How to use a domain name generator

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Have you ever sat in front of a blank search bar, trying to invent the perfect web address out of thin air? A domain name generator takes that pressure off. You type in a few words that describe your brand, and the tool gives you hundreds of available domain name ideas in seconds. The mechanics are simple. But using one well takes more thought than you might expect.

This chapter covers how generators work, which types exist, how to get the best results, and what to do once you find a name you like. If you are still at the stage of picking a brand name itself, the guide on how to come up with a brand name covers that from the ground up.

What is a domain name generator?

A domain name generator is an online tool that suggests available web addresses based on words you enter. You type in one to three keywords that describe your brand, and the tool combines, rearranges, and modifies those words to produce a list of names you can register right away.

Some generators check availability in real time. Others focus on creativity first and let you check availability as a second step. Either way, you start with a handful of words and leave with a shortlist of options you would not have thought of on your own.

How does a domain name generator work?

A generator takes your input words and runs them through a set of rules. It might add prefixes and suffixes, swap word order, combine two words into one, or suggest alternative extensions like .co, .io, or .store alongside .com.

More advanced tools use AI. Instead of rearranging your keywords, they analyze meaning, pull in synonyms, and generate completely new words that feel related to your input. These AI-powered generators produce more creative results, though some of those invented words may be harder to spell or remember.

What types of generators are out there?

Not all domain name generators work the same way. The type you choose shapes the kind of names you get back.

Keyword-based generators

You enter one or two words, and the tool combines them with popular terms, prefixes, and suffixes. If you type "coffee" and "shop," you might get freshcoffeeshop.com or coffeeshophub.com. These tools work well when you want a name that clearly describes what your brand does.

AI-powered generators

AI generators analyze the meaning behind your input and create brandable names that may not contain your original keywords at all. You might enter "fast delivery" and get back something like Zippora or Swiftly. The chapter on branded domains vs keyword domains explains why this kind of name often ages better.

Rhyme and portmanteau generators

Some generators specialize in blending syllables, creating rhymes, or mashing two concepts together. The results are hit or miss, but when they land, you get a name that sticks in someone's head after hearing it once.

Industry-specific generators

A few generators focus on particular industries like food, tech, fitness, or fashion. They use terminology and naming patterns common in that space to produce results that feel native to your market rather than generic.

How do you get the best results from a generator?

The quality of what you get out depends entirely on what you put in.

Start with two or three core words

Enter two or three words that describe the essence of your brand. These could be what you do, how you want people to feel, or the audience you serve. "Modern fitness coaching" will produce better results than "fitness" alone.

Try different combinations

Run several searches with different word pairings. Swap adjectives. Replace a noun with a synonym. Each new combination sends the generator down a different path. Five rounds of varied input will give you more usable ideas than twenty rounds of the same two words.

Filter by extension

If .com is your priority (and for most brands it should be), use the extension filter to hide everything else. If .com is taken for your top picks, expand to .co, .io, or a newer extension that fits your brand.

Do not stop at the first page

Generators show the most obvious names first. The more creative suggestions tend to appear deeper in the results. Scroll past the first batch. Some of the strongest names are on page three or four because they are less predictable.

What should you look for in the results?

A generator can hand you hundreds of names in seconds. Knowing which ones to keep is the skill that matters.

Short and easy to spell

The best domain names are under 15 characters and use words someone could spell after hearing them once. If you have to explain the spelling every time you say your web address out loud, it is too complicated.

Easy to say out loud

Imagine telling the name to a friend over the phone. If it rolls off the tongue and they could type it without asking you to repeat it, that is a strong sign. A name that is easy to say gets shared more often.

.com availability

A .com domain still carries the most credibility and is what visitors type by default. If a name is available as a .com, it has an advantage over the same name on a different extension. If a perfect brandable name is only available as a .co or .io, it can still work depending on your audience.

No trademark conflicts

A name might be available as a domain but already trademarked by another company. Always run a trademark search before you commit. The chapter on what to check before buying a domain covers this step in detail.

What should you ignore in the results?

Generators give you volume. A large percentage of suggestions will not be worth your time. Here is what to skip.

Gibberish names

AI generators sometimes invent words that are technically pronounceable but mean nothing. If the name feels like a random string of syllables, skip it. A domain name should feel like a word, even if it is a made-up one.

Names with hyphens

People forget to type hyphens, they are awkward to say out loud, and they are commonly associated with spammy websites. If the only way to get the .com version of a name is to add a hyphen, move on.

Names with numbers

Numbers cause the same confusion as hyphens. Is it "4" or "four"? Every time someone has to guess, you risk losing them. A clean, letter-only name avoids this entirely.

Awkward word combinations

Sometimes two perfectly fine words create an unintended meaning when combined. Read every name carefully and say it out loud. Check if the letters run together in a way that spells something you did not intend.

What should you do after finding a name?

Before you register anything, run through these checks.

Check for trademarks

Search the trademark database in your country to confirm the name is not already registered. A trademark holder can force you to give up the domain even if it was available for registration.

Check social media availability

Your domain and your social handles should match or be as close as possible. Search the major platforms to see if your chosen name is available as a username. Consistent naming builds recognition.

Say it out loud

Say the full domain to another person and ask them to spell it back. If they get it right on the first try, you are in good shape. If they guess wrong, keep looking.

Sleep on it

Write down your top three to five names, close the tab, and come back the next day. The names that still feel right after 24 hours are the ones worth buying.

What are the most common mistakes when using a generator?

The biggest mistakes happen when people treat the output as a final answer instead of a starting point.

Using the first name that is available. Availability does not make a name good. Evaluate every name against the criteria above before committing.

Ignoring how the name sounds. A name needs to work as a spoken word too. Every time you say your web address out loud, it needs to land on the first try.

Picking a name that is too descriptive. A domain like "bestaffordableyogaclasses.com" describes what you do but is impossible to remember. Shorter, more abstract names build stronger brands. The guide on how to choose a domain name goes deeper on finding that balance.

Skipping the trademark check. A name can be available as a domain and still be trademarked. One cease-and-desist letter is all it takes to lose your name and every link that pointed to your site.

Overthinking it. Spending weeks searching is a form of procrastination. Pick a strong name and start building.

How does WEMASY help with your domain?

Every paid WEMASY plan includes a free custom domain, SSL, hosting, and the option to set up email on your domain. You connect your name during setup, and your site launches on a clean, branded address from day one. WEMASY also includes built-in analytics and SEO tools to track how your new domain performs. See what each plan includes on the pricing page.

The next chapter covers how to use your domain across all channels, from your website to email to social media and print materials.

Frequently asked questions

Can a domain name generator find names that are already trademarked?

How many keywords should you enter into a generator?

Should you always pick a .com domain from the generator results?

Are AI-powered generators better than keyword-based ones?

Is it worth buying a premium domain from a generator's suggestions?