The .media domain is an open generic top-level domain (gTLD) for media companies, agencies, publishers and creators. It is a broad, professional extension covering everything from production studios to digital-content brands.
.media at a glance
Source: IANA root zone database & registry data · methodology
Where to register a .media domain
Prices are indicative and set by each registrar; renewal rates may differ from first-year promotions. Links may be sponsored. tldlist.us is an independent reference and not a registrar.
What does .media mean?
The .media extension is a generic top-level domain for the broad world of content and communication. Launched in 2014 within the Identity Digital portfolio, it covers publishers, production houses, advertising and PR agencies, broadcasters, podcasters and digital creators — anyone whose business is making or distributing media. A .media address reads as professional and on-topic for a creative or publishing brand.
Its appeal is the clean fit between word and industry. studio.media, brandname.media, social.media — the extension states the sector without a long, hyphenated .com. For agencies and content companies competing for attention, that clarity is part of the pitch.
Who uses .media?
.media is used by digital and creative agencies, video and photography studios, publishers and magazines, podcast networks, marketing and PR firms, and personal creators building a media brand. It scales from a one-person production label to a multi-brand agency group. A name like north.media or pixel.media works equally well on a business card and a credits screen.
For a pure news outlet the more specific .news may be sharper, and a portfolio site might prefer .photography or .studio. But as an umbrella term for the whole content industry, .media is one of the most versatile professional extensions available.
.media registration rules and requirements
.media is a fully open gTLD: anyone, anywhere can register an available name with no documentation, licence or local presence. Registration is first-come, first-served through any accredited registrar under standard ICANN rules. Many strong names remain available, though premium one-word combinations can carry higher pricing.
How much does .media cost?
A .media domain typically runs about $25 per year at mainstream registrars, though rates vary by registrar and any introductory promotion. Always confirm the renewal price — not just the first-year offer — before you register.
| Registrar | Typical .media price (per year) |
|---|---|
| Identity Digital accredited registrars | ~$25–35/yr |
| Namecheap | ~$25/yr |
| Porkbun | ~$28/yr |
.media pros and cons
Pros
- Broad, professional fit for the entire content industry.
- Cleaner than a long, hyphenated .com for agencies and studios.
- Open to anyone with no restrictions or paperwork.
- Scales from a solo creator to a multi-brand agency group.
Cons
- Less specific than .news or .tv for niche use cases.
- Premium one-word names can be expensive.
- Pricier than budget generics like .online.
- Lower default familiarity than .com among general audiences.
Example .media websites
- Creative agencies adopt names like north.media as a clean professional brand.
- Studios and production houses use pixel.media or studio.media.
- Podcast networks and publishers brand umbrella sites on name.media.