Service business domain generator.

Services has a wide thematic landscape — .services, .pro, .work, .agency, .consulting — and very uneven trust signal across audiences. A name that works on .com for one client base reads as “not quite real” on .pro for another. We generate names and check each across the most relevant open zones, including your ccTLD where local trust matters most.

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 service business.

Six patterns across trades, agencies, and consulting practices.

mastco.com

Short two-word consulting brand. .com is the right primary for consulting and professional services almost always — the audience is institutional, the trust gradient strongly favours the familiar zone, and the cost of looking “not quite real” on a thematic outweighs any branding gain.

consulting.com

atlas.consulting

Abstract-trust noun + .consulting. Long URL, but reads explicit. Useful when the .com is taken or brokered and the brand voice is positioned as descriptive rather than coined. Reads better for boutique consulting than for management-consulting at scale.

boutique.consulting

pivotplumbing.com

Clear-trade brand + .com. For local trades, .com is the trust-default for older clients in particular — plumbing, electrical, HVAC customers tend to read non-.com as “fly-by-night” regardless of the actual TLD's legitimacy.

trade.com

riverway.services

Geographic-feel + .services. The .services TLD works best for multi-service operators (cleaning, maintenance, facilities) where the category isn't already in the brand name. For single-trade specialists, the matching trade word ahead of .com is usually clearer.

multi-service.services

northgate.agency

Geographic-feel + .agency. Reads natural for design, marketing, and creative agencies — the TLD is well-established in those circles. Wrong register for traditional service businesses; right for digital agencies and studios.

creative agency.agency

boltbeam.uz / .kz / .ge

Concept-duo brand + ccTLD. For trades and local services operating in one country, the ccTLD beats any thematic. Local search-engine results favour it; Google Maps and directory listings tend to source the ccTLD version first.

tradesccTLD

Pitfalls

Three places service-domain decisions usually break.

The trust gradient is real and audience-dependent.

For tech-aware clients, .io, .dev, .agency all read fine. For institutional buyers, regulated industries, and older audiences, anything other than .com or the ccTLD invites a “is this a real company?” second look. Know which audience you sell to before falling in love with the thematic.

Hyphens are domain-correct and brand-wrong.

bolt-beam.com is technically a fine domain, and may be available when boltbeam.com isn't. But hyphens read amateur on a business card and don't survive verbal communication — “our website is bolt-beam-dot-com” loses people. If the hyphenated version is your only option, reconsider the name.

Renewal cost varies meaningfully by TLD.

Standard gTLDs renew at $10–20/year. Some niche thematics (.consulting, .services) renew at $30–60/year. Premium-tier ccTLDs can be more. For a domain you'll hold for 10+ years, that compounds — worth knowing the renewal price, not just the registration price, before locking in.

Try a brief.

One or two sentences about the service and the audience. You'll see 3–5 candidates with domain status across the relevant zones in under a minute.

Open in Telegram

free preview · paid report inside Telegram