.ai Domains for Startups: What's Still Affordable in 2026

TLD StrategyDomain Pricing
.ai Domains for Startups: What's Still Affordable in 2026

What's In This Article

The .ai extension went from a niche country code to the most sought-after TLD in tech — and prices followed. This guide explains why .ai resale prices exploded, how to tell a fairly-priced .ai domain from a speculative one, where to find quality .ai names under $500, the renewal cost trap most buyers miss, and how to decide between a brandable and a keyword .ai. Every .ai domain featured here is a flat $199.

In 2018, you could register almost any .ai domain you wanted for the cost of a nice dinner. By 2026, the good ones cost more than a used car.

I have watched a lot of TLDs come and go, but the .ai story is unlike anything since the original .com land rush. A country-code domain assigned to a small Caribbean territory became the single most contested extension in technology — and the prices tell the story. If you are a founder who wants a .ai without paying a speculator's markup, this guide is your map: why prices exploded, how to spot a fair deal, where the affordable names still hide, and the renewal cost almost nobody mentions until the invoice arrives.

Every .ai domain featured here is available for a flat $199.


How .ai Went From Obscure to Essential

.ai is the country-code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Anguilla, a British Overseas Territory in the Caribbean with a population smaller than a mid-size college. For most of its existence, .ai was a quiet ccTLD with negligible demand.

Then artificial intelligence became the defining technology story of the decade. Suddenly, the two letters that happened to spell "AI" were the most valuable real estate in the domain world. Every model lab, AI wrapper, copilot, agent framework, and "AI-powered" feature launch wanted a matching .ai address. Demand went vertical.

The economics worked out beautifully for Anguilla — .ai registrations have become a material contributor to the territory's government revenue — and brutally for founders. According to industry trackers like OpenProvider's domain trend reports, .ai has been among the fastest-growing extensions year over year, and aftermarket data shows average .ai resale prices running into the thousands, with premium one-word names commanding five and six figures.

The key insight: the registry price never exploded — the scarcity premium did. Registering an available .ai directly is still reasonable. It's the desirable, already-taken names that cost a fortune on the aftermarket. Understanding that distinction is how you avoid overpaying.


Why .ai Resale Prices Spiked So Hard

Three forces compounded to create the .ai premium:

  1. Inelastic demand. When a category-defining startup decides it needs a .ai, it will pay almost anything. AI companies are frequently well-funded, and a $25,000 domain is a rounding error against a $20M raise. That willingness-to-pay drags the whole market up.

  2. Perceived necessity. Founders came to believe a .ai was table stakes for an AI product — the way .com signals "real company." That belief, accurate or not, manufactured demand far beyond what the supply of short, clean names could absorb.

  3. Speculation. Domain investors recognized the trend early and registered thousands of brandable and keyword .ai names to resell. Much of today's aftermarket inventory is held by speculators pricing for the one funded buyer who must have that exact name.

This is the same dynamic that makes premium .com names expensive, only compressed into a few hot years. We break down the full mechanics of how this inflates prices in flat-rate vs. auction domains and how to get a premium domain for under $500 — both worth reading before you spend a dollar on the aftermarket.


The Renewal Cost Trap Nobody Warns You About

Here is the detail that catches founders off guard: .ai renewals cost far more than .com renewals, and the registry requires a two-year minimum.

A .com renews for roughly $10–$15 per year. A .ai typically runs $70–$100 per year, billed on a two-year cycle. Over five years, that's a few hundred dollars in renewals versus a few dozen for a .com.

Cost Factor Typical .com Typical .ai
Registration term 1 year minimum 2 years minimum
Annual renewal ~$10–$15 ~$70–$100
5-year renewal cost ~$50–$75 ~$350–$500
Aftermarket premium (good name) $500–$50,000+ $2,000–$100,000+

None of this should scare you off .ai — the renewal difference is trivial compared to the aftermarket premium you avoid by buying smart. But you should budget for it and include it in your total cost of ownership rather than being surprised at renewal time.


How to Find an Affordable .ai Domain (Under $500)

You have three realistic routes to a .ai without a five-figure check:

1. Register an available name directly

If the exact .ai you want is unregistered, a registrar will sell it to you at registry rates (remember the two-year minimum). The catch: nearly every short, brandable, or obvious keyword name is already taken. You'll be working with longer or more creative constructions.

2. Buy flat-rate from a curated marketplace

This is the fastest path to a vetted name. On 199.domains, every .ai is a flat $199 — already screened for clean history and trademark conflicts, ready for transfer. No bidding, no negotiation, no waiting for a speculator to respond to your offer.

3. Hunt the aftermarket for mispriced listings

Occasionally a .ai is listed below market by an owner who wants out. This is rare for quality names and requires patience, screening, and often negotiation. For most founders, the time cost outweighs the savings — see our decision framework on acquisition channels.

For a broader playbook on landing premium names cheaply across every extension, our under-$500 guide covers the full tactics.


Brandable vs. Keyword .ai Domains

Just like any extension, .ai names split into two strategic camps — and the right pick depends on how your startup will grow.

Brandable .ai — for building a distinctive brand

A coined or abstract name on .ai gives you an ownable, trademark-eligible brand with a tech-forward signal baked in. These are ideal for venture-scale companies that will invest in brand-building.

Keyword .ai — for organic discovery

A descriptive name on .ai telegraphs exactly what you do and earns search-intent advantages — instant category recognition and click-through lift in results. Ideal when organic discovery drives your growth.

The decision mirrors the broader strategic choice we cover in depth in our brandable domains guide and keyword domains guide. The short version: brandable wins on differentiation, keyword wins on discovery.


Curated .ai & Brandable Domains Under the Hype

Here is a sample of .ai and AI-adjacent brandable names available right now for a flat $199 — the same caliber of name that speculators list for thousands:

adoram.ai and lc1.ai are short, coined, phonetically clean brandables — the kind of one-word .ai that routinely sells for thousands on the aftermarket. giftbuddy.ai and aiadmaker.ai are keyword-forward names that tell you what the product does while keeping the .ai signal. Browse the full set of brandable and AI domains or search the marketplace for more .ai names.


When .ai Is the Right Call — and When It Isn't

A .ai is a strong choice when:

  • AI is core to your product. Model labs, AI agents, copilots, ML tooling — the extension reinforces your positioning.
  • AI is adjacent. Automation, data, developer tools where an AI-forward signal helps.
  • The matching .com is unavailable or unaffordable. A clean .ai beats a compromised .com with a hyphen or misspelling.

A .ai is the wrong call when:

  • Your product has nothing to do with AI. The expectation mismatch can confuse customers. A brandable .com or .io serves you better.
  • You're building for a non-technical consumer audience that still defaults to typing .com.
  • You can't budget for the higher renewals over the life of the brand.

For the deeper logic on how an extension shapes trust and recall, see our breakdown of SaaS naming psychology and the case for owning a single clean word.


The Bottom Line on .ai in 2026

The .ai gold rush priced a lot of founders out of the names they wanted — but only on the speculative aftermarket. The extension itself remains accessible, the renewal premium is real but manageable, and quality brandable and keyword .ai names are still available without a five-figure check if you know where to look.

The smartest move in 2026 isn't to overpay a speculator or to settle for an awkward name. It's to buy a vetted, trademark-screened .ai at a flat price, budget for the renewals, and put the thousands you saved into building the actual product. Start with the curated .ai and brandable catalog — every name a flat $199, ready to transfer within 72 hours.

Find your .ai domain for a flat $199

Skip the five-figure aftermarket. Browse curated, trademark-screened .ai and brandable domains — every one a flat $199, ready for instant registrar transfer.

Browse Brandable & .ai Domains

Article FAQs

Why are .ai domains so expensive?

Two forces collided: surging demand and constrained supply. Every AI startup, model lab, and AI feature launch since 2023 has wanted a matching .ai domain, while the .ai registry (operated for Anguilla) released names at standard rates. The result is a hot aftermarket where short, brandable, and keyword .ai names resell for thousands — average .ai resale prices have run several thousand dollars, with premium one-word names reaching five and six figures. The registration price was never the issue; the scarcity premium on desirable names is.

Are .ai domain renewals more expensive than .com?

Yes. The .ai registry requires a two-year minimum registration and renewal, and the per-year cost is meaningfully higher than .com — typically in the range of $70–$100 per year versus roughly $10–$15 for a .com. Over a multi-year horizon this adds up, so factor renewal into your total cost of ownership, not just the acquisition price. The upside: that cost is trivial next to a five-figure aftermarket purchase, and flat-rate acquisition keeps your upfront spend low.

Is a .ai domain credible for a startup that isn't an AI company?

Increasingly, yes — but with nuance. .ai has broadened from 'artificial intelligence' into a general tech-forward signal, and plenty of non-AI startups use it. That said, if your product has nothing to do with AI or automation, a .ai can create a mild expectation mismatch. Use .ai when AI is core or adjacent to what you do; if it isn't, a clean .com, .io, or .co will usually serve your brand better long-term.

How do I find an affordable .ai domain under $500?

Three routes: register a brandable or keyword .ai directly through a registrar if the exact name is still available; buy from a flat-rate curated marketplace like 199.domains where every .ai is a flat $199; or hunt the aftermarket for under-priced listings (rare for quality names). The flat-rate route is the most reliable for getting a vetted, trademark-screened name quickly without negotiation or bidding.

Should I choose a brandable or keyword .ai domain?

Choose a brandable .ai (like adoram.ai or lc1.ai) if you're building a venture-scale brand you'll trademark and want a distinctive, ownable name. Choose a keyword .ai (like giftbuddy.ai) if organic search discovery and instant category clarity matter more. Both work on .ai; the decision mirrors the broader brandable-vs-keyword choice and depends on whether your growth comes from brand-building or search.