.voyage Domain Registrationfrom £85.98/yr


Why Choose a .voyage Domain?

The .voyage extension was launched in 2014 as part of ICANN's new gTLD programme and is operated by Donuts (now Identity Digital). It evokes longer, more considered journeys — cruises, expeditions, sabbaticals, round-the-world trips — rather than quick getaways. The word translates cleanly across English, French, and several other European languages, which makes it a strong fit for travel businesses targeting international audiences. Registration is open to anyone, with no documentation or geographic ties required.

Ideal for:

  • Cruise lines and small-ship operators
  • Adventure and expedition travel companies
  • Travel bloggers documenting long-form trips
  • Sabbatical and gap-year planning services
  • Bespoke travel agencies and concierge planners

Things to know:

  • Unrestricted — anyone, anywhere can register a .voyage domain.
  • Operated by Identity Digital, the registry behind a large portfolio of travel and lifestyle TLDs.
  • Some short, high-demand keyword names are classified as premium by the registry and carry higher annual fees that recur each year.
  • Standard ICANN policies apply, including the 60-day transfer lock after registration.

Creative .voyage Domain Ideas

  • Northern.voyage — Arctic and Scandinavian expedition cruises
  • Solo.voyage — travel planning for solo adventurers
  • Slow.voyage — long-haul, low-carbon travel blog
  • Atlas.voyage — bespoke trip-planning agency
  • Family.voyage — multi-generational holiday specialists
  • Cargo.voyage — booking platform for freighter travel

Frequently asked questions about .voyage

Anyone can register .voyage. There are no restrictions on location, business type, or use case — individuals, agencies, bloggers, and travel companies can all register one. You don't need to provide any travel-industry credentials or documentation, and there are no residency requirements attached to the extension.

You can register a .voyage domain for between one and ten years at the time of initial registration, and renew in similar terms. Many customers choose multi-year registrations to lock in continuity for branded sites, but a single year is perfectly acceptable if you want to test the name first.

Yes. As long as the domain is at least 60 days old, isn't locked at the current registrar, and you have the EPP authorisation code from your existing provider, you can transfer it across. Transfers usually extend the registration by one additional year on top of the existing expiry date.

Yes. The registry classifies certain short, generic, or high-value keywords as premium names. These carry a higher annual fee that applies every year, not just at first registration. Our domain search will show the correct price for any name you check, including premium tiers.

After expiry there's a renewal grace period of around 30 days where you can renew at the standard rate. After that the domain enters a redemption period of roughly 30 days with a higher restoration fee, then a brief pending-delete phase before being released back to the public for general registration.