Domain Age Tool

Domain Age Checker Tool

Enter a domain name and press Enter to find out how old it is — registration date, expiry, registrar, and more.

Domain Age Checker Chrome Extension

Check domain age right from your browser toolbar. Works on any tab, one click.

Chrome Add to Chrome

This domain age checker lets you find out exactly how old any domain is — for free, instantly, no signup required. Enter a domain and you'll get back the original registration date, creation date, expiry date, and registrar. Whether you're doing SEO research, evaluating a domain purchase, or just curious about when a site first appeared, checking domain age takes one lookup and a few seconds.

How Our Domain Age Checker Works

Domain registration dates are publicly recorded in WHOIS and RDAP databases maintained by registrars and regional internet registries. Our tool queries those records in three steps:

  1. WHOIS / RDAP Lookup: We query the domain's registry to retrieve the raw registration record, which contains the creation date, expiry date, registrar name, and last-updated timestamp.
  2. Date Parsing: The creation timestamp is extracted and normalized — different registries format dates differently, so we handle the variations to give you a consistent result.
  3. Age Calculation: The exact domain age is calculated from the creation date to today, broken down into years, months, and days so you get a precise answer rather than a rough estimate.

Why Check How Old a Domain Is?

There are more reasons to use a domain age tool than you might expect. Here are the most common ones:

SEO and competitive research. When you're analyzing a competitor, their domain's age is a useful data point. Older domains tend to have more accumulated backlinks, indexed content, and crawl history — all of which contribute to their authority in search results. Use this tool to check domain age alongside a backlink audit to understand how much of a head start a competitor actually has, and how long it might realistically take to close the gap.

Buying or investing in domains. Before purchasing an expired or aftermarket domain, age is one of the key signals to check. How old is a domain? When was its domain creation date? Has it had continuous use, or was it parked for years? A 10-year-old domain that's been actively used and linked to carries very different value than one that's been sitting idle. Age alone isn't enough — combine it with a backlink audit — but it's always the first thing to check.

Detecting new or suspicious websites. Phishing sites, scam pages, and spam operations almost always run on freshly registered domains. Checking when was this domain registered is one of the fastest trust signals you can pull. A site claiming to be an established business on a domain created three weeks ago is a red flag worth investigating.

Journalism and source verification. Before citing a website as a source, it's worth knowing how long it's been around. A site publishing authoritative-sounding content on a domain that's six months old warrants more scrutiny than one with a decade of history. Use this tool to find domain age quickly as part of your source-checking workflow.

Competitive analysis and launch timing. Knowing when a competitor's domain was first registered tells you when they likely started building their online presence. If their domain is eight years old and yours is two, you have a concrete picture of the SEO gap you're working against — and a more realistic timeline for catching up.

Does Domain Age Affect SEO?

Google has never publicly confirmed domain age as a direct ranking factor, and there's no checkbox in their algorithm that says "older = better." What is true is that older domains have had more time to accumulate the things that do affect rankings: backlinks from other sites, a crawl history that search engines trust, indexed content across many pages, and topical authority built up over years of publishing.

So the relationship is indirect but real. A domain registered in 2008 that's been consistently used will typically have a much stronger backlink profile than one registered in 2022 — and those backlinks are what move rankings. Age is the enabler, not the signal itself.

The practical takeaway: domain age alone means nothing. A 15-year-old domain with thin content and no backlinks won't outrank a well-optimized two-year-old site. But when you're evaluating a domain for purchase, age combined with a clean backlink profile and no history of spam is a genuinely meaningful signal. That's when knowing the domain creation date — and what the domain was used for at that age — actually matters.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the domain age checker completely free?

Yes, completely free — no signup, no API key required. You can check as many domains as you need without creating an account.

How accurate is the domain age information?

The data comes directly from WHOIS and RDAP records maintained by domain registrars and registries. It's as accurate as those records allow. Some TLDs — particularly country-code domains like .io, .ai, and .co — may redact creation dates due to privacy policies, in which case the tool will return whatever the registry exposes.

What does domain age mean?

Domain age is how long a domain name has been registered, measured from the original creation date in the WHOIS record to today. It reflects the domain's registration history, not necessarily when the website launched — a domain can sit unused for years before a site goes live on it.

Does domain age affect SEO rankings?

Google has never confirmed domain age as a direct ranking signal. However, older domains tend to have accumulated more backlinks, crawl history, and topical authority over time — all of which do influence rankings. Domain age alone means nothing; a 15-year-old domain with thin content won't outrank a well-optimized 2-year-old site. Age is most useful as a signal when evaluating a domain for purchase alongside its backlink profile.

How do I check how old a domain is?

Enter any domain name into the search box above and press Enter. The domain age lookup queries WHOIS and RDAP records, parses the original registration date, and calculates the exact age in years, months, and days — usually in under a second. No technical knowledge needed to check how old a domain is.

What's the difference between domain age and domain expiry date?

Domain age is how long the domain has been registered, measured from the creation date. The expiry date is when the current registration term ends — after which the domain must be renewed or it enters a grace period before becoming available for others to register. Both dates are visible in WHOIS records and both are shown in our results.

This free domain age checker gives you a clean, instant answer without manually parsing WHOIS output. Whether you're using it as a domain age tool for SEO research, domain investing, or security checks — pair it with our hosting checker and WHOIS lookup for a complete picture of any domain.