Major shift coming to .uk namespace.
Nominet has approved a controversial program to offer second level .uk domain names, but has drastically changed the program from the first draft.
Under the approved plan, second level .uk domain names (e.g. example.uk) will be available for registration at a wholesale price of £3.50 for single year registrations and £2.50 for multi-year registrations.
Owners of existing third level .co.uk domain names will get first rights to the matching second level .uk domain names. Nominet will reserve the equivalent second level domain name for five years. The .co.uk domain owner can claim the matching second level domain name at any time during this period. The right is with the domain name, not the current registrant, so the right is transferable if a domain name changes hands.
To prevent gaming, this only applies to .co.uk domain names that were registered as of 11:59 pm on October 28, 2013.
Registrants of .org.uk and other third level domain names will not get secondary rights to the .uk domain name if the .co.uk registrant doesn’t opt to register the domain name. However, if no matching .co.uk was registered as of October 28, then the first right goes to the .org.uk owner.
93% of third level .uk domain names are .co.uk domain names, according to Nominet. In only 4% of cases is a third level domain registered under more than one second level .uk domain name.
The original second level proposal by Nominet didn’t give priority to current third level .uk nameholders, and also proposed a wholesale price of £20 per year.
Although I suspect many .co.uk owners will opt to register the shorter .uk domain names, it will be interesting to see what they do with them. Changing to the second level domain will be like moving your site to an entirely different domain name in the eyes of Google. That’s not easy and has search engine repercussions. Perhaps Google will design a system to make it easier for customers to make the transition. Otherwise, .co.uk owners might want to just forward the shorter domain to their existing .co.uk domain.
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Kassey says
“93% of third level .uk domain names are .co.uk domain names”
So shifting the names to 2nd level is the right decision. New Zealand is planning the same too, by shifting from .co.nz to .nz only. So simplicity is the trend.
Then, I don’t understand why some very smart people have decided to launch .co.com third-level domain registry which go against this trend.
Acro says
“Changing to the second level domain will be like moving your site to an entirely different domain name in the eyes of Google. That’s not easy and has search engine repercussions.”
Google already has a well-defined set of guidelines related to a permanent transition to a new design. It’s not rocket science. https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/83106?hl=en
The new change from .co.uk to .uk won’t please speculators. Also, I foresee that CentralNIC’s .uk.com allocations will be affected.
Andrew Allemann says
It’s not rocket science, but there are pretty big hiccups:
https://domainnamewire.com/2013/05/09/homeadvisor-domain-change/
Acro says
Meant to say, “transition to a new domain,” my mistake.
Bob says
I own http://www.bankingadviser.co.uk and I just bought http://www.bankingadviser.uk
Do you think it is useful to buy a domain .uk when you already own the same domain with .co.uk since nobody could buy it and use it anyways ?
Thank’s