Paste and clean
Raw keywords become .com domains, URLs are normalized, duplicates collapse, and the final list stays ready for bulk WHOIS.
Bulk lookup
Clean domains, run bulk WHOIS, compare age, registrar, parking, and export a decision-ready CSV.
Raw keywords become .com domains, URLs are normalized, duplicates collapse, and the final list stays ready for bulk WHOIS.
Review registrar, created date, expiration date, nameservers, registrant fields, and parking signals in one table.
Filter to available or high-priority names, then export a CSV for later review, registration, or acquisition outreach.
Bulk workflow
A bulk WHOIS check is most useful when it stays close to the naming decision. QName keeps the input, status counts, registrar evidence, domain age, and export in one workspace so AI SaaS builders can compare many names without losing the shape of the original idea.
Paste domains from a launch note, competitor sheet, or keyword brainstorm. QName cleans the list before the bulk WHOIS request so repeated rows and loose formatting do not slow the workflow down.
The bulk WHOIS domain checker accepts pasted lists, raw keywords, CSV-style rows, and quick notes from launch research. Short words are normalized into domains, duplicates are removed, and the cleaned list can be reviewed before the query runs. That matters when a founder is moving from model news to product naming: the same phrase may appear in a spreadsheet, a chat thread, and a domain brainstorming note, but the bulk WHOIS result should stay clean.
Bulk WHOIS results include created and expiration dates where the registry provides them. Domain age helps separate a fresh registration from an older name with history before money is spent.
After the bulk WHOIS query finishes, QName separates registered domains, available domains, and records that need manual review. Registered rows show dates, registrar, age, nameservers, registrant fields when available, and parking signals. Available rows remain visible because open suffixes can be the most valuable result of a bulk WHOIS pass. Review rows are not hidden; registry throttling, privacy shields, or incomplete responses should be flagged instead of treated as certain answers.
Click a result to sweep the same prefix across .com, .ai, .io, .app, and other common startup suffixes. A bulk WHOIS list becomes a faster path into focused domain discovery.
Sorting and filtering turn the bulk WHOIS table into a lightweight research surface. Sort by creation date to find older domains, sort by expiration date to spot names that may need follow-up, filter to available domains for registration candidates, or search inside the table when a campaign contains hundreds of AI domain ideas. The CSV export keeps that evidence portable for a founder, broker, or small team reviewing names after the first pass.
Use cases
Bulk WHOIS is not only a larger version of a single lookup. It is a way to preserve context while a naming list is still changing. QName is shaped for the moments when a founder has too many good candidates, not too few.
Use bulk WHOIS before buying domains for a new product category, especially when a model launch creates fresh language around a workflow. A video model may push people toward storyboards, camera prompts, shot planning, or motion controls. An image model may create demand around product photos, character consistency, or style transfer. A music model may create naming space around stems, loops, voice, jingles, or licensing. A bulk WHOIS pass lets you test those related words together, compare the strongest suffixes, and keep only the names with enough evidence to deserve the next step.
Use bulk WHOIS again when comparing competitors, acquisition targets, expired-domain lists, or old project ideas. The table makes it easy to separate a parked domain from an actively used domain, a young registration from an older record, and a clean availability signal from a result that needs a registrar check. That structure helps a solo builder avoid random purchases and helps a small team explain why one name is stronger than another.
The suffix sweep is deliberately attached to the bulk WHOIS table. A row often reveals a better question: if the .com is taken, is the .ai still open, and is the .app worth keeping as a product surface? Instead of starting a new search from scratch, click the result and let QName carry the prefix into a focused suffix check. This keeps bulk WHOIS research practical, fast, and close to the decision.
FAQ
Practical answers for using QName as a bulk WHOIS domain checker, export tool, and domain age research workspace.
QName accepts up to 1000 cleaned domains in a single bulk WHOIS run. Very large raw lists should be split into focused batches so filtering, sorting, and CSV review stay readable.
Bulk WHOIS is strong discovery evidence, but final availability and price should be confirmed at a registrar. Some registries hide details or throttle responses, so QName keeps uncertain rows in review.
Domain age helps compare acquisition risk and credibility. A name registered years ago may have history, backlinks, or prior use, while a fresh registration can signal a newly claimed opportunity.
Yes. The CSV export includes domain, status, dates, age, registrar, parking status, nameservers, registrant, and email fields when those values are returned by the registry data source.