7 Tips To Find Cheap & Powerful Expired Domains

This post was written by on May 16, 2009
Posted Under: Domain Names  

So you are in the market for purchasing domain names so you can make your first million (or two) on the internet.

Before you rush out and register that brand new domain I am going to suggest that you consider an aged domain instead.

What is an aged (or expired) domain??

An aged/expired domain is a domain that has been previously registered by another person, and that person or company has, for whatever reason decided not to renew it.

Sometimes the reason is simply that they forget.

There was a famous story a few years ago when a very valuable domain passport.com owned by Microsoft was not renewed when it came time to renew the registration, meaning it became available for anyone to re-register.

An individual did just that with this domain, but luckily for Microsoft this guy did the right thing and gave the domain back to them (I think Microsoft paid him back the registration fee).

Other reasons for not renewing a domain might be that the company that owned the domain went bankrupt, or they maybe transferred the business that used to operate on that domain to another domain.  In fact there are a heap of reasons why domain names do get forgotten about.

Domain Name Finder Video

So what are the advantages for you re-registering an aged domain?

1.    Links – Most domains, particularly those domains that have been actively used in the past and not just had no promotion have other sites pointing to them over time, and these backlinks form a vital part in determining how well the domain will rank in the search engines for particular keyword phrases.

2.    Page Rank – As a consequence of these links, many of these expired domains will have existing page rank.

3.    Age – As a general rule the search engines give more authority to domains that have been registered for a a longer period than other domains.

4.    Web site Visitors – Many domains will have existing traffic, with visitors rolling up to that domain on a regular basis, usually as a result of previous promotions done by the previous site owner.

5.    No Sandbox - New domains are once in a while placed in a “sandbox” where they will not get as much traffic as more established domains until they have proven themselves to the search engines.

These are probably the most attractive items to consider when re-registering an existing domain versus registering a brand new domain.

There is an vital distinction I recommend you become familiar with between an expired or aged domain and a deleted domain.

An aged or expired domain name has the existing age kept.

For example if I registered a domain three years ago and then did not renew the registration and you come along and re-register it, then for all intensive purposes the domain is still 3 years old and still has all the advantages of that age in the search engines.

If however, you re-register a deleted domain, then effectively you have registered a BRAND NEW domain.  You will still be be able to use any links, page rank, and traffic, but your domain may be subjected to the sandbox, and WILL be treated as a brand new domain by the search engines.

So the key is to grab the domain before it is deleted by the domain registrar.  There are a number of free websites available that you can use to find aged domains or expired domains.

Just do a search in Google for terms such as aged domain finder or something similar.

These websites will often allow you to search for domains and return information about the age of the domain, existing page rank, number of links, traffic, and even allow you to use the Wayback machine (a catalog of all web pages at various points in time) to see what content was on the domain in the past.

Some of the more complete services will allow you to search with keywords as well which is a very powerful feature.

You see domains rank better in Google, MSN, and Yahoo if they contain a keyword relating to the particular niche you are involved with.

For example if you are selling products for cats, then if you have the word cat or cats in the domain name this will help you get better rankings than domains that do not have this (if everything else is equal).

When you are searching for an expired domain please check out the free  purchasing domain names script.

Essential tips to purchasing aged domains

1. Try and get a domain at least five years old (the older the better, this is a minimum).

2. Aim for a decent number of links as possible (although this is not essential).

3. Existing Page rank is not necessary but a bonus if you can find it.

4. Existing web traffic again is not essential but is a huge bonus.

5. Make sure the domain has at least part of a keyword relating to the niche you are going to use the domain in.

6. Check the history of the domain to make sure you are happy with the previous content that has been used on the domain previously.  Bad content may have blacklisted the domain in the search engines.  Many services allow you to search for this automatically.

7. Optional: Use a service that allows you to search closeouts.  These are really cheap domains usually costing only $5 (plus standard registration fees).  Wht buy premium domains if you do not need them?  You do not need to spend much money to find domains that have most of the items discussed above.  In fact only recently I purchased a 11 year old domain, with 200+ web visitors per day and a heap of links for just $5 !

Buying expired domains can really give you a legup on your competition, and if your smart and use the right websites, and look for the right type of domains, it need not be an expensive exercise.

Isn’t your internet marketing worth spending an extra $5 to get an aged domain so you can take advantage of all these factors?

 

To your great success.

Tim & Anthony

P.S.

We think that our Viral Marketing article might take your fancy as well.

About

Tim writes a lot about Internet Marketing on this blog. If you have a question ask away and I feel sure you will get a reply. Anything about Internet Marketing in general, but also search engine optimization, web 2.0, google+, twitter, even yucky ol Facebook.

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  • http://howtogetridofacneadvice.com Cee

    Thanks for the great article. I didn’t know that the domain kept its age when someone else registered it

  • http://custodywar.com Kelly

    Blog is
    childcustodymythbusters.blogspot.com

    I know this is off-topic. Please forward it to the right place. What software do you use for article spinning? Thanks

  • PriyaMehta

    Registering for a domain is one of the most basic aspects of developing a site, yet at the same time, it can be vital to a site’s success. If ranking high on search engines such as Google is of high priority, then it would be advisable to register an “exact match domain”.

  • http://www.realisticrevenue.com Daniel Deus

    Hi Guys,

    Good stuff. Just thought I should let you know – according to my Kaspersky AntiVirus, there is a trojan virus on your aged-domain-finder site. You might like to get your tech guys to double check it

  • http://www.seanbreslin.com/buy-a-domain Sean Breslin

    This is a great piece on aged domains… It is the way I’m going forward now unless, I buy product specific domains where an established name would not be available.

  • http://grantsandscholarshipsforwomen.com Grants and Scholarships

    I am going to head over to your aged domain site. I’ve been looking into this for the last few weeks. And had gotten so excited finding tons of domains with PR 3, 4, even PR 5. And later loosing my excitement when running them through scrapebox’s fake pr checker and seeing that they were all fake (except a few PR 1 and 2 sites).
    So just a heads up to others.
    Make sure you check whether the stated PR is real or not! Often it just aint ;)

    Thanks marketing assasins.
    ps. Love your rss genius plugin

  • Johannes Jager

    Damn you guys are good. Am checking the domain site right now.

    This would also mean……..

    That if I set up a website on a new domain and keep on working on it for 5-10 years, it could become very valuable.

    Never underestimate the value of long term thinking!

  • http://theaffiliateproductreview.com James Blackstone

    I found your article to be informative. I recently took a look at expired domain auctions at “godaddy.” I believee other resources would be more beneficial because “godaddy” is popular ie. lots of competition for bidding. I’ll check out Market Samurai because it’s obvious I live under a rock.

  • http://easywaystopsmoking.org Art teaches easy way to stop smoking

    I’ve had very little luck finding any domains worth purchasing for any of my niches so far, but I’ll keep looking.

    I do agree that Market Samurai is probably the best keyword tool on the market. Especially if you preload it with a huge list from google’s adwords tool, after preloading the adwords tool with keywords from the free keyword tracker tool. Seems like a lot of work, but man does it ever work!

    I’d also like to comment to the individual who says LSI is a waste of time because the Stompernet folks proved it. Google may not use LSI, but using LSI terms will add even more opportunities for your pages to rank. So why not use what google recommends? They obviously recommend them for a reason.

  • http://www.windowsanddoorsgallery.com keizi

    It is all good to be part of this adventure, you learn alot from this new world of technology,thank you for your education.

  • http://toolsofattraction.ca Terence O’Neill

    Great Info Guys…as usual. Actually. awesome

  • http://auto-accident-lawyer-directory.com/ Dr. Michael Haley

    Thanks for the tip. I found a golden aged domain for what I have to do at http://www.aged-domain-finder.com/.

  • http://www.learnquilling.com jenn

    Thanks! I’ve had some success lately with purchasing aged domains however my latest project is a really unpopular keyword so its not coming up in any aged domain search…I’m still going to buy a domain for it as a secondary domain to use and see how it goes!

  • http://blog.premiumwebmastersoftware.com Horst

    Hi Jeff,
    thanks for this nice article and the aged domain finder. IT’s funny – yesterday I got an E-Mail someone wanted me to buy an aged domain finder software.

  • http://www.im-tool-maker.com Douglas Anderson

    Excellent, valuable article. I have just completed an auction (my first) at GoDaddy for an expired domain in one of the niches I work in, but the final cost was US$36, not $5. And the original owner has the right to claim his domain back (by paying the renewal fee) for 14 days after the domain name expiry. So it will take 13 more days before I find out if I did actually purchase the domain. If not, GoDaddy says they will refund.

  • tim

    Hi Jeff,

    I would never say never. Who is to say they use it on all sites (if they use it at all). Who is to say it’s too slow? Yes I’ve read/watched the stomper stuff :)

    Technology is evolving dramatically. It’s all a matter of “horsepower” :)

    Agreed that LSI is speculation, but in general the concepts at a general level make sense as they structure content in a way that makes sense for humans as well as search engines.

    LSI aside, you should I feel be focusing on providing information that best helps out your potential visitors and structure it accordingly.

    Regards

    Tim

  • http://www.fastfortuneformula.com/ jeff

    LSI? The Stompernet guys proved Google is not using LSI. Its just not possible to use LSI on a system as large as the internet because it would just be too slow. Is there some news about Google using LSI now? I’ve not heard any. LSI has always been speculation anyway.

    But Market Samurai is excellent.

  • http://www.davekendrick.com Dave

    Good stuff!
    It appears that Google is now leaning more heavily on related LSI Content. They want to give their customers what they want. Yes I also agree that Market Samurai was one of the best purchases I made :-)

  • http://www.thegooglesecretloophole.com google secret loophole

    Nice article… I will check and see if the related keywords are the top LSI’s using the Google keyword tool. Good to see that someone else think Market Samurai is an excellent tool