Education domain name generator.
Education has a real thematic TLD selection — .academy, .school, .education, .courses, .coach, .training — plus your ccTLD and the standard gTLDs. .edu is restricted to US-accredited institutions only, so it's not in the play. We generate brand names and check each across the relevant open zones in one pass.
Try it free
Describe the project — get first names with status.
Domain and Telegram status checked free, right here. The full Telegram report checks 12–15 more domain options, Instagram and language risks.
Pairings
Which TLD pairs with which kind of education brand.
Six patterns across tutoring, academies, kids' schools, and online courses.
northline.academy
Geographic-feel + thematic. .academy works for adult professional programmes and language schools — reads accredited without overclaiming. Long URL, but private-school marketing usually accepts that trade-off for the clarity.
tessera.education
One-word Latin-feel brand + .education. The TLD is long but it's the only word that reads truly category-defining; works for foundations, multi-format institutions, and anyone who outgrows “academy” or “school”.
pivot.coach
Verb-noun brand + the .coach TLD. .coach is narrow but precise — for executive coaching, career coaching, and 1-on-1 practices it's exactly the right register. Wrong for kids; correct for adults.
haltontutors.com
Surname + service. Two-word brand-names usually have .com open. For tutoring practices, .com outperforms thematic TLDs — parents tend to trust the familiar domain more than the niche one for individual-tutor work.
curiolab.com + .courses
Product brand for online courses. Marketing-and-content domain on .com, course-catalogue subdomain or the matching .courses for the actual enrolment flow. Splits commerce and content cleanly.
pencilandloop.uz / .kz / .ge
ccTLD as primary. For a kids' school operating in one city or country, the ccTLD beats any thematic for parent trust. Local authority dashboards and government school registries also tend to list the ccTLD version, not .academy.
Pitfalls
Three places education-domain decisions usually break.
.edu isn't available outside US accreditation.
.edu is restricted to US-accredited post-secondary institutions registered with the relevant regulator. You can't buy it for a tutoring practice, a CIS academy, or an online course — and applications from elsewhere get rejected. Stop optimising for it; .academy and .education are the open analogues.
Parents and adult learners decode TLDs differently.
For kids' schools, parents in conservative markets read .com and the local ccTLD as “real” and almost anything else as either commercial or not-quite-school. For adult learners and corporate coaching, .coach, .training, and .academy read modern and credible. The audience changes which TLD reads as “a real school”.
Some TLDs are licensed in some jurisdictions.
The TLD is one thing; the right to call your business an “Academy”, “School”, or “University” in your name is another, and varies by country. Even if somename.school is technically available, you may not be allowed to brand the business as a “school” without education-ministry registration. Domain decision and naming decision check different boxes.
Try a brief.
One or two sentences about the programme and the audience. You'll see 3–5 candidates with domain status across the relevant zones in under a minute.
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