Domain sales tracker
Real transaction data scraped from public aftermarket sources. See what domains are selling for and identify market trends.
Why track domain sales data?
The domain aftermarket is a multi-billion-dollar industry, but pricing remains opaque. Unlike real estate, there is no central MLS for domain transactions. Sales happen across dozens of platforms — auctions on NameJet and DropCatch, fixed-price listings on Dan.com and Afternic, private brokerage deals, and direct negotiations — with no single place to see them all.
We address this by scraping publicly reported sales from NameBio, DNJournal, and Sedo on a daily basis. Every record includes the domain name, sale price, the marketplace where the transaction occurred, and the date it was reported. By aggregating data from multiple sources, you get a broader view of what buyers are actually paying.
For domain investors, comparable sales are the closest thing to an objective valuation. If similar three-word .com domains have been selling for $2,000 to $5,000, that range gives you a realistic benchmark for your own portfolio. For buyers, sales data helps you understand whether an asking price is reasonable relative to what similar names have recently traded for.