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WHOIS lookup

Check a domain's registrar, dates, status and name servers — via modern RDAP.

Queries are proxied through our server and never stored.

How to do a WHOIS lookup

  1. Enter a domain. Type a domain like example.com (no http:// needed).
  2. Run the lookup. We fetch the public RDAP registration record for that domain.
  3. Review the record. See the registrar, key dates, status codes and name servers.

About WHOIS and RDAP

WHOIS is how you find out who registered a domain and when it expires — essential when buying a domain, chasing an expiry, or checking a registrar before a transfer. This tool uses RDAP (Registration Data Access Protocol), the structured, standardized successor to text-based WHOIS, so results are consistent and machine-readable. Personal contact details are typically redacted for privacy, but the registrar, lifecycle dates, EPP status codes and name servers are public. Pair it with a DNS lookup to see where the domain points, or an SSL check for its certificate.

Frequently asked questions

What is a WHOIS lookup?
It shows the public registration record for a domain — the registrar, creation and expiry dates, status codes and name servers. We query it over RDAP, the modern structured replacement for legacy WHOIS.
Why is the registrant name hidden?
Most registrars apply privacy protection (and GDPR redacts personal data), so contact details are usually withheld. Registrar, dates, status and name servers remain public.
Does this work for every domain?
It works for any TLD that publishes RDAP, which is now the majority. A few country-code registries are not yet on RDAP and may return no data.
Is my search private?
Your query is sent to our server, which fetches the public RDAP record and returns it. We do not store searches. Nothing about the lookup is saved.
How do I read the status codes?
Codes like clientTransferProhibited or pendingDelete describe locks and lifecycle states set by the registrar or registry. They are EPP status codes defined by ICANN.