Domain Name Generator


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About Domain Name Generator

A domain name generator is an online tool that creates available website address suggestions based on keywords you provide, checking real-time availability across multiple extensions like .com, .net, and .org. ToolsPivot's version lets you pick from 13 TLD extensions and returns a full results table showing each suggested domain's availability status, with no account or sign-up required.

Most generators from registrars like GoDaddy or Namecheap push you toward buying domains through their platform. ToolsPivot doesn't sell domains. It gives you the ideas and availability data, and you register wherever you want. That difference matters if you're comparing prices across registrars or managing domains through a specific provider already.

How to Use ToolsPivot's Domain Name Generator

  1. Enter your keyword: Type one or two words that describe your brand, business, or project into the input field. Keep it short. "Eco" or "tech shop" works better than a full sentence.

  2. Select your extensions: Check the boxes next to the TLDs you want to search. ToolsPivot supports .com, .net, .org, .info, .biz, .us, .in, .uk, .fr, .ru, .co, .me, and .tv. Select one or all 13.

  3. Click "Check": The tool processes your keyword and generates domain combinations by pairing it with prefixes, suffixes, and related terms.

  4. Review the results table: ToolsPivot displays three columns: Keywords (the terms used), Suggested Domains (the full domain name), and Status (available or taken). Scan the status column to focus only on domains you can actually register.

  5. Try another keyword: Hit "Try New Keyword" to clear results and run a fresh search with different terms. There's no limit on how many searches you can run.

What ToolsPivot's Domain Name Generator Does

  • Keyword-based domain suggestions: The tool takes your input word and generates multiple domain name combinations using common prefixes (like "my," "get," "the") and suffixes (like "hub," "app," "pro"). You'll see variations you probably wouldn't brainstorm on your own.

  • 13 TLD extension support: Search across .com, .net, .org, .info, .biz, .us, .in, .uk, .fr, .ru, .co, .me, and .tv in a single search. That's 13 extensions checked per keyword without switching between registrar websites.

  • Real-time availability status: Every suggested domain gets checked against registration databases. The results table shows whether each combination is available or already taken, so you don't waste time searching for names that are gone.

  • Organized results table: Output appears in a clean three-column table (Keywords, Suggested Domains, Status) that's easy to scan. No clutter, no upsells, no pop-ups asking you to buy hosting.

  • Unlimited searches: Run as many keyword searches as you need. There's no daily cap, no "3 free searches then pay" limit, and no registration wall. Close the tab and come back tomorrow for more.

  • Country-code TLD coverage: Beyond the standard .com and .net, the tool checks country-specific extensions (.uk, .us, .in, .fr, .ru) for businesses targeting regional audiences. A bakery in London can search for .uk names alongside .com options in one pass.

Pair these results with ToolsPivot's domain availability checker if you want to verify a specific domain that isn't in the generated list. And once you've registered your new domain, run it through the WHOIS lookup tool to confirm your registration details are correct.

Reading Your Results: What the Status Column Actually Means

"Available" means the domain isn't registered by anyone and you can buy it through any accredited registrar (Namecheap, Cloudflare Registrar, Porkbun, GoDaddy, Google Domains' successor Squarespace Domains, and others). Prices vary by registrar and TLD. A .com might cost $9-15/year at one registrar and $18/year at another, so shop around before you commit.

"Taken" means someone already owns that domain. But "taken" doesn't always mean "dead end." Some taken domains sit unused or are listed for resale on aftermarket platforms like Afternic, Sedo, or Dan.com. If you find a taken domain that's a perfect brand fit, check whether it's parked or active before moving on.

A few practical tips for working with your results:

  • Run 3-5 keyword variations. If "greenbox" gives you mostly taken results, try "gogreen," "boxgreen," or "greenkit." Small word swaps open up entirely different pools of available names.

  • Don't ignore non-.com results. Extensions like .co and .me have gained serious traction. Stripe started on stripe.cc before moving to stripe.com. Plenty of startups launch successfully on alternative TLDs.

  • Cross-check before buying. Use ToolsPivot's domain age checker to see if an "available" domain was previously registered. Some dropped domains carry spam history or old backlink penalties from prior owners. A quick check with the DNS lookup tool can also reveal whether leftover DNS records exist.

Why Use ToolsPivot's Domain Name Generator

  • No registrar bias: GoDaddy's generator feeds you into GoDaddy's checkout. Namecheap's generator feeds you into Namecheap's checkout. ToolsPivot generates names without pushing you toward any registrar, so you can compare pricing across providers and register where you get the best deal.

  • Zero friction access: No account creation, no email verification, no "enter your phone number" gates. Open the page, type a keyword, and get results. That's it.

  • Batch extension checking: Instead of searching .com on one site, then .net on another, and then .co on a third, ToolsPivot checks up to 13 extensions in one shot. For anyone comparing TLD options side by side, that saves real time.

  • Clean output format: The three-column results table is scannable in seconds. You're not wading through "premium domain" upsells, hosting package promotions, or "people also searched for" distractions mixed into your results.

  • Pairs with related ToolsPivot tools: After generating names, check your new domain's SSL certificate once it's live, generate a sitemap for search engine indexing, and build meta tags for your pages. The full launch workflow lives under one roof.

  • Works on any device: The tool runs in your browser on desktop, tablet, or phone. No software downloads, no Java plugins, no compatibility issues.

Who Gets the Most Out of This Tool

Startup Founders Brainstorming Brand Names

You've got a business idea but no name yet. Plug core concept words into the generator and let the prefix/suffix combinations spark ideas you hadn't considered. A founder searching "fintech" might discover "GetFintech.co" or "FintechPro.me" is available, while the obvious FintechApp.com was taken years ago. Run your top picks through ToolsPivot's keyword research tool to check whether your brand term has existing search volume.

Freelancers Building Portfolio Sites

Designers, developers, and writers need personal brand domains. Search your name or a name-plus-skill combination ("markdesigns," "sarahwrites") and see which extensions are open. Portfolio domains don't always need .com. Extensions like .me and .co work well for personal branding, and they're often cheaper to register.

SEO Professionals Securing Client Domains

Agency teams managing multiple client launches can generate 20-30 domain ideas per client in minutes. Instead of manual guessing, run the client's target keywords through the generator, filter by extension, and present a shortlist of available options. After registration, set up the site's technical SEO foundation using the robots.txt generator and schema markup generator.

E-commerce Entrepreneurs Launching Product Lines

Online store owners launching new product lines or sub-brands can search product-category keywords ("organic snacks," "pet gear") to find product-focused domains. Newer TLDs like .co work well for commerce brands. And shorter domains (under 12 characters) tend to perform better in paid ad campaigns because they're easier to read in display URLs.

Side Project Experimenters

Not every domain search is a serious business decision. Some people just want a cheap domain for a hobby blog, a weekend project, or a joke site. The generator handles casual searches the same way it handles business ones. Search "pizzacat" and see what comes up. Extensions like .tv and .me often have fun, affordable options that don't break the bank.

Quick Pointers Before You Register

Aim for domains under 15 characters. Every character beyond that increases typo risk and makes the name harder to share verbally. "GetPixelPro.com" rolls off the tongue. "GetThePixelProfessionalDesign.com" doesn't.

Skip hyphens and numbers unless they're part of your actual brand name (like 37signals or 3M). When someone hears your domain in conversation, they won't know if it's "five" or "5," or where exactly the hyphen goes. That confusion sends traffic to competitors.

Check trademark databases before registering. The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) at tess2.uspto.gov lets you search existing trademarks for free. Registering a domain that matches someone else's trademark can lead to a UDRP dispute and forced transfer of the domain.

Consider buying both .com and one alternative extension if budget allows. A .com for credibility and a .co or country-code TLD for branding flexibility is a common approach. Registration costs average $10-15/year per domain at most registrars, so protecting two extensions for $20-30/year is reasonable insurance. Run your final choice through ToolsPivot's hosting checker once the site is live to verify your hosting setup is solid, and use the page speed checker to make sure your new site loads fast.

Common Questions About Domain Name Generators

How does a domain name generator work?

It takes the keyword you enter and combines it with common prefixes, suffixes, and related terms to create domain name suggestions. ToolsPivot's tool then checks each combination against registrar databases and shows availability status for every extension you selected. The whole process takes seconds.

Is ToolsPivot's domain name generator free?

Yes, 100% free with unlimited searches. No sign-up, no daily limits, no credit card required. You can run as many keyword searches across all 13 supported extensions as you need.

What domain extensions does the tool support?

ToolsPivot checks 13 TLDs: .com, .net, .org, .info, .biz, .us, .in, .uk, .fr, .ru, .co, .me, and .tv. You can select one extension or all 13 at once for a broad search.

Can I register a domain directly through ToolsPivot?

No. ToolsPivot generates ideas and checks availability, but it doesn't sell domains. You'll register through a separate registrar like Namecheap, Cloudflare, Porkbun, or Squarespace Domains. This means you're free to shop for the best price without being locked into a specific provider.

Should I always pick a .com domain?

Not necessarily. The .com extension has the strongest name recognition, with roughly 44% of all registered domains using it. But .co, .io, and .me have become widely accepted alternatives, especially for startups and personal brands. Choose based on availability, price, and how well the extension fits your brand identity.

How do I know if a domain name is trademarked?

Search the USPTO trademark database (tess2.uspto.gov) before registering any domain. Registering a name that infringes on an existing trademark can result in a UDRP complaint and loss of the domain. ToolsPivot checks availability, not legal status, so trademark verification is a separate step you should always take.

What's the ideal length for a domain name?

Keep it under 15 characters. Domains between 6 and 14 characters hit the sweet spot of being memorable, easy to type, and simple to share verbally. The average length of the top 100,000 most-visited domains is around 9 characters.

How is this different from a domain availability checker?

A domain availability checker tells you if one specific domain you already have in mind is available. A domain name generator creates new name ideas based on your keyword. Use the generator to brainstorm, then the checker to verify specific names that aren't in the generated list.

Can I check if a generated domain was previously owned?

Yes. Use ToolsPivot's domain age checker or WHOIS lookup tool to see registration history. Some "available" domains are recently expired and may carry spam history from previous owners, which could affect your site's reputation with search engines.

Does having keywords in my domain help with SEO?

The direct ranking benefit of keyword-rich domains has dropped significantly since Google's exact-match domain update. A branded domain with strong content will outrank a keyword-stuffed domain with thin content every time. That said, keywords in the domain can improve click-through rates because searchers see their query reflected in the URL. Use ToolsPivot's SEO checker to audit your site once it's live.



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