Drop & Flip
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A daily curated digest of the best domain plays: expired drops worth grabbing, recent flip sales with multiples, auction watchlists and the sharpest threads from across the domaining world.
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Brandable vs keyword: two different games
We keep these in separate mental buckets:

Keyword/exact-match: buyer is searching for the term, demand is measurable, sale is faster but ceiling is capped.
Brandable (invented words): no search demand to lean on, slower sit, but a funded startup can pay a multiple of cost.
Marketplace fit: keyword names move on Afternic; brandables sit better on Brandbucket/Squadhelp with their curation.

📌 Pick of the day: don't list a made-up brandable on Afternic and expect traffic to sell it. Venue mismatch kills more flips than price.

Why it matters: the same name priced right on the wrong platform is invisible.
Closing the deal without getting burned

The sale isn't done at "yes." Mechanics threads every flipper should bookmark:

Use escrow, always
Escrow.com or marketplace-native (Dan/Afternic). Never "send PayPal F&F first"
— Buyer pays in, you push the domain, escrow releases. Boring = safe

Push vs. transfer
— Same registrar: instant account push, no 60-day lock drama
— Cross-registrar: auth code + transfer, slower, mind the post-transfer lock

The 60-day trap
— A name you just acquired can't transfer out for 60 days — disclose if selling fast

📌 Pick of the day: keep buyer and yourself on the same registrar when possible — the push is instant and dispute-proof.
FAQ: How do I avoid buying a trademarked name by accident?
A UDRP complaint can wipe your name and your reputation. Quick screen:

Before you bid
— Search the exact term on the USPTO TESS database (free) and the EUIPO register.
— Plug it into a general web search — if a real company actively uses it, walk away.

Red flags
— Coined brand words, misspellings of big brands, or 'brand + keyword' combos (nikeshoes-style). All UDRP magnets.

📌 Pick of the day: generic dictionary words and descriptive phrases are the safest flips. If a name only has value because it echoes a known brand, that value isn't yours to sell.

(Source: USPTO TESS and WIPO's UDRP case index, both free to search.)


Для любителей tool comparisons — @stack_compare
How to actually read a drop list

Most people scroll the daily expired feed and quit at page two. A tighter way to triage:

Sort first
— By referring domains, not by "backlinks" (the second number is mostly spam)
— By Wayback age: a name registered in 2009 with a 14-year gap is a redirect risk, not a gem

Kill fast
— Anything with a Chinese/PBN footprint in the anchor cloud
— Hyphens and numbers unless the keyword is genuinely premium

Keep
— Clean .com, one dictionary word or tight two-word brandable, real archived content

The skill isn't finding good names — it's discarding 95% in ten minutes so you can study the 5%.

📌 Pick of the day: filter every list by "first seen in Wayback before 2015" and read only those.
Backorder stacking, explained plainly

A name you want is pending delete. Do you place one backorder or several? Roundup of how the pros split it:

The case for stacking
— Each registrar has different catch infrastructure; more orders = more shots at the drop
— DropCatch, SnapNames and Dynadot Backorder catch different names well on different days

The catch (literally)
— If two of your own backorders catch, you don't pay twice — but if it goes to auction, you're now bidding against nobody and everyone
— Stacking only helps on contested names; for a quiet drop, one order is plenty

📌 Pick of the day: stack only when a name shows 3+ backorders already placed — otherwise you're paying for redundancy nobody needed.
Pricing an end-user sale without guessing

The hardest part of flipping isn't buying — it's naming a number that doesn't scare off or underprice. Threads worth reading on comps:

Where to anchor
— NameBio sold-comps for the exact keyword, last 24 months only (older data lies)
— Filter by extension: a .com comp doesn't price your .io

Read the buyer, not the name
— A funded startup pays 5 figures for the same string a solo founder won't touch above $800
— Check their LinkedIn headcount and last raise before you reply

Common trap
— Quoting your cost-plus margin instead of the buyer's value. They don't care you paid $12.

📌 Pick of the day: pull 5 NameBio comps before every outbound — it turns "make an offer" into a defendable ask.
One to follow

For website flipping done right, @SellItAlready is the move. Blunt, opinionated takes on website flipping: when to hold, when to dump, why your…
GoDaddy auctions: the timing nobody mentions

Expired auctions there have rhythms. What seasoned bidders watch:

The close window
— Auctions extend if a bid lands in the final minutes — sniping the literal last second rarely works
— Set your max and walk away; emotional re-bids are where margin dies

The Tuesday/Wednesday lull
— Fewer end-users browsing midweek; some of the cleaner names close softer

Closeouts
— Names that failed auction drop to fixed price (~$11-100). Boring, but the calmest hunting ground

📌 Pick of the day: build a watchlist of 40, bid on 3. Watching teaches you real close prices better than any guide.
The 4-minute Wayback check before you buy

An expired name's history can be an asset or a landmine. Quick due-diligence pass:

Open the archive
— Was it a real business, a blog, or a casino/pharma/PBN site? The last one poisons resale
— Look for a content gap then a sudden language switch — classic dropped-and-abused signal

Cross-check anchors
— Free backlink tools: if anchor text is all "buy cheap" in three languages, walk

Trademark sweep
— USPTO + a plain Google. A name that was someone's brand can mean a UDRP headache, not a flip

📌 Pick of the day: a clean 10-year content history beats a big backlink number every single time.
Where your sale price actually leaks

A $2,000 sale isn't $2,000 in your pocket. Grouped breakdown of where marketplaces take a cut:

Commission tiers
— Afternic / Sedo: ~15-20% standard
— Dan (now part of GoDaddy): historically friendlier on fees
— Direct outbound: 0%, but you handle escrow yourself

Escrow
Escrow.com fee on top; decide who pays it in the deal terms upfront

The silent one
— Currency conversion + payout fees on international buyers

List everywhere for reach, but for a warm end-user lead, going direct can be the difference between a margin and a wash.

📌 Pick of the day: always model net-after-fees, not sticker price, before accepting an offer.
Outbound that doesn't get marked spam

Cold-emailing end-users is half of domaining income and 90% of the rejection. Threads on what works:

Subject line
— Name the domain, not "a business opportunity." "Regarding GreenLoom.com" beats anything salesy

The body
— Two sentences. Who you are, the name is available, here's the link. No paragraph about "synergy"

Price or no price?
— Stating a number filters tire-kickers and speeds the deal; leaving it open invites lowballs
— Most operators now lead with a firm BIN

Volume reality
— 1-3% reply rate is normal. It's a numbers game with a polite tone.

📌 Pick of the day: one domain per email. Pitching a "portfolio" reads as spam instantly.
The two-word .com sweet spot

Single dictionary words are gone or six figures. The workable inventory lives in two-word .coms. What separates flippable from junk:

Green flags
— Both words common, combo reads naturally (PrimeLedger, SwiftHarbor)
— Describes a plausible product or service category
— Passes the radio test: spell it once, heard correctly

Red flags
— Awkward consonant clash at the seam (CashShip)
— One trendy word that dates fast (anything +AI, +Crypto from 2021)

This is the bread-and-butter tier: $1-3k buys, $2-8k sales, repeatable.

📌 Pick of the day: read the name aloud to someone who isn't a domainer. Their face is your appraisal tool.
The annual renewal cull

Every portfolio quietly bleeds on names that'll never sell. A grouped pruning checklist for renewal season:

Drop without guilt
— Held 3+ years, zero inbound, zero appraisable comps
— Trendy strings that aged out
— Anything you can't remember why you bought

Hold
— Real keyword .coms with steady (even if rare) inquiries
— Names where one plausible end-user could pay 50x renewal

The math
— A $10/yr name held "just in case" for 8 years cost $80 to sell for $200. Was it worth the attention?

📌 Pick of the day: if you wouldn't buy it again today at the drop price, don't renew it.
NameBio as a research engine, not a price lookup

Most use it to check one name. The deeper use is pattern-mining. Ways operators read the sold-comps database:

Spot live demand
— Filter by keyword + last 90 days: which verticals are buying right now
— A cluster of "clinic / dental / med" sales tells you where end-user money is moving

Calibrate your eye
— Browse random sub-$2k sales daily; you learn the floor better than any course

Sanity-check trends
— Watch a keyword's average sale price drift over quarters before you stock up on it

📌 Pick of the day: spend 10 minutes a day in NameBio's recent sales — it's the cheapest market education there is.
Expired, pending delete, dropped — the words matter

Newcomers conflate these and miss windows. A clean glossary of the lifecycle:

Expired
— Owner missed renewal; grace + redemption period still lets them reclaim it (often at a fee)

Pending delete
— Past redemption, ~5 days from release; this is when backorders fire

Dropped / available
— Back in the open pool; first hand-reg or the catcher who won it

Why it matters
— You can't hand-reg an "expired" name yet — it's not free. Backorder it, don't refresh-spam the registrar.

📌 Pick of the day: know which stage a name is in before you act — half of beginner frustration is acting at the wrong phase.