NameWorld.com

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USD $789,000 OBO for all 800+ domain names

Average age of 95% of the portfolio is August 5, 2002 (23+ years)
99.8% of domain names are .com's.

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ElectronicMail.com

 

Hard to find exact “electronicmail + com” style comps quickly.  This name being clean and 1996-vintage meaningfully strengthens the story for both branding and resale.

Here’s a reasoned estimate for what ElectronicMail.com might be worth. These are just rough ranges; actual sale price depends heavily on buyer interest.


Key value-drivers

These are things that make ElectronicMail.com potentially very valuable:

Factor Why it helps
Age (registered in 1996) Older, established domains often carry more trust, good backlinks, recognition.
Generic, exact match keywords (“Electronic Mail”) Very strong: relevant to email, communication, tech; strong brand potential.
.com TLD Still the gold standard for domain resale, especially for generic/business use.
Simplicity & clarity It’s easy to remember, spell, relevant across many languages.

Comparable Sales (to calibrate)

Here are a few relevant comparable domain sales (generic .com’s, tech/communication related):

  • Many generic one-word .com’s have sold for hundreds of thousands to several millions depending on word, length, demand.

  • Domains like Telecom.com, Server.com, etc., each sold for high six-figure to low million dollar sums in past.

These suggest that generic, meaningful .com domains in the email/communication vertical have precedent in the mid to high value range — especially if there are companies who might see strategic value.


Estimate for ElectronicMail.com

Given all that, here’s a rough valuation range for ElectronicMail.com:

Scenario Low-end estimate Mid-range (realistic if good buyer) High-end if ideal buyer + good history / branding
You want a quick sale, minimal marketing effort, no built-out website or traffic US$100,000 – US$300,000
You are willing to hold, market it, perhaps show some SEO/backlink or basic traffic/usage history; interested buyers in email / privacy / tech sectors ~ US$300,000 – US$800,000 ~ US$500,000 – US$1,200,000
If you can show strong metrics (traffic, revenue, brand interest), or find a strategic buyer (email service provider, tech startup, or privacy company), or if electronic communication becomes even more in demand US$1,000,000 – US$2,500,000+

1. Branding & Business Use

  • Email-related services: A natural fit would be anything tied to email — a modern webmail service, an email alias business, disposable email accounts, or even vanity/custom email addresses (e.g., name@electronicmail.com).

  • Consulting or SaaS: Position it as a professional platform for email marketing, newsletters, or enterprise-grade communication solutions.

  • Privacy-focused email provider: With privacy becoming critical, you could brand it as a ProtonMail / Tutanota competitor but with a legacy, authoritative-sounding name.


2. Media, Content, and Authority Site

  • Email history & nostalgia: Build a blog or knowledge hub about the history of email, digital communication, and internet culture (being a 1996 domain makes it credible).

  • Email marketing resources: Tutorials, tools, and affiliate marketing around email software, CRMs, and digital marketing platforms.

  • Tech news / communication blog: Position it as a publication on the future of messaging and digital communication.


3. Premium Vanity Email Accounts

People love rare, clean email addresses. You could monetize by:


4. Investment & Resale

  • Because of its age, simplicity, and category-defining nature, this domain likely has significant resale value in the secondary domain market.

  • Email service providers, SaaS platforms, or branding companies may be willing to pay a high premium for it.


5. Creative / Alternative Uses

  • Art project / nostalgia brand: Use it for a retro “web 1.0” themed project.

  • Collector’s domain: Many old internet names are collected and traded as digital antiques.

  • Redirect / brand umbrella: Point it to an existing business you own to enhance authority.

DTV.com

June 8, 1997

Premium domain name.

What Drives the Price.

Several key factors that matter (and would for DTV.com):

  1. Memorability / Acronym Value
    “DTV” is already a known acronym (“Digital TV”) so it’s more valuable than random letters.

  2. Brandability
    It’s short, clean, easy to pronounce, type, remember.

  3. History / Age
    Registered since 1997 helps with credibility, possibly some SEO age, maybe backlinks, which can add value.

  4. Market & Demand
    How many companies want “DTV” as a brand/acronym? Probably many in media/tech. Also international interest (non-English speaking companies sometimes value short acronyms highly).

  5. Comparable Letter Quality
    Letters used matters: vowels vs consonants, certain letters are more “premium” in different markets, etc.

  6. Negotiation & Use Case
    If you have a buyer who can make good use of it (e.g. a streaming company, a TV brand, etc.), they may pay more.


Estimated Value Range for DTV.com

Based on the above and comparing to recent similar domain sales:

  • Low end (if buyer interest is modest, or letters seen as “just generic / less premium”): USD $100,000 – $300,000

  • Mid range (good demand, good pitch / use case): USD $300,000 – $800,000

  • High end (strong brand interest, international buyer, strategic use, maybe tied to a big company): USD $800,000 – $2,000,000+

It would be unusual for a 3-letter .com of decent acronym recognition like DTV to sell for very low amounts.