Four years ago Michael asked, If A .US Domain At Best Is Only Worth 1% of a .Com and 25% Of A .CA Why Bother?
I’m sure this will piss off a whole group of folks who invest in .US domains, but looking through the Snapnames.com .US domain auction closing tomorrow , July 8th at 3:15pm, I couldn’t help but notice that Slots.Us is at auction with a reserve of $58,830 or roughly 1% of what the .com just sold for, or just over 25% of what Slots.ca just sold for.
Candy.US is another domain for sale in this auction with a reserve price of just over $14K.
We all know the Domain King sold Candy.com for $3M, making the .US domain available for just 1/2 of 1% of the .com price.
And neither slots.us or candy.us may sell.
So when your looking at other lower priced .US domains, what exactly is the upside?
The fact that an identical .Ca domain sold for 4x what the owner of Slots.Us would be happy selling his domain for says a lot about the extension especially considering the population of the United States is about 10X more than Canada.
It’s certainly not a “new” extension and if it couldn’t make it in the universe of competing with 21 TLD’s and a less than 200 ccTLD’s how it is going to bloom once there are 500 TLD’s and 200 ccTLD’s?
So for all of you .US investors tell me what is upside to this extension?
That post garnered a lot of replies (106) and a lot of debate on what the value and the future of .US looked like. In this new domain world with hundreds of new extensions coming online, what is your opinion of .US now ?
DNPric.es says
One thing we cannot deny is that .us is good for hacks. Famo(.)us sold for 25,000.00 USD three years ago. Also it gave birth to delicious…
Otherwise, it is a legging behind many ccTLDs, indeed.
Ramahn says
Should have been dot USA instead of “us”. JMO.
Raymond Hackney says
All country codes are delegated as being two letters, so they did not have the option.
cnn.si & fbnewswi.re says
I would be happy to sell an .US for $60,000 🙂 🙂 🙂