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More posts by @Alves908

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@Lengel546

The question is should we put hyphens in domain names? The answer is if you have them like stack-exchange.com instead of stackexchange.com, you will get less traffic because according to SEO practices, domains should have the following properties:


Small and memorable
Easy to understand
Not use hyphens with multi-words for easy indexing

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@Rambettina238

SEO value is not affected by dashes - the search engines ignore them.

But from a user perspective, dashes can make a domain look spammy. Many spammy, exact-match domains have used dashes so they have sort of "poisoned the well".

From Moz.com:


Top Tips
- Word Separators: Avoid hyphens. Hyphens detract from credibility and can act as a spam indicator.


If the domain name looks and reads okay without dashes, then I would leave them out.

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@Michele947

Depends on your user-base: In Germany everyone would expect hyphens in domain names. In the English-speaking world you should probably avoid them:


Nobody expects them there and mistypes
There is no real right way to pronounce it.


On SEO perspective it doesn't matter. Both names rank the same.

And of course in doubt you should purchase both. Every user gets to the right site.

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@Dunderdale272

I would avoid hyphens in the domain name. While they are useful in the path for a file or post, they add unneeded noise to the domain itself. Imagine having to spell it out for someone..."stack dash overflow dot com" just doesn't sound right.

On the other hand, there are likely some domains where a well-placed hyphen would be beneficial. For example: expertsexchange can be read as expert sex change. A hyphen would make a big difference: experts-exchange.

In the end, it's up to you, but my instinct is to avoid hyphens in a domain name.

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@Bryan171

Domain name: No. (It’s not normal and is harder to remember. However, preference is okay. It doesn’t affect ranking.)

For example,


webmasters.stackexchange.com/questions/410/is-it-better-to-put-hyphens-in-a-domain-name

File Location in URL: Yes. (It’s easier for people to read.)

For example,


http: //webmasters.stackexchange.com/questions/410/is-it-better-to-put-hyphens-in-a-domain-name

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