.com – Big wellness-travel and personal-growth energy. Perfect for retreats, coaching travel, or adventure therapy content. Long but emotionally strong.

WebsiteCatapult.com – Excellent web design and growth metaphor. A catapult implies launching sites fast, which is exactly the promise agencies sell.

FailedFusion.com – Intriguing and story-like. Could fit tech commentary, postmortems, or fiction. It’s not a typical business name, but it’s memorable.

ObjectiveHosting.com – Trustworthy, professional hosting brand. “Objective” suggests transparency and reliability, good in a skeptical industry.

UberPrince.com – This has potential trademark confusion because “Uber” is a major brand. Even if used generically, many buyers will avoid it due to legal risk, which hurts resale.

DiehardTech.com – Strong tech enthusiast identity. Great for reviews, media, or a passionate community brand.

MiniTranslators.com – Could fit translation tools, pocket devices, browser plugins, or lightweight translator services. The “mini” suggests convenience and simplicity.

FewHosts.com – Minimalist and intriguing. Could be positioned as curated hosting providers or a boutique hosting service. Short and memorable, though the concept needs explanation.

RebornSpaces.com – Excellent for renovation, interior design, decluttering, or restoration brands. “Reborn” implies transformation, which sells well in home niches.

SheScholars.com – Strong, empowering education branding aimed at women in academia. Great for communities, mentorship programs, scholarships, or media.

IncomparableSoft.com – Slightly awkward phrasing, but could work in software branding if “Soft” is treated like “software.” It feels like a company name, but resale depends on buyer taste.

RetrogradeInsurance.com – Clever and unusual. “Retrograde” adds a cosmic or contrarian vibe, which could be a playful insurance blog or a niche brand. Not conventional, but memorable.

ReliablyInvest.com – Clean and trust-forward. Great for investing education, newsletters, or fintech tools. The adverb makes it feel safe and methodical.

SurvivedDivorce.com – Strong support and resilience branding. Perfect for coaching, communities, legal guidance content, or memoir-style media. The emotional clarity is the value, and buyers in this niche often want exactly that tone.


Remember: you can get dot coms at just $5.99 over at Unstoppable Domains each Friday by clicking HERE or on the banner above. They’re losing money on each name they offer at this price, as $5.99 is basically half of the wholesale cost that they themselves have to pay. Offers like this are *very* rare!

Also worth remembering: they are offering $5.99 registrations and transfers each day if you are a member of their Domainer Club, plus potentially other perks depending on how large of a portfolio you have. If you want to get in, send them an email at growth@unstoppabledomains.com and they will take good care of you.

Finally, keep in mind that I go through ~20,000 domains each day MANUALLY (AI is remarkably bad at it, as are other automated approaches… if you care about achieving solid STRs and actually making money, that is!) so as to pick a a handful for myself and have done so for several years. If you want to check out my personal portfolio and choose what to buy from a huge list, visit DadDomains.com. FOR THE TIME BEING (!!!), I am selling domains from the DadDomains portfolio at just $20 each if you pay through PayPal or $14 each if you pay through Bitcoin as long as you buy at least ten. There are thousands to choose from, shouldn’t be difficult! To claim domains at these prices, email deals@daddomains.com.

Published inDropped Domains

Be First to Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *