A domain name generator that checks real availability
Most domain generators hand you a list of clever ideas and leave you to discover, one by one, that the good ones are already registered. This domain name generator is different: every name it suggests is checked live against the domain registry, so each idea is marked as genuinely available or already taken before you get your hopes up. You enter a keyword — your industry, your product, a word that captures your idea — and get back a set of brandable, modern, and action-oriented variations, each with its real registration status attached.
How the availability check works
When you generate names, each candidate is looked up through RDAP, the registry protocol that reports whether a domain is registered. A name marked available means the registry has no record of it — nobody currently owns it. A name marked taken is already registered, and you can click straight through to a full WHOIS lookup to see who holds it and when it expires (sometimes a name you love is expiring soon). One honest note: "available" here means "not currently registered," which is the reliable signal; the registrar confirms final availability at checkout, since a small number of names can be premium-priced or reserved. But you won't waste time on names that are obviously already gone.
A business name generator grounded in what's actually free
Naming a startup, app, shop, or blog is really two problems at once: thinking of a name you like, and finding one whose domain you can actually register. A business name generator that only solves the first half sends you in circles. By pairing idea generation with a live availability check, this tool solves both together — you can move straight from "I like that name" to "and I can register it right now." The suggestions are grouped by style so you can steer toward what fits: short brandable coinages, modern tech-flavored names, or direct action-oriented phrases.
From idea to registration
When a name is taken, it links to a full WHOIS/RDAP lookup so you can investigate the current owner and expiry — useful if you want to try to acquire it or wait for it to drop. When a name is available, it links out to a registrar where you can secure it. Once you've registered your domain, the rest of this site's tools help you set it up properly: point your DNS records, configure email authentication, and check your SSL certificate. The name generator is just the first step of the journey the rest of the toolkit supports.