Registrant vs. Registrar vs. Registry: What Newbies Must Know
The Three Key Players in Domain Ownership
1. Registrant
- The legal owner of a domain (e.g., JohnDoe.com).
- Responsibilities: Renew domains, avoid trademark infringement.
2. Registrar (The Seller)
- Companies like GoDaddy or Namesilo that sell domains.
- Red Flags: Upselling fake “SEO packages” or hiding renewal fees.
3. Registry (The Database Manager)
- Organizations managing TLDs (e.g., Verisign for .com, Afilias for .info).
- Controversy: Some registries (.sucks) charge predatory fees ($200+/year).
How They Work Together (With Example)
Scenario: Buying BestCryptoWallet.com
- Registry: Verisign tracks all .com domains.
- Registrar: You pay them to register it.
- Registrant: You own it, but must renew before expiration.
Common Newbie Mistakes
- Mistake 1: Assuming registrars own domains (they’re just middlemen).
- Mistake 2: Ignoring registry renewal fees (e.g., .io costs $60/year).
Pro Tips for Savvy Buyers
- Use ICANN lookup to confirm your registrar isn’t reselling (e.g., CheapRegistrar.com [now already ceased operation] might resell GoDaddy).
- Avoid registrars charging >$15/year for .com renewals.
Use this to check .COM updated pricing
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