.org
Introduced | January 1, 1985 |
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TLD type | Generic top-level domain |
Status | Active |
Registry | Public Interest Registry (technical service by Afilias) |
Sponsor | Not technically sponsored, but PIR is connected with the Internet Society |
Intended use | Miscellaneous organizations not fitting in other categories (generally noncommercial) |
Actual use | Nonprofits; personal sites; open-source projects; some government websites; mostly used by non-commercial entities |
Registration restrictions | None |
Structure | Registrations at second level permitted |
Documents | RFC 920; RFC 1591; ICANN registry agreement |
Dispute policies | UDRP |
DNSSEC | Yes |
Registry website | pir |
The domain name .org is a generic top-level domain (gTLD) of the Domain Name System (DNS) used on the Internet. The name is truncated from 'organization'. It was one of the original domains established in 1985, and has been operated by the Public Interest Registry since 2003. The domain was originally "intended as the miscellaneous TLD for organizations that didn't fit anywhere else".[1] It is commonly used by non-profit organizations, open-source projects, and communities, but is an open domain that can be used by anyone. The number of registered domains in .org has increased from fewer than one million in the 1990s, to ten million in 2012, and held steady between ten and eleven million since then.
- ^ Postel, J. (March 1994), RFC 1591: Domain Name System Structure and Delegation, doi:10.17487/RFC1591, retrieved January 28, 2021
Contract period | 1 Year |
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Registration | 13.00 € |
Transfer | 13.00 € |
Renew | 13.00 € |
Owner change | Free |
WHOIS privacy | Not available |
Transfer lock | Available |