Every domain name has a lifecycle. It’s born when someone registers it, lives as long as they keep paying for it, and eventually dies if they stop. But between “active” and “available again,” there’s a surprisingly complex sequence of grace periods, holds, and waiting rooms — each with specific timing, costs, and implications.
Understanding this lifecycle isn’t just academic. (The EPP protocol manages these transitions behind the scenes.) If you’re trying to acquire an expiring domain, recover one you forgot to renew, or understand why a domain you want is stuck in limbo, these phases are exactly what you need to know.
The Complete Domain Lifecycle
Registration → Active → Renewal → Expiry
↓
Auto-Renew Grace Period (0-45 days)
↓
Redemption Grace Period (30 days)
↓
Pending Delete (5 days)
↓
Released to Public
Let’s walk through each phase.
Phase 1: Registration
A domain’s life begins when someone registers it through an ICANN-accredited registrar (or a registrar’s reseller). The registration involves:
- Availability check: The registrar queries the registry via EPP
<check>command - Registration request: The registrar sends an EPP
<create>command to the registry - WHOIS/RDAP data: Contact information is recorded (registrant, admin, tech contacts)
- DNS configuration: Nameservers are set (or parked on default registrar nameservers)
- Payment: The registrant pays the registration fee for an initial term
Registration terms are typically 1–10 years. The registry charges the registrar a wholesale fee, and the registrar marks it up for the end user. For .com, Verisign’s wholesale price is $10.26/year (as of 2024); retail prices vary from $8 to $20+ depending on the registrar.
The Add Grace Period
Immediately after registration, most registries offer an Add Grace Period (AGP) — typically 5 days. During this window, the registrar can delete the domain and receive a full refund from the registry.
This exists for legitimate reasons (typos, accidental registrations), but it was historically abused through domain tasting — registrars would register thousands of domains, test them for traffic revenue, and delete the unprofitable ones within the AGP for free. ICANN largely curtailed this in 2009 by imposing fees on excessive AGP deletions.
Phase 2: Active
An active domain is fully functional:
- DNS resolves normally
- The registrant controls nameservers and DNS records
- WHOIS/RDAP shows registration data
- EPP status is typically
ok(orclientTransferProhibitedif locked)
During this phase, the registrant can:
- Modify DNS records and nameservers
- Update contact information
- Transfer the domain to another registrar
- Lock the domain against unauthorized transfers
- Renew the registration
Phase 3: Renewal
Domains can be renewed at any time during their active period — you don’t need to wait until close to expiry. Most registrars support renewal for 1–10 years, up to a maximum total registration period of 10 years from the current date.
Auto-Renewal
Most registrars offer (and default to) auto-renewal. When enabled, the registrar automatically charges the registrant’s payment method and extends the registration before it expires. This is the single most important protection against accidental domain loss.
Auto-renewal failures happen when:
- The credit card on file has expired
- Payment is declined (insufficient funds, fraud detection)
- The registrant’s email bouncing means they never see failure notifications
Manual Renewal
Some registrants prefer manual renewal for cost control or because they want to let certain domains expire. The risk is obvious — forget to renew, and you could lose a valuable domain.
Phase 4: Expiry
When a domain’s registration period ends and it’s not renewed, it enters expiry. What happens next varies by registrar and TLD, but ICANN’s Expired Registration Recovery Policy (ERRP) provides a framework for gTLDs.
Auto-Renew Grace Period (ARGP)
For gTLDs, registries typically offer an Auto-Renew Grace Period of 0–45 days after expiry. During this time:
- The registry auto-renews the domain (billing the registrar)
- The registrar can delete the auto-renewal for a refund if the registrant doesn’t want it
- DNS may still function, or the registrar may redirect it to a parking page
- The registrant can still renew at standard pricing
This is the “oops, I forgot” safety net. Most registrars will attempt to contact the registrant multiple times during this period.
What Happens to the Website?
When a domain expires, most registrars change the nameservers to point to a parking page showing “This domain has expired” along with ads and a link to renew. Some registrars are more aggressive — they’ll monetize the expired domain’s traffic with pay-per-click ads during the grace period.
The domain doesn’t immediately disappear from DNS. Cached records may still work for hours or days depending on TTL values. But authoritative resolution will point to the registrar’s parking servers.
Phase 5: Redemption Grace Period (RGP)
If the domain isn’t renewed during the auto-renew grace period, the registrar deletes it from the registry. The domain then enters the Redemption Grace Period (RGP) — typically 30 days for gTLDs.
During redemption:
- The domain is completely non-functional — no DNS resolution, no website, no email
- The EPP status changes to
redemptionPeriod - The domain cannot be transferred to another registrar
- The original registrant can still recover the domain, but at a significantly higher cost
Redemption recovery typically costs $80–200+ (compared to a standard $10-15 renewal). This fee covers the registry’s <renew> command during redemption, which carries a surcharge. The high cost exists partly as a deterrent against using redemption as a normal registration strategy and partly because the registry has already processed the deletion.
RGP for ccTLDs
Country code TLDs have their own policies. Some don’t offer a redemption period at all — when it’s gone, it’s gone. Others have shorter or longer windows. Always check the specific ccTLD’s policies.
Phase 6: Pending Delete
After the redemption grace period expires, the domain enters Pending Delete status — a 5-day countdown to release.
During pending delete:
- The EPP status is
pendingDelete - The domain cannot be recovered by anyone — not the former registrant, not any registrar
- No DNS functions
- The domain is queued for release back to the general pool
This 5-day buffer exists to ensure all registry systems are synchronized before the name becomes available again. It’s the point of no return.
Phase 7: Release
After the pending delete period, the domain becomes available for new registration. In theory, anyone can register it on a first-come, first-served basis.
In practice, high-value expiring domains rarely make it to general availability.
Domain Drop Catching
Drop catching (also called domain sniping) is the practice of attempting to register a domain the instant it becomes available after pending delete.
How It Works
Drop catchers know exactly when domains will be released (the pending delete period is predictable). They use automated systems to submit registration requests to multiple registrars simultaneously, at the exact millisecond the domain becomes available.
Professional drop-catching services include SnapNames, DropCatch.com, and Pool.com. These services:
- Monitor domains in pending delete
- Queue registration requests across multiple registrar connections
- Fire simultaneous EPP
<create>commands at the release moment - Auction the domain to interested buyers if captured
The Speed Game
Because multiple drop catchers compete for the same domains, success comes down to:
- Connection speed to the registry
- Number of simultaneous requests (each registrar connection can submit one)
- Timing precision — registries release domains at specific times (Verisign releases
.comdomains at approximately 2:00 PM EDT)
Expired Domain Auctions
Many registrars now run their own expired domain auctions. Instead of letting a valuable domain fall through to pending delete, the registrar holds an auction among interested buyers during the grace period. The previous registrant typically gets nothing from these auctions — the proceeds go to the registrar.
This is controversial but legal. The registrar’s terms of service usually grant them the right to auction expired domains.
The Complete Timeline (gTLD Example)
For a .com domain expiring on January 1:
| Date | Phase | Can Recover? | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 1 | Expiry date | Yes | Standard renewal |
| Jan 1–Feb 14 | Auto-Renew Grace (0-45 days) | Yes | Standard renewal |
| Feb 15–Mar 16 | Redemption (30 days) | Yes | $80-200+ |
| Mar 17–Mar 21 | Pending Delete (5 days) | No | — |
| Mar 22 | Released | First to register | Standard registration |
Note: Exact timing varies by registrar and registry. Some registrars have shorter grace periods.
Protecting Your Domains
Given the complexity (and finality) of the expiration process:
- Enable auto-renewal on every domain you care about
- Keep payment methods current — set calendar reminders to update cards before they expire
- Use registrar lock (
clientTransferProhibited) to prevent unauthorized transfers - Monitor expiry dates — even with auto-renewal, verify it actually processed
- Use multiple contact emails so renewal notices reach you even if one inbox fails
- Register for the maximum term (10 years) for critical domains — it’s cheap insurance
Key Takeaways
- Domains pass through 7 phases: registration → active → renewal → expiry → auto-renew grace → redemption → pending delete → release
- Auto-renewal is the most important protection against accidental loss
- Redemption recovery is possible but expensive ($80-200+)
- Pending delete is the point of no return — 5 days before public release
- Drop catching is a competitive, automated practice for capturing expiring domains
- Expired domain auctions let registrars monetize valuable domains before they drop
Next, we’ll look at the organizations behind the curtain — the registries, registrars, and resellers that make this whole system run.