To every domain owner
Register a domain in the zone .wiki
The .wiki domain is designed for websites featuring collective knowledge, reference guides, and information databases. It is ideal for encyclopedias, educational projects, documentation, communities, and platforms where users can create and edit content. Using a .wiki domain immediately signals the site’s format—structured and useful information. This builds trust and makes navigation easier for users.
This domain can be used in both educational and commercial projects, such as a company knowledge base or a help center. .wiki helps create a user-friendly information storage system and attract an audience interested in learning and finding answers. It is a good choice for projects focused on knowledge and the exchange of experience.
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Frequently Asked Questions
This domain is particularly useful for companies and teams: internal knowledge bases, customer support, training materials, and product documentation. Everything makes sense just from the URL itself, without needing explanations in headlines or ads.
What is the .WIKI domain zone?
.WIKI is a thematic domain zone in the new gTLD category. It is not country-specific and is suitable for both small projects and large organizations. The meaning of the word “WIKI” has long been clear to a wide audience: it is a website where knowledge is organized into sections and can be continuously updated.
The zone was created for informational platforms. It is chosen not because it is trendy, but for practical reasons: if a project involves providing valuable instructions or documentation, .WIKI reads naturally and immediately establishes the appropriate format.
Advantages of owning a .WIKI domain
- The first advantage is a clear signal to the user. A person sees .WIKI and expects structure, search, sections, and clear logic. This builds trust and reduces aimless “wandering” around the site in an attempt to find what they need.
- The second advantage is convenience for the product and support. When a service has a separate address for its knowledge base, it’s easier to separate marketing and documentation. Customers experience less confusion, and the support team has a lighter workload.
- The third point is the impact on SEO through user behavior. Search engines don’t give .WIKI domains any special privileges, but they rank pages well that actually answer the user’s question. The .WIKI format is all about that: one topic per page, a clear structure, updates, and internal linking. If the content is done right, the site consistently attracts search traffic.
- The fourth advantage is ease of communication. .WIKI looks good in an email, in an app interface, in an article, or in a tooltip next to the “Help” button. Such an address is easy to explain and hard to confuse.
Why choose a .WIKI domain?
.WIKI is chosen when it’s important to show that this is a source of knowledge. For companies, it’s a way to separate documentation from the main website and build support in a human-friendly way. For educational projects, it offers the opportunity to present materials as a reference guide that people return to. There is also a marketing benefit. If a brand demonstrates transparency and a willingness to explain its product, it builds trust. A .WIKI domain helps convey this idea without saying a word.
What types of projects is the .WIKI domain suitable for?
The .WIKI domain works well for projects where content has a long lifespan and is constantly updated:
- company and service knowledge bases;
- documentation on products, APIs, integrations, and settings;
- internal corporate portals with regulations and instructions;
- educational resources: courses, manuals, guides, and materials for employees;
- niche reference guides: medicine, finance, construction, technology, education;
- encyclopedias, dictionaries, and catalogs of terms and standards;
- communities that collectively curate knowledge and update articles.
How to choose a domain in the .WIKI zone?
It’s best to choose a .WIKI name that immediately explains who owns the knowledge base and what it’s about. Two approaches usually work well.
- The first is brand + .WIKI. This is convenient if the .WIKI domain refers to a specific company or product. For example, if you have a service, the address becomes a clear extension of the main website.
- The second is a thematic word if you’re creating an independent reference guide. It’s important that the word is easy to read, without complex combinations, unnecessary numbers, or hyphens. This is a domain that people will copy, paste into messages, and type manually, so simplicity is more important than “creativity.”
If you plan to grow, it’s best not to limit yourself with a narrow description. Today you provide information on one product, and tomorrow you might add another product line or a new section—the domain needs to accommodate that.
How do you buy a .WIKI domain from us?
We process domains officially and handle registration without any unnecessary intermediate steps. You enter your desired name, check availability, select a term, and pay for the order. After that, the domain is activated and appears in your account. Next, we can help with practical tasks that often follow immediately after purchase: configuring DNS, setting up SSL, setting up email on the domain, creating redirects, or transferring the domain from another registrar so that website availability isn’t affected. If you’re building a knowledge base for a product, we’ll advise you on how to neatly separate the main website from the documentation to ensure a user-friendly experience.
.WIKI Domain Registration Terms
Registration takes place online. The domain owner must provide contact details: standard information for individuals, and company details for organizations. The registration term can be selected from 1 to 10 years.
Once activated, the domain can be used immediately: connect a website, create subdomains for sections, set up email, or host a placeholder page while content is being prepared. Management is accessible via the control panel, where you can modify DNS records and other settings. Secure connections are used for security, and notifications are sent for major changes to prevent accidental actions.
A .WIKI domain is a good choice for those building a clear, structured knowledge base and wanting the website’s format to be evident from the address itself. If it’s important to handle everything officially, set it up securely, and avoid wasting time on unnecessary steps—register your .WIKI domain with us.