How to Choose a Domain Name That Helps You Rank
Your domain name won't make or break your SEO, but a poor choice can quietly work against you. Here's how to pick one that supports both search rankings and brand trust.
Choose a short, memorable domain that includes your brand name and, optionally, one relevant keyword. Prioritise a .com or country-code TLD for your market, avoid hyphens and numbers, and think long-term — your domain is harder to change than your logo.
Does Your Domain Name Actually Affect SEO?
Directly, very little. Google has confirmed that an exact-match domain (EMD) — say, cheapplumberslondon.com — carries minimal ranking advantage today. What your domain does affect is click-through rate, brand recall, and the quality of backlinks you attract. A credible, clean domain earns more trust, and trust signals do influence rankings indirectly.
So treat your domain as a branding decision first and an SEO decision second. The two goals are compatible — you just need to know which levers actually matter.
Keep It Short and Easy to Type
Shorter domains reduce typos, fit neatly in email signatures, and are easier to say aloud. Aim for under 15 characters if possible. If your brand name is longer, consider whether an abbreviation or a single strong word captures what you do.
- Avoid hyphens — they look spammy and users forget them
- Avoid numbers — ambiguous when spoken (is it '4' or 'four'?)
- One word or a tight two-word combination is the sweet spot
- Say it out loud: if you have to spell it, it's too complicated
Choose the Right TLD for Your Market
The top-level domain (the .com, .co.uk, .io part) matters for perceived trust more than for raw rankings. Google treats country-code TLDs like .co.uk or .de as geotargeting signals, which can help you rank in that specific country. For pan-European or global audiences, .com remains the safest default.
- .com — universal trust, best for international reach
- .co.uk / .de / .fr etc. — strong local signal for that market
- .io — accepted in tech circles, but unfamiliar to general consumers
- .agency / .studio / .design — fine for branding, no SEO penalty, but lower consumer trust in some sectors
- Avoid obscure TLDs unless you have a very specific reason
Should You Include a Keyword in Your Domain?
A keyword in your domain can help with click-through rates when the term matches what someone searched for — they see a visual confirmation in the URL. However, exact-match domains stuffed with keywords (bestcheapseoservicesuk.com) look untrustworthy and are harder to build a brand around.
A sensible middle ground is a branded domain that naturally contains one relevant word — think Plumbnote, Basecamp, or Shopify. The keyword isn't forced; it's part of a real name. If you can achieve that, great. If not, a strong brandable name with no keyword will serve you better long-term than a clunky EMD.
Check History Before You Buy
Expired domains sometimes carry penalties or a toxic backlink profile from previous owners. Before you register a domain — especially a previously owned one — run it through a tool like Ahrefs, Semrush, or the Wayback Machine to see its history. A domain that hosted spam or was used for link schemes can drag your new site down from day one.
- Search the domain in Google — if nothing indexes, investigate why
- Check archive.org to see what the site previously contained
- Run a backlink audit for any inherited spam links
- If the history is unclear, walk away and register a fresh name
Protect Your Brand With Variations
Once you've chosen your primary domain, consider registering the most obvious variations — common misspellings, the .com if you chose a ccTLD, and the ccTLD if you chose .com. You don't need to build separate sites; simply redirect them all to your main domain. It costs a few pounds per year and prevents competitors or squatters from claiming adjacent names.
A Quick Decision Checklist
- Under 15 characters and easy to pronounce
- No hyphens, numbers, or double letters
- Matches or closely reflects your brand name
- Appropriate TLD for your target market
- Clean history — no penalties or spam associations
- Key variations registered and redirected
- Available as a social media handle (check Namecheckr)
Run your shortlist through this checklist and you'll eliminate most bad choices quickly. If two options are close, pick the one that sounds more like a brand — because that's what you're building.
Frequently asked questions
- Do exact-match domains still help with SEO?
- Marginally at best. Google has significantly reduced the EMD advantage. An exact-match domain might improve click-through rates slightly, but a strong brand name will outperform it over time.
- Is .com always better than a country-code TLD like .co.uk?
- Not always. If your entire audience is in one country, a ccTLD like .co.uk can act as a geotargeting signal and build local trust. For international audiences, .com is the safer default.
- Can a bad domain name hurt my rankings?
- A keyword-stuffed or hyphenated domain can reduce click-through trust, and a domain with a toxic history can carry ranking penalties. Neither kills a site outright, but both create headwinds you'd rather avoid.
- How long should a domain name be?
- Aim for under 15 characters. Shorter is almost always better — it's easier to type, say, remember, and fit on printed materials.
- What if my ideal domain is taken?
- Try a different TLD appropriate for your market, add a short relevant word (e.g. 'get', 'hq', 'studio'), or consider buying the domain from its current owner. Avoid hyphens as a workaround — they cause more problems than they solve.
Founder of Plumbnote, an online-first studio building websites, social content, brand design, and AI automations for companies across Europe.
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