Daily domain intelligence from RobotDomainSearch — auction picks, industry news, and market insights powered by real data.
🔥 Today’s Domain Pick
tokenme.com — $449 current bid (39 bids)
Three years ago, someone paid $15,007 for this domain. Today it’s back at auction, sitting at $449 with 39 bids and climbing. That prior sale isn’t just history — it’s the strongest possible comparable anchor. When the exact same domain has a verified transaction, you don’t need to guess.
The numbers tell a story:
- RDS Valuation: $8,000 – $12,000 – $16,000 (85% confidence)
- Quality Score: 65 (competitive auction)
- Current Bid: $449 (39 bids)
- Extensions Taken: Multiple across .ai, .com, hyphenated variants
- Registered: 2013
- Ends: This week
Our valuation API pegs the mid estimate at $12,000 with 85% confidence — directly anchored by the 2023 sale at $15,007 (100% similarity score). The heuristic engine scores pronounceability at 100/100 and .com TLD at 100/100. Supporting comps tell the broader story: wonderly.com ($100K), fintiv.com ($117K), releaf.com ($128K) — the statistical median for brandable .coms in this length range sits at $700, but the mean rockets to $172,984 thanks to outlier sales.
Name-Search-Presence scores “tokenme” at 77/100 — and here’s where it gets interesting. TokenMe isn’t a blank slate. It’s already an established brand: TokenMe (tokenme.ai) is a construction site safety and intelligence platform with Crunchbase and Tracxn profiles. Bit4id sells a hardware USB token device called “TokenME” for electronic signatures. There’s a company profile on TheCompanyCheck, GitHub repos from a MidTool-Team, and SourceForge downloads. The .com sits at the center of a brand ecosystem that’s already been validated across multiple industries.
The play here is pure repricing arbitrage. A domain that sold for $15K in a private transaction is now available through public auction at a fraction of its last sale. With 39 bids showing strong demand and the .com anchoring credibility, the market is actively rediscovering this asset. At $449 against a $12K mid valuation, that’s a 27x discount — and the prior sale proves someone already paid the premium.
📰 Domain News
AI Companies Still Driving End User Domain Sales
Sedo’s weekly end user sales report shows AI and tech companies continue to dominate acquisitions. The top sale was NGBet.com at $158,000, but the real story is in the mid-market: Freebuff.com ($4,995) was bought by Codebuff, an AI coding platform, for its free-tier product. LearnVolt.com ($2,675) went to a corporate e-learning system. EgyptianLabs.com ($2,650) was acquired by an AI-powered software holding company. Even FemBe.com (€5,500) — a women’s health brand — forwarded to its .de equivalent. The pattern is clear: end users aren’t waiting for prices to drop. They’re buying now, and AI companies are leading the charge.
Source: DomainNameWire · Mar 17
Unstoppable Domains Pivots Hard to Traditional DNS
Matthew Gould, founder of Unstoppable Domains, made a candid admission on X: traditional DNS domains now make up more than 90% of the company’s business. Within two to three years, he expects DNS and the traditional web could account for 99%+ of it. The company — once the poster child of Web3 domain ownership — is now an ICANN-accredited registrar pursuing legitimacy in the conventional namespace. Gould hinted that some of Unstoppable’s Web3 TLDs could eventually be submitted through ICANN’s next gTLD application round. It’s not a rejection of Web3 roots so much as a capitulation to market reality: blockchain domains drew attention during the crypto boom, but mainstream adoption never followed.
Source: DomainGang · Mar 17
“Prosumer” Domains: The Next Buzzword Play?
Nikita Bier, Head of Product at X, declared on Twitter that “prosumer” — a mashup of producer and consumer — will be the defining word for everyone working at the frontier of AI in 2026. Domain investor Elliot Silver ran the numbers: 394 domain names currently contain “prosumer” across all TLDs, with 50 TLDs registered for the exact term. Only three are developed. Whether prosumer domains will command premiums remains uncertain, but the pattern is familiar — when tech leaders coin category terms, early registrants sometimes catch lightning. As Silver notes, the registrars are always the guaranteed winners.
Source: DomainInvesting · Mar 17
⏰ Best Auctions Closing Soon
Curated from 122,000+ auctions across all platforms. Scored on valuation-to-bid ratio, quality score, search volume, and brand potential. TLD diversity enforced.
🏷️ timedate.org — $62 · 46 bids · QS: 72 · 1,461 backlinks
RDS Valuation: $100 – $250 – $500 (75% confidence)
Two dictionary words, one compound domain. “Time” and “date” are among the most universally searched concepts on the internet — timeanddate.com is one of the web’s most visited utility sites. The .org version strips the conjunction and goes clean. Our model prices it conservatively at $250 mid, anchored by comparable .org compound sales in the $25–$160 range. But the heuristic engine sees further: word score 80/100, pronounceability 95/100, and a statistical median of $223 for compound .org domains.
Search Presence: Name-Search-Presence scores 72/100 — “timedate” maps to established brand presence including Time magazine entities, date-related commercial services, and the dominant timeanddate.com platform. The compound has instant recognition with zero brand competition for the exact term.
At $62 with 46 bids and 1,461 inbound links, this is a 15-year-old domain with real link equity being aggressively contested. The .org TLD gives it institutional credibility — perfect for a utility site, open-source project, or developer tool.
🔧 midtool.com — $25 · 26 bids · QS: 73 · Estibot: $1,200
RDS Valuation: $200 – $500 – $1,200 (75% confidence)
The highest quality score in today’s closing-soon dataset. “Midtool” is a clean compound — “mid” + “tool” — with perfect pronounceability (100/100) and a .com TLD. Our model sees $500 mid, while the heuristic range stretches to $227K at the top end based on brandable .com segment statistics.
Search Presence: Name-Search-Presence scores 47/100 — “midtool” has moderate presence: a physical business (Midtool, St. Paul, MN), a Chinese AI assistant platform (MidTool on CSDN), and GitHub repos from MidTool-Team. The term straddles developer tooling and physical manufacturing.
At $25 with 26 bids, this is a sub-$30 entry point for a compound .com with the highest QS closing today. Developer tools and AI middleware are the hottest startup categories of 2026 — “midtool” maps directly to that space.
🤖 consociate.ai — $1 · 1 bid · QS: 43 · RDS: $60,000 mid
RDS Valuation: $45,000 – $60,000 – $75,000 (85% confidence)
One bid. One dollar. And a valuation model that sees $60,000. The gap is staggering — a potential 60,000x return at current price. Our model anchors to comparable .ai brandable sales: conversive.ai ($50K), bankruptcy.ai ($60K), scarlett.ai ($60K), covenant.ai ($65K), companies.ai ($66K), virtuoso.ai ($70K), intuitive.ai ($125K). The statistical median for .ai brandables in this length range sits at $62,500.
Search Presence: Name-Search-Presence scores 69/100 — “consociate” is a real English dictionary word (Merriam-Webster: “to bring into association”) with established commercial usage: Consociate Health operates in the healthcare space, and Consociate Media runs a marketing firm at consociate.marketing. Dictionary words on .ai command premium prices.
A dictionary word on the .ai TLD at $1. The .ai segment has produced blockbuster sales in the $50K–$125K range for brandable terms. “Consociate” — meaning to bring together, to unite in association — is tailor-made for AI collaboration platforms, partnership tech, or federated learning systems. This one should not be sitting at $1.
🔥 Hot Auctions This Week
The most competitive auctions across all platforms — ranked by bid count, with valuation analysis. Deduplicated from previous issues.
yummypancakes.com — $156 · 78 bids · QS: 59 · 8yr
RDS Valuation: $75 – $150 – $350 (75% confidence)
The most-bid domain in today’s entire dataset at 78 bids. Our model prices it at $150 mid — right at the current auction level — anchored by comparable long brandable .com sales in the $25–$395 range. The segment median for 11–15 character brandable .coms sits at $89.
Search Presence: Name-Search-Presence scores 27/100 — “yummypancakes” has minimal existing brand presence. A French restaurant operates at yummypancakes.fr, and there are tangential YouTube videos, but no major brand owns the term. Clean slate for development.
Seventy-eight bids from a low starting price tells you one thing: the crowd wants this domain. It’s a fun, instantly memorable food brand — think meal kit delivery, recipe platform, or family restaurant chain. The 8-year age adds stability, and the .com TLD means universal recognition. The market has spoken; this one isn’t slowing down.
otka.com — $911 · 37 bids · QS: 67 · RDS: $120,000 mid
RDS Valuation: $80,000 – $120,000 – $200,000 (75% confidence)
Four letters. Pronounceable. .com. That combination alone puts you in rarefied territory — only 456,976 possible four-letter .coms exist, and the vast majority are taken. Our model anchors to comparable LLLL .com sales: serp.com ($210K), bitz.com ($112K), siam.com ($100K), wwww.com ($120K). The statistical median for four-letter .coms sits at $111,100.
Search Presence: Name-Search-Presence scores 58/100 — “otka” primarily surfaces as a common misspelling of “Okta,” the $15B identity management company. Reddit threads discuss “Otka” administration, and the search landscape is dominated by Okta brand references. That proximity to a major tech brand cuts both ways: instant recognition, but potential trademark friction.
At $911 with 37 bids, this four-letter .com sits at a 131x discount to its $120K mid valuation. The comparable sales data is overwhelming — four-letter .coms routinely trade in six figures. Even the weakest comparable (ehip.com at $30) doesn’t dim the segment’s strength. This is a blue-chip asset class at a startup-friendly price point.
femlabs.com — $306 · 35 bids · QS: 67 · 16yr
RDS Valuation: $500 – $1,200 – $2,500 (75% confidence)
“Fem” + “Labs” — two powerful signals in one compact domain. The femtech industry is projected to reach $75 billion by 2028, and “labs” connotes innovation, research, and scientific credibility. Our model sees $1,200 mid, anchored by brandable .com segment statistics with a median of $700.
Search Presence: Name-Search-Presence scores 27/100 — “femlabs” has low but relevant presence: FemLab (femlab.co) is a researcher-activist cooperative focused on feminist digital platforms, UNESCO runs a FemLab.AI think tank, and femlab.co.za offers hormone therapies. The term is emerging but not yet claimed by a dominant brand.
At $306 with 35 bids and 16 years of domain age, this is a category-defining compound hitting the femtech zeitgeist. The low NSP score is actually bullish here — no established brand means the buyer gets to own the category. Biotechnology startups, women’s health platforms, and research institutions would all find this name immediately credible.
📚 Domain History: .org
The .org domain was one of the internet’s original seven TLDs, established in January 1985. It was intended for organizations that didn’t fit neatly into .com (commercial), .edu (educational), or .gov (government) — essentially, “everything else.” Wikipedia, Craigslist, and the Internet Archive all call .org home. For decades it was managed by the Internet Society (ISOC) through the Public Interest Registry (PIR). In 2019, ISOC controversially attempted to sell PIR to private equity firm Ethos Capital for $1.135 billion, sparking a massive backlash from nonprofits, digital rights groups, and ICANN itself, which ultimately blocked the sale. Today, .org remains one of the most trusted TLDs on the internet, with over 10 million registrations. Its June 2026 price increase from $9.93 to $11.00 will be its first in years — a reminder that .org’s relative price stability has been one of its quiet advantages over more aggressively priced TLDs.
→ Explore the full history of .org on RobotDomainSearch
Built by RobotDomainSearch — domain intelligence for humans and agents. Data sourced from 1M+ live auctions across Namecheap, Sedo, and Dynadot. Valuations powered by the RDS Valuation API.