The .money domain is an open generic top-level domain (gTLD) for personal finance, payments and money-related tools. Its plain, universal meaning makes it a strong fit for fintech, budgeting and financial-content brands.
.money at a glance
Source: IANA root zone database & registry data · methodology
Where to register a .money 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 .money mean?
The .money extension is a generic top-level domain that names one of the most universal subjects there is. Launched in 2014 within the Identity Digital portfolio, it frames a website as being about finance — earning, saving, spending, sending or managing money. A .money address is direct and unmistakable: visitors know the topic before they read a word of the page.
That clarity is its main asset. send.money, smart.money, crypto.money — the extension completes a financial idea cleanly. For fintech and personal-finance brands fighting for trust and recall, a short, on-topic name can do real marketing work that a long .com cannot.
Who uses .money?
.money is used by fintech startups, payment and remittance services, budgeting and personal-finance apps, money blogs and comparison sites, and crypto and investing projects. It suits both consumer tools (“how to manage your money”) and transactional products (“move money”). A name like simple.money or save.money reads as purpose-built for the category.
Regulated financial institutions often still prefer the familiarity of .com for primary banking sites, and a broader fintech brand might choose .finance. But for content, tools and challenger brands, .money is one of the most descriptive and brandable options, sitting alongside .market in the commerce family.
.money registration rules and requirements
.money 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 useful names remain available, though premium one-word combinations can carry higher pricing. Note that the extension implies finance but does not itself certify any regulatory status.
How much does .money cost?
A .money 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 .money price (per year) |
|---|---|
| Identity Digital accredited registrars | ~$25–35/yr |
| Namecheap | ~$25/yr |
| Porkbun | ~$28/yr |
.money pros and cons
Pros
- Universal, instantly understood subject in any market.
- Descriptive names complete a financial idea cleanly.
- Open to anyone with no restrictions or paperwork.
- Strong fit for fintech, budgeting and money-content brands.
Cons
- Does not certify any regulatory or banking status.
- Regulated banks often still prefer the familiarity of .com.
- Premium one-word names can be expensive.
- Pricier than budget generics like .online or .xyz.
Example .money websites
- Fintech and remittance tools use names like send.money to state their function.
- Personal-finance blogs and apps adopt smart.money or save.money.
- Crypto and investing projects brand themselves on memorable name.money addresses.