Portfolio

Compared to other domain providers who have tens of thousands of terms and more in their inventory, our portfolio with fewer than 10,000 domains feels rather modest. But quantity alone is not the decisive criterion in domain trading. Many website operators and founders in particular have now recognized that a memorable, as short as possible term is of great advantage. You therefore value a high-quality domain. In addition to many generic domains that directly describe either a product or a service, our portfolio also includes a large number of short two- and three-digit domains.

People interested in our domains usually reach us when they enter the domain name in the browser line. All domains are configured and usually forward directly to our offer page with a specified price. In addition, our domains are listed in numerous domain exchanges.

It would go beyond the scope if we were to show our complete domain portfolio at this point. Instead, we refer to a small selection of our offer below.

eu-domains

In addition to a large number of short two- and three-digit combinations and popular generic terms, our range of eu domains includes a large number of exclusive domain names, most of which were applied for and assigned in the preferential registration phase.

You will find a small selection of our range on kurze.eu and exclusive.eu.

at-domains

Our range of at domains is relatively small with fewer than 500 terms, but of high quality. It largely consists of domains registered in the initial phase, before the year 2000, which we took over from the world's largest affiliate company in 2017.

We have listed our most interesting at domains on only.at.    

other domain endings

In addition to a few dozen interesting .de domains, there are also numerous other TLDs in our portfolio. Of the so-called new gTLDs, the new domain endings, we only have a few selected domains in our portfolio. Apart from a few exceptions, these domains do not enjoy a high position value with us, because in our opinion they will not prevail or assert themselves against the common TLD in the long term.