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Goswami781

: How to back order domain It seems that information on the topic is a bit sparse in the wild. How do you go about back ordering a domain? If you do find a service that will do it for you,

@Goswami781

Posted in: #DomainRegistrar #Domains

It seems that information on the topic is a bit sparse in the wild. How do you go about back ordering a domain?

If you do find a service that will do it for you, does the current owner of the domain name know that it is back ordered?

How does it work if I back order with one domain registrar and then host the site with another? Does it work something like a normal domain transfer?

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@BetL925

I have backordered a few domains... with some one nice catch.

My recommendation:
backorder on snapnames.com AND pool.com. These two services seem to be currently the 800-pounds gorillas in the game. I had one name with each of those. You pay only to the service who gets the name for you, so might as well request to both... you never know which service will catch the drop.

You can also backorder with namejet.com.

Don't worry about the owner: the owner already has ample reminders from its registrar. Either he is not interested to keep the name, or he/she does not check emails.

If it's a popular backorder you'll go into an auction.

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@Steve110

A domain name backorder means paying a domain registry to monitor an existing domain name that someone else owns, and if it becomes available the registry attempts to register it for you.

There are many such services, and in fact most domain registrars provide it.

However it's not 100% successful. Particularly popular domain names may be backordered by many people, so when it becomes available several automated systems may be attempting to register it at the same time, but only one will succeed.

The current owner of the domain name is not notified, but check the fine print of the backorder services you evaluate.

Keep in mind that if someone else backorders the same domain, on the same registrar, you suddenly have a conflict - which of you two will the registrar actually attempt to register the domain name for? The registrar may not tell you that the domain name you've backordered has also been backordered by other customers of theirs. You might consider asking them how they manage such situations.

Read the backorder terms. In general if you backorder the domain and the attempt is successful, then you own the domain just as though you had registered it yourself, and you can use whatever hosting provider you choose.

If you backorder through a domain registration service that only bundles domains with hosting packages, then you may be stuck with them for hosting.

Whether you should buy domain names and hosting from the same service is a separate question entirely...

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@Cugini213

Backordering a domain means using a third party service to order (and usually pay for) a domain which is currently owned by someone else, with the aim to get the domain as soon as it will become available.

The most part of hosting services usually offer this kind of service. You pay a yearly fee and they will try to register the domain for you as soon as it will became available.

The current owner of the domain doesn't know anything about it. The service provider doesn't need to inform him. It simply monitors the domain for chances and tries to purchase it in case it becomes available.

Usually, the provides simply registers the domain. Then, once you become the new domain owner, you have to purchase a separate hosting service, use your own or transfer the domain.

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