If you have never bought a domain name before, this guide walks you through it in plain English —
what a domain name is, whether your business really needs one, how much it costs, how to pick a good
one, and exactly how to register and connect it.
Written for small business owners · Updated June 2026
Quick Answer
To get a domain name, choose a short name that matches your business, check that it's
available at a domain registrar, and register it for about $10–$20 per year. After that,
turn on privacy protection and auto-renew, then connect the domain to your website. The whole process
usually takes under 20 minutes.
What Is a Domain Name?
A domain name is your website's address on the internet — the part people type into
a browser to find you, like yourbusiness.com. Instead of customers memorizing a string of
numbers (the actual server address), they just type your name.
Think of it like the sign and street address of a physical shop. The domain is the address; your
website is the shop itself; and web hosting is the land the shop is built on. You
need all three to be open for business online, and they work together so that typing your domain
loads your website.
Do You Really Need a Domain Name?
For almost every business that wants to be taken seriously online, yes. A custom
domain does several things a free social page or a generic link cannot:
Makes your business look professional and established
Builds trust — customers expect a real business to have its own website
Gives you a branded email address (you@yourbusiness.com instead of a Gmail address)
Helps customers find you on Google instead of only on social media
Means you own your online identity rather than renting space you don't control
If your business currently lives only on a Facebook page, a domain is the upgrade that puts you in
control. We break that decision down in our guide on
a Facebook page vs. a real website.
How Much Does a Domain Name Cost?
Most domain names cost about $10 to $20 per year, though the exact price depends on
the ending (the part after the dot) and demand. You pay each year to keep the domain.
Domain ending
Typical yearly cost
Best for
.com
$10–$20
Most businesses — the default, most-trusted choice
.net / .org
$10–$20
Alternatives if your .com is taken
.co
$10–$35
A modern, shorter alternative to .com
Newer endings (.shop, .pro, etc.)
$10–$40+
Niche branding
Premium / in-demand names
$100s–$1,000s
Short, high-value names already owned by someone
General market ranges as of June 2026. Prices vary by registrar and change over time.
Watch the renewal price. Some registrars offer a low first-year price, then renew at
a higher rate. Before buying, check what the domain costs to renew each year — not just the first-year
promo. A "free domain" bundled with hosting usually means you pay the renewal yourself after year one.
How to Choose a Good Domain Name
A strong domain name is easy to say, spell, and remember. Aim for these:
Keep it short — fewer words and characters are easier to remember and type
Use your business name, or your service plus your city (e.g., AustinRoofingPros.com)
Make it easy to spell and say out loud — the "radio test"
Prefer a .com when it's available
Avoid hyphens and numbers — they get lost when spoken aloud
Check it doesn't accidentally spell something odd when run together
Make sure it's not too close to an existing brand or trademark
Local tip: If your exact business name's .com is taken, adding your city or service
often opens up a clean, available, and SEO-friendly option — and it tells customers exactly where you
work.
How to Get a Domain Name: Step-by-Step
Here's the full process from idea to a domain you own and can use:
Brainstorm and choose your name
Pick a short, memorable name that matches your business — ideally your business name with a .com ending. Have two or three backups ready in case your first choice is taken.
Check if it's available
Type your chosen name into the search box at any domain registrar. It will tell you instantly whether it's available. If it's taken, try a backup or a different ending.
Register the domain
Create an account, add the domain to your cart, and pay for at least one year. You now hold the rights to use that domain for the period you paid for.
Turn on privacy and auto-renew
Enable free WHOIS privacy so your personal name, address, and phone aren't published publicly. Turn on auto-renew so you never lose the domain by forgetting to pay.
Connect it to your website
Point the domain to your website by updating its DNS or nameserver settings. If someone builds your site for you, they can handle this connection so your domain loads your live site.
Where to Register a Domain Name
You can register a domain in three main places. Any of them gives you a real, fully-owned domain —
the difference is mostly convenience and price:
1. A dedicated domain registrar
Companies that specialize in domains (such as Namecheap, GoDaddy, Porkbun, or Cloudflare). Usually the cheapest and most flexible, and they include the tools to point your domain anywhere.
2. A website builder or web host
Platforms like Squarespace, Wix, or Bluehost let you buy the domain and build the site in one place. Some include a free domain for the first year with a hosting plan — just check the renewal price.
3. Through whoever builds your website
If a provider designs your site, they can often register and connect the domain for you so you don't have to touch any technical settings. You can also buy the domain yourself and simply hand them the login.
Tip for full control: Buy the domain in your own account whenever possible.
That way the domain is unmistakably yours, and you can move your website later without losing your
address.
How to Connect Your Domain to Your Website
A domain on its own is just an address — it needs to point at a website. Connecting the two is done
one of two ways:
Nameservers: change the domain's nameservers to your website host's, which hands the host full control of the domain's settings.
DNS records: add or edit specific records (an "A record" or "CNAME") that point your domain to the server where your site lives.
If that sounds technical, it's because it can be — it's the one step most new owners get stuck on.
The good news: it's usually a one-time setup, and whoever hosts or builds your site can do it for you.
At ContentExperts.ai we connect your domain for you as part of building the site, so you never have to
touch DNS settings. You can see what's included with
each plan or browse example websites to see
the finished result.
Common Domain Name Mistakes to Avoid
Letting it expire — always enable auto-renew so you don't lose your address (and your rankings)
Skipping privacy protection, which publishes your personal contact details online
Buying the domain inside someone else's account, so you don't truly control it
Choosing a long or hard-to-spell name that customers can't remember
Picking a trendy ending when the .com is available and more trusted
Ignoring the renewal price and getting surprised in year two
Using a name too close to an existing trademark
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a domain name for my business?
Yes. A custom domain name (like yourbusiness.com) makes your business look professional, builds
trust, gives you a branded email address, and means you own your online identity instead of renting
space on a social media page. Almost every business that wants a real website needs a domain.
How much does a domain name cost?
Most standard domain names cost about $10 to $20 per year for popular endings like .com, though some
can run higher. You pay the registration fee each year to keep the domain. Watch for renewal prices,
which are sometimes higher than the first-year promotional price.
Do I own my domain name forever?
Not in one payment. You register it for a set period (usually one year at a time) and keep it as long
as you renew. Turning on auto-renew prevents you from losing it by accident.
Can I get a domain name if I only have a Facebook page?
Yes, and it's a smart upgrade. A Facebook page is rented space you don't control. A domain name plus
a simple website gives you a professional address customers can find on Google, builds trust, and
keeps your business presence in your own hands.
Should I buy a .com or another ending?
A .com is the most recognized and trusted ending, so choose it when it's available. If your exact
.com is taken, options like .co, .net, or an industry or location-based ending can work — but most
small businesses are best served by securing the .com if they can.
What's the difference between a domain name and web hosting?
A domain name is your website's address (yourbusiness.com). Web hosting is the storage where your
website's files actually live. You need both for a working website, and the two are connected so that
typing your domain loads your hosted site.
Want Your Domain Working on a Real Website?
Already have a domain, or not sure where to start? ContentExperts.ai builds clean, fast websites for
small businesses and connects your domain for you — no technical setup on your end.