Home Domain Sales Online.Jobs Leads Tuesday’s Domain Sales at $65K

Online.Jobs Leads Tuesday’s Domain Sales at $65K

Online.Jobs led Tuesday’s aftermarket charts with a $65,000 sale via DomainAgents, anchoring a busy day that also saw strong .co, .info, and .ai trades across GoDaddy, Namecheap, Spaceship, and Atom.

Online.Jobs Leads Tuesday’s Domain Sales at $65K

Online.Jobs topped yesterday’s domain marketplace action with a $65,000 sale at DomainAgents, highlighting continued strength in job-related domain names as the employment sector remains a hot ticket for domain investors.

The .jobs extension caught fire with the premium sale, while GoDaddy’s marketplace dominated the day’s transaction volume with 21 of the 25 reported sales. Gyrogear.co followed at $25,500, and etle-korlantas.info moved for $11,306. The remainder of the top tier saw sojourner.com ($10,750), touristtube.com ($7,301), and bellavitabistroict.com ($6,086) changing hands—all through GoDaddy’s platform, which clearly owned Tuesday’s action.

What makes the Online.Jobs sale particularly interesting is the premium attached to the .jobs TLD in an era where .com still rules the roost. Someone clearly sees value in the vertical-specific branding, especially as remote work and job boards continue their post-pandemic expansion. The $65K price tag suggests this isn’t just a flip—it’s likely headed for development as a legitimate employment platform.

Mid-range sales showed consistent activity across varied niches. Taisho-bistro.com sold for $5,102, laserpegs.com went for $4,950, and teleoperator.ai fetched $4,500 at Spaceship.com—one of the few non-GoDaddy venues in yesterday’s sales report. The AI extension continues proving its worth in the automation and technology space, even at moderate price points. Oldcastletheatre.org rounded out the sub-$5K tier at $4,138, showing that even niche cultural organizations are willing to invest in premium naming.

Domain Price Date Venue
online.jobs$65,0002025-11-26DomainAgents
gyrogear.co$25,5002025-11-26GoDaddy
etle-korlantas.info$11,3062025-11-26GoDaddy
sojourner.com$10,7502025-11-26GoDaddy
touristtube.com$7,3012025-11-26GoDaddy
bellavitabistroict.com$6,0862025-11-26GoDaddy
taisho-bistro.com$5,1022025-11-26GoDaddy
laserpegs.com$4,9502025-11-26GoDaddy
teleoperator.ai$4,5002025-11-26Spaceship.com
oldcastletheatre.org$4,1382025-11-26GoDaddy
singulardtv.com$3,2502025-11-26GoDaddy
interceptive.com$3,0882025-11-26GoDaddy
ghousedc.com$3,0652025-11-26GoDaddy
kovlerdiabetescenter.org$3,0502025-11-26GoDaddy
crystalexpress.com$2,9992025-11-26Atom.com
2q2.com$2,7002025-11-26GoDaddy
arkosebrewery.com$2,6802025-11-26GoDaddy
flaminggrillcafe.com$2,6502025-11-26GoDaddy
hotelpalmclub.com$2,6502025-11-26GoDaddy
bermudagolf.co$2,6002025-11-26GoDaddy
loaded-spoon.com$2,5502025-11-26GoDaddy
companionplanting.net$2,4252025-11-26Namecheap
bodyscreen.com$2,4002025-11-26Dynadot
gogenie.com$2,4002025-11-26GoDaddy
thecornerpubfl.com$2,3112025-11-26GoDaddy

Lower-Tier Activity Shows Market Depth

The $2,000-$3,000 range demonstrated healthy buying interest across multiple platforms. Singulardtv.com ($3,250), interceptive.com ($3,088), and ghousedc.com ($3,065) led this bracket, while crystalexpress.com moved through Atom.com for $2,999. The sub-$3K action included 2q2.com at $2,700—short alphanumerics still have their fans—along with arkosebrewery.com ($2,680) and a trio of hospitality names: flaminggrillcafe.com and hotelpalmclub.com both at $2,650, plus bermudagolf.co at $2,600.

Creative food-related domains continued the pattern with loaded-spoon.com ($2,550), companionplanting.net ($2,425) through Namecheap, and bodyscreen.com ($2,400) via Dynadot. Gogenie.com matched that $2,400 figure at GoDaddy, while thecornerpubfl.com closed out the visible sales at $2,311. The restaurant and hospitality sector’s consistent presence—seven food and venue names in total—suggests local businesses are finally waking up to the reality that a memorable domain beats a Facebook page every single time. Tuesday’s sales might not have broken records, but the diversity of buyers and price points shows the domain aftermarket is alive and kicking.

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