In the domain world, shorter almost always means better. Short domain names are easier to type, easier to remember, and easier to share — and the market values them accordingly. But with hundreds of millions of domains registered, finding a short, available name requires creativity and strategy.
Why Short Domains Command Premium Prices
The value of short domains comes down to basic economics: fixed supply meets growing demand. There are only 676 possible two-letter .com combinations, 17,576 three-letter combinations, and 456,976 four-letter combinations. Every single one of these is registered on .com.
According to NameBio sales data, average prices by domain length tell a clear story:
- 2-letter .coms — Average sale price: $150,000+ (some exceeding $1 million)
- 3-letter .coms — Average sale price: $10,000-50,000
- 4-letter .coms — Average sale price: $1,000-10,000 (pronounceable ones command more)
- 5-letter .coms — Average sale price: $500-5,000
- Single-word .coms — Highly variable; common English words average $10,000+
The Science Behind Short Domain Value
Research in cognitive psychology supports the value of short names. Miller's Law suggests that working memory can hold approximately 7 (plus or minus 2) chunks of information. A short domain name occupies fewer memory chunks, making it significantly easier to recall.
Studies in Harvard Business Review on brand name processing have shown that shorter names are processed more fluently — the brain recognizes and evaluates them faster. This "processing fluency" translates directly into perceived trustworthiness and preference.
Real-World Impact of Domain Length
- Fewer typos. Every character is an opportunity for a typing error. Shorter domains lose less traffic to typos.
- Better for mobile. On small screens, every character counts. Short domains fit better in URLs, text messages, and social posts.
- Easier word-of-mouth. If you tell someone your domain in a noisy bar, can they remember it? Short names pass this test more reliably.
- Professional appearance. Short domains look cleaner in email addresses (you@brand.com vs you@my-long-company-name.com).
- Social media fit. Character limits on platforms like Twitter/X make short domains valuable for sharing links.
How to Find Available Short Domain Names
Finding a short, available domain name in 2026 requires creative strategies. Here are approaches that actually work:
1. Explore Alternative TLDs
While every short .com is taken, newer TLDs offer vastly better availability. A name like "kova.app" or "zune.dev" might be available at standard registration prices — names that would cost thousands on .com.
2. Coin New Words
Invented words are one of the best paths to short, available domains. Think "Hulu" (4 letters), "Roku" (4 letters), or "Etsy" (4 letters). These names were available because they didn't exist as words before. Combine consonants and vowels in unusual but pronounceable ways.
3. Use Non-English Words
Short words from other languages that are easy for English speakers to pronounce can yield available domains. "Luma" (Latin for light), "Kero" (Japanese), or "Vela" (Spanish for sail) are examples of cross-language names that work globally.
4. Use AI to Generate Short Names
AI domain generators excel at creating short, brandable names because they can explore naming patterns humans wouldn't think of. Describe your project and specify that you want short names.
Famous Short Domain Names and Their Stories
- x.com — Originally Elon Musk's online bank (1999), later became PayPal, repurchased by Musk and now rebranded as Twitter/X. Perhaps the most iconic single-letter domain.
- a.com — Two-letter domains are among the most valuable digital assets, with most owned by major corporations.
- fb.com — Purchased by Facebook (now Meta) for an estimated $8.5 million to match their stock ticker.
- arc.net — The Browser Company's 3-letter domain for their Arc browser.
- cal.com — Acquired by the open-source scheduling company, replacing their longer domain.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are all short .com domains taken?
Yes — all 2, 3, and 4-letter .com domains are registered. Most 5-letter common word combinations are also taken. However, short domains on alternative TLDs (.app, .dev, .io) have much better availability. Additionally, coined/invented words of 5-6 characters can still be found on .com with persistence.
How short should my domain be?
Aim for under 10 characters as a general rule, and under 7 for the best memorability. The average domain among the top 100 websites is about 6 characters. That said, a clear 12-character domain is better than a confusing 5-character one — clarity trumps brevity.
Is a 3-letter domain always better than a longer word domain?
Not necessarily. A 3-letter domain like 'QZJ.com' is short but meaningless and hard to brand around. A slightly longer but meaningful domain like 'Notion.so' or 'Linear.app' is far more valuable as a brand. The ideal is a short domain that also has meaning or brandability.
Where can I buy premium short domains?
Premium short domains are available through aftermarket platforms like Dan.com, Afternic, Sedo, and GoDaddy Auctions. For ultra-premium names (single words, 2-3 letter combinations), consider working with a domain broker who specializes in high-value transactions. Expect to pay $1,000-$100,000+ for desirable short .com domains.