← Blog

Free vs Premium Domain Names: What's the Difference and Which Should You Choose?

Understand the difference between free subdomains, standard registrations, and premium domains. Learn when each option makes sense and how your choice impacts branding, SEO, and credibility.

When you're building a website, one of the first decisions is how much to invest in your domain name. Options range from completely free subdomains (yourbusiness.wordpress.com) to multi-million dollar premium domains. Understanding the differences — and when each makes sense — can save you money while protecting your brand.

The Three Tiers of Domain Names

1. Free Subdomains

Platforms like WordPress.com, Wix, Weebly, and Blogger offer free websites with subdomains like yourbusiness.wordpress.com or yourbusiness.wixsite.com. These cost nothing but come with significant limitations.

2. Standard Domain Registrations ($8–15/year)

Registering your own .com, .net, or other TLD through a registrar like Cloudflare Registrar, Porkbun, Namecheap, or Google Domains (now Squarespace Domains) typically costs $8–15/year. This is the sweet spot for most individuals and small businesses.

Pro tip: Cloudflare Registrar sells domains at wholesale cost with zero markup — typically the cheapest option for standard registrations. Porkbun is another budget-friendly choice with excellent first-year pricing.

3. Premium Domain Names ($100–$1,000,000+)

Premium domains are names that are already registered by someone else and listed for sale at a markup. They're available through aftermarket platforms like Sedo, Afternic, Dan.com, or through registrars that mark certain unregistered names as premium (charging a higher registration fee).

According to NameBio, the average premium .com domain sells for $2,000–$5,000, though the range is enormous. Short one-word domains and high-value keyword domains can sell for millions.

When Free Domains Make Sense

Free subdomains aren't always a bad choice. They have legitimate use cases:

When to Invest in a Premium Domain

Not every business needs a premium domain, but in certain cases the investment pays for itself. Moz's research on domain value suggests that strong domains contribute to higher click-through rates in search results, because users are more likely to click on a clean, recognizable URL.

The Hidden Costs of 'Free'

Free subdomains often have hidden costs that aren't immediately obvious:

Finding the Right Balance

For most people, the best approach is registering a standard domain ($8–15/year) and investing time in finding the right name rather than spending thousands on a premium. Use tools like domhaul to generate creative, available domain names that you can register at standard pricing.

The AI-powered name generator can suggest brandable names you might not have considered — often finding available names that feel premium without the premium price tag. In many cases, a creative and memorable standard-price domain outperforms a generic premium keyword domain.

Are free domain names really free?

Free subdomains (like yourbusiness.wordpress.com) are free in terms of money, but they come with restrictions: you don't own the domain, you may have ads displayed on your site, and your SEO authority belongs to the platform, not you. Some registrars offer 'free' custom domains bundled with hosting purchases, but you're paying through the hosting fee.

Why are some domains premium and others cost $10?

Premium domains are names already owned by someone who has listed them for resale, or names that registries have designated as high-value. Short, keyword-rich, or highly brandable names are premium because demand exceeds supply. Standard-price domains are unregistered names available at the registry's base price.

Is a premium domain worth it for a new business?

It depends on your budget and industry. If you're in a competitive space where brand perception matters (finance, healthcare, SaaS), a premium domain can provide a meaningful advantage. For most small businesses and side projects, a well-chosen standard-price domain with strong branding is sufficient.

Can I upgrade from a free subdomain to a custom domain later?

Yes, but the transition isn't seamless. You'll lose any SEO authority accumulated on the subdomain, and existing links pointing to the old URL won't benefit your new domain unless the platform supports 301 redirects (most free tiers don't). It's better to start with a custom domain from day one if there's any chance you'll take the project seriously.