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TLD (Top-Level Domain)

What is a TLD and how do different TLDs affect a tokenized domain?

Publicado el 22 de mayo de 2026Por Equipo Namefi
  • glossary

Idioma original: English

A TLD (Top-Level Domain) is the rightmost part of a domain name — .com, .org, .io, .xyz, .de, .uk, and so on. TLDs are administered by registries operating under ICANN contract (for gTLDs and new gTLDs) or under country-level authority (for ccTLDs like .uk or .de). Each TLD has its own rules around eligibility, pricing, renewal, and what a registrar can do with names under it. Different TLDs also vary in how easily they can be tokenized: some TLDs and registries have moved earlier than others toward supporting on-chain ownership layers, others haven't moved at all. The Choosing a Domain Tokenization Platform post discusses how to evaluate TLD coverage across platforms. Reference: ICANN's list of TLDs.

Palabras clave relacionadas

  • TLD
  • top-level domain
  • gTLD
  • ccTLD
  • new gTLD
  • .com
  • .io
  • .xyz
  • TLD registry

Sobre quienes escriben

Equipo Namefi
Equipo Namefi • Namefi

Namefi es un equipo de desarrolladores y diseñadores apasionados por crear herramientas que simplifican la gestión de nombres de dominio para todos.