Domains with Registration & Expiry Dates

Database including domain registration and expiration dates. Perfect for drop-catching and domain research.

Dataset Details

Format CSV
Last Updated March 14, 2026
File Size 1.76 GB
Records 133,055,711
Category Dataset
Status Processing

Documentation & Schema

domain

The fully qualified domain name (e.g., example.com).

Use Cases

Marketing & Lead Generation: Identify potential clients and generate targeted outreach lists.

Market Research: Analyze trends, technology adoption rates, and industry patterns within this domain space.

Security & Compliance: Monitor domain registrations for brand protection and threat intelligence.

Expiring Domains Database: 133 Million+ Records for Domain Investors and SEO Professionals

Every day, millions of domain names inch closer to the end of their registration period. When a domain's registration expires and the owner fails to renew it, it enters a brief window where it can be acquired by anyone—often at standard registration prices. These expiring domains represent one of the most valuable opportunities in the domain industry, and WebTrackly's All Expiring Domains dataset gives you the intelligence you need to act on them.

What Are Expiring Domains?

An expiring domain is a domain name that is approaching the end of its current registration term. Once the registration period lapses, the domain enters a grace period, then a redemption period, and finally becomes available for re-registration. During these stages, the domain may be caught by drop-catching services, purchased at auction, or simply re-registered by a new owner. Understanding when domains expire is critical for anyone looking to acquire valuable digital assets before competitors do.

What This Dataset Contains

This comprehensive dataset includes over 133 million domain records with registration and expiry dates across hundreds of top-level domains. Each record provides the domain name, the original registration date, the expiration date, and associated TLD information. With this data, you can filter domains by expiry window, age, extension, and other criteria to build highly targeted acquisition lists.

Who Benefits from Expiring Domain Data?

The All Expiring Domains dataset serves a wide range of professionals and organizations:

  • Domain Investors and Flippers – Identify soon-to-expire domains that carry inherent value due to short length, keyword relevance, or brandability. Domain investors use expiry data to plan drop-catch strategies and acquire premium names at minimal cost.
  • SEO Specialists – Expired domains often retain backlink profiles, domain authority, and search engine trust built up over years of active use. SEO professionals seek these domains to redirect authority to client websites or to build private blog networks with genuine link equity.
  • Brand Protection Teams – Corporations and trademark holders monitor expiring domains to prevent cybersquatters from acquiring names that contain their brand terms. Early detection of an expiring brand-related domain allows legal or acquisition teams to act before bad actors do.
  • Registrars and Hosting Providers – Registrars use expiry data to offer renewal reminders, aftermarket listings, and drop-catching services to their customers, creating additional revenue streams.

Key Use Cases

The dataset powers a variety of workflows critical to the domain and SEO industries:

  • Catching Valuable Expiring Domains – Build automated pipelines that scan upcoming expiry dates and flag domains meeting your value criteria, whether that is keyword match, domain length, or TLD preference.
  • Finding Domains with Existing SEO Authority – Cross-reference expiry data with backlink databases to discover domains that still hold significant link equity. Acquiring such domains lets you leverage years of organic SEO work.
  • Brand Protection and Monitoring – Set up alerts for domains containing your trademarks or brand names that are about to expire, ensuring you can secure them before they fall into the wrong hands.
  • Domain Portfolio Management – Large portfolio holders use expiry data to benchmark their own holdings against the broader market, identify acquisition targets, and track competitor domain strategies.

Data Fields and Structure

Each record in the dataset typically includes the following fields: domain name, top-level domain (TLD), registration date, expiration date, and domain age. The data is delivered in convenient formats suitable for bulk processing, database import, or integration with custom analytics tools.

Update Frequency

Domain registration data changes constantly as domains are renewed, transferred, or allowed to expire. WebTrackly refreshes this dataset on a regular basis to ensure that the expiry dates you see reflect the latest WHOIS and registry information. This means you can rely on the data for time-sensitive operations like drop-catching and auction bidding.

Why Choose WebTrackly?

WebTrackly specializes in large-scale domain intelligence datasets built for professionals who need accuracy, completeness, and fresh data. Our All Expiring Domains package covers 133,055,711 domains at a price of just $66.50, making it one of the most cost-effective sources of expiry data available. Whether you are an individual domain investor or an enterprise-level brand protection team, this dataset provides the foundation for smarter domain acquisition decisions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is an expiring domain?
An expiring domain is a domain name whose registration period is approaching its end date. If the current owner does not renew it, the domain passes through grace and redemption periods before becoming available for anyone to register.
How many expiring domains are included in this dataset?
This dataset contains over 133 million domain records with registration and expiration dates, covering hundreds of top-level domains worldwide.
How often is the expiring domains data updated?
WebTrackly refreshes the dataset on a regular basis using the latest WHOIS and registry data, ensuring that expiry dates are current and reliable for time-sensitive operations like drop-catching.
Who typically uses expiring domain data?
The primary users include domain investors seeking valuable names to acquire, SEO specialists looking for domains with existing backlink authority, brand protection teams monitoring trademark-related domains, and registrars offering aftermarket services.
What data fields are included in each record?
Each record typically includes the domain name, top-level domain (TLD), registration date, expiration date, and domain age. The data is provided in formats suitable for bulk processing and database import.

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