.property Domain Registrationfrom £222.34/yr


Why Choose a .property Domain?

The .property extension launched in 2014 as one of several real-estate-focused new gTLDs, sitting alongside .realty, .estate and .homes. It states the purpose of a website in a single word, which is useful when buyers, sellers and renters are scanning search results or business cards. Because it directly names the industry, it works well for listings portals, individual development projects and agencies that want a descriptive web address rather than a forced abbreviation.

Ideal for:

  • Estate agents and letting agencies
  • Property developers marketing a single scheme or building
  • Buy-to-let landlords and portfolio sites
  • Property investment and crowdfunding platforms
  • Surveyors, conveyancers and property management firms

Things to know:

  • Unrestricted — anyone, anywhere can register a .property domain. There is no requirement to hold an estate agency licence or own real estate.
  • Some short, generic terms (city names, common keywords like loan.property or london.property) are reserved as premium names with higher registry pricing.
  • It works well as both a primary domain and a campaign domain pointing at a specific listing or development.

Creative .property Domain Ideas

  • Riverside.property — a single-development microsite for a new-build scheme
  • Camden.property — a hyper-local letting agency in north London
  • Holiday.property — a short-let and vacation rental marketplace
  • Commercial.property — a B2B listings site for offices and warehouses
  • Auction.property — a portal for properties going under the hammer
  • Student.property — purpose-built student accommodation listings

Frequently asked questions about .property

Anyone. The .property registry has no eligibility restrictions, so individuals, agencies, developers and investors anywhere in the world can register one. You do not need to be a licensed estate agent or prove ownership of a property to use the domain for a website, listing page or marketing campaign.

You can register a .property domain in one-year increments, typically from one up to ten years at a time. Registering for multiple years locks in the name and prevents accidental expiry, which is useful if the domain is tied to a long-running development scheme or an established agency brand.

Yes. If you already hold a .property domain elsewhere, you can transfer it across by unlocking the domain at your current registrar, requesting the EPP authorisation code, and starting the transfer from your account. The transfer adds an extra year to the registration term, so no time is lost in the process.

Yes. The registry classifies a portion of short, generic and high-value names — things like city names and one-word industry terms — as premium domains. These carry a higher registration fee and often a higher renewal fee that matches the registration price. The domain search will flag any premium pricing before you check out.

After expiry the domain enters a renewal grace period during which you can still renew at the standard price. If you miss that window it moves into a redemption period with a higher restoration fee, and finally drops back to the public pool. Auto-renewal is the simplest way to avoid losing a domain you rely on.