UDRP Explained: What It Is and How to Defend Your Domain

“UDRP claims can steal your domain. This guide explains what UDRP is and how to fight back.”


Aim

The Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution Policy (UDRP) is the domain world’s quick-and-dirty court. If someone thinks your domain steps on their trademark, they can file a UDRP claim and snatch it without ever stepping into a courtroom. This guide breaks it down and shows you how to hold onto what’s yours.

What Is UDRP and When Does It Hit?

UDRP is a fast-track process to settle domain disputes, mostly over trademarks. It’s cheaper than suing, so brand owners love it. They’ll use it if your domain:

  • Looks too close to their trademark,
  • Was registered in “bad faith” (e.g., to scam or sell back),
  • And you’ve got no legit reason to own it.
  • Scope: Covers .com, .net, and most gTLDs, plus some ccTLDs.

The Three Things They Have to Prove

To take your domain, the complainant needs all three:

  • Similarity: Your domain matches or mimics their trademark.
  • No Rights: You’ve got no legit claim to the name.
  • Bad Faith: You registered it to screw them over.

Miss one, and you win. Simple as that.

How to Defend Your Domain in a UDRP Case

UDRP notice in your inbox? Don’t freak out—fight smart:

  • Show Legit Use: Prove it’s for a real site or business, not a scam.
  • Lean on Generic Terms: If it’s a common word (e.g., “cloud” or “river”), argue it’s not their exclusive turf.
  • Prove Good Faith: Show receipts or plans proving you didn’t target their brand.
  • Hire Help: UDRP isn’t court, but a lawyer can sharpen your case.
  • Resource: Check past cases at ADR Forum for ammo.

How to Avoid UDRP Trouble

Prevention beats a fight:

  • Skip Brand Names: Don’t even flirt with them.
  • Keep Records: Document why you bought the domain—proof kills bad-faith claims.
  • Takeaway: Clean domains don’t get UDRP’d.

Conclusion: Know UDRP or Lose Everything

UDRP is a real threat, but it’s beatable. Learn the rules, prep your defense, and don’t let trademark bullies steal your domains. Knowledge is power—use it.