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Millions of customers rely on our domains and web hosting to get their ideas online. We know what we do and like to share them with you.
When you register a domain name, you’re not just securing an address for your website, you’re also handing over your personal contact details to a global directory called WHOIS. Unless you take steps to protect it, this information, your full name, address, email, and phone number, becomes instantly visible to anyone online.
Because your security shouldn’t be an upgrade.
Still, many domain registrars still charge extra for what they call “privacy protection”. In a world where data misuse and digital threats are constant risks, this feature shouldn’t be optional. It should be included, always.
Domain privacy protection, often called WHOIS privacy, replaces your publicly visible contact information with anonymized details managed by a third-party privacy service. This keeps your personal data hidden from public view while still meeting registration requirements.
Without it, your personal info gets indexed, scraped, and sometimes sold, leading to spam, unwanted sales calls, phishing attempts, or worse.
The WHOIS database was originally created to help network administrators contact each other in the early days of the internet. Back then, transparency was key. But today, it’s more often exploited by bots, spammers, and malicious actors than used for legitimate purposes.
Unfortunately, many registrars still expose your information by default, unless you pay them not to.
Spammers, marketing agencies, and shady operators monitor WHOIS records for fresh domain registrations. Register a domain without privacy, and you’re almost guaranteed to get unsolicited calls and emails within days.
Freelancers, creators, activists, and even small business owners can become targets. Making your home address and phone number public opens the door to real-world risks, not just digital ones.
Fraudsters can stitch together your public details to impersonate you, access other services, or socially engineer support agents. Privacy protection creates a vital barrier that disrupts those efforts.
If you're preparing a product launch or registering domains for future projects, privacy prevents competitors from snooping on your plans by watching your domain acquisitions.
In one high-profile case, a small business owner who registered a domain without privacy was targeted by scammers impersonating domain renewal agencies, nearly falling victim to a phishing scheme. In another, a creator faced in-person harassment after their home address was scraped from a WHOIS listing.
These aren't outliers, they’re becoming more common as scraping tools become more sophisticated.
Many registrars treat domain privacy as a premium feature, offered at $5 to $15 per domain, per year. While that may sound small, it adds up quickly, especially if you're managing multiple domains.
This pricing model creates an unfortunate trade-off: either pay to protect your privacy or risk exposing your data to harvesting. For something so basic and critical, that shouldn’t be the choice.
Some companies, however, have taken a better approach. Registrars like NameSilo and a few others include domain privacy protection for free, not just in the first year, but permanently.
They’ve recognized that user safety is a right, not a revenue stream.
The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) does limit how much personal data is shown for EU-based individuals, but it doesn’t guarantee full WHOIS privacy, especially for:
GDPR helps, but it doesn’t replace the need for proper privacy protection.
"Privacy protection makes a website look suspicious." Not true. Customers care more about what’s on your site than your WHOIS record. Plus, for sensitive projects or small operations, privacy builds security without hurting credibility.
"It affects domain ownership." Also false. With reputable registrars, privacy protection doesn’t affect your legal ownership, you still retain full control over your domain.
"It complicates domain transfers." Transfers may require temporary disabling of privacy, but most registrars handle that process smoothly. It's not a real roadblock.
Everyone benefits from privacy, but especially:
If you wouldn’t put your phone number on your homepage, you probably don’t want it in WHOIS either.
If privacy matters to you, it shouldn’t be something you add on later, it should be built in from the start. When choosing a domain registrar, look for one that:
Start by checking your current registrar: is your WHOIS privacy enabled? If you’re paying extra for it, consider whether it’s worth switching to a provider that offers it at no cost. Set reminders for domains nearing expiration, transferring them before renewal could help protect your privacy and reduce costs over time.
It’s not just about saving money. It’s about choosing partners who treat your privacy like a basic right, not a paid upgrade.
In a time where online threats are real and relentless, privacy shouldn't be a product you’re pressured into, it should be the default. Domain privacy protection is no longer a nice-to-have. It’s a basic layer of defense against spam, surveillance, and exploitation.
So next time you register a domain, ask yourself: is your registrar charging you to protect your own identity?
Choose the ones who don’t.