Boutique and shop domain generator.
Retail has three TLDs that read clearly out of the box — .shop, .store, and .boutique — plus your ccTLD and the standard gTLDs. We generate brand names and check each one across the relevant zones so you can see what's available, where parked-domain signals appear, and what the actual primary domain should be before you order labels.
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 retail brand.
Six patterns that show up across boutiques and online shops.
norra.shop
Short coined brand on .shop. The TLD reads modern-indie and prints cleanly on a label. .com is usually gone for short names of this shape; .shop is the working primary.
westlinegoods.com + .store
Two-word brand still has .com open. .store as a secondary makes sense when the online catalogue is the main checkout — keeps the marketing domain on .com and the buy-now domain on .store.
crane.shop
One-word descriptive noun + .shop. The TLD-as-context: a passer-by on the URL knows it sells things. Works best for general-merchandise shops where the brand name doesn't already signal a category.
edith.store
Given-name + .store. The name-as-brand pattern for vintage and curated shops, where .com is overwhelmingly held by individuals and unrelated businesses. .store reads commercial without losing the personal-name warmth.
cardamomwool.com
Concept-duo, no spaces. Two-noun brand-name compounds usually leave .com open simply because few squatters automate them. When the .com is free, that's almost always your primary.
halt.co
Short brand using .co as a brand-friendly alternative when the .com is taken or brokered. .co reads close enough to .com for many audiences and avoids the “generic gTLD” trust gap.
Pitfalls
Three places retail-domain decisions usually break.
.shop, .store, and .boutique aren't interchangeable.
.shop reads modern, indie, slightly e-commerce-coded. .store reads more commercial, broader. .boutique reads niche, but the word is long and clunky in the URL — practically only works for actually-boutique brands. Picking the wrong one isn't a disaster; picking deliberately makes the brand 5–10% clearer.
The QR-code test for a long URL.
Hangtags often print a QR code with the URL underneath. A long URL — cardamomwool.boutique — is fine as a QR target, but the printed-underneath version is unreadable. If hangtags are in the brand plan, optimise URL length, not just availability.
IG-shops often don't need a domain at all.
Instagram-only shops can run a brand to 50k followers with no website beyond a Linktree. If that's the model, paying for a brokered .com is just renting status. The handle is the storefront; the domain is the future-option to expand off-platform.
Try a brief.
One or two sentences about the shop. You'll see 3–5 candidates with domain status across the relevant zones in under a minute.
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