AI Domain Name Generator
Generate domain names with AI, then check which ones you can actually buy
BloomQuery combines two jobs that are usually split across separate tools: coming up with good domain ideas and checking live availability across the TLDs you care about. Use Instant search when you already have a direction. Use Deep Search when you need the naming angle itself.
Instant search
Start with a word, product idea, or brand fragment and check live availability across selected TLDs as you type.
Deep Search
Let the AI agent branch into synonyms, metaphors, compounds, and less obvious naming directions when the straightforward options are already taken.
TLD-aware results
Compare `.com`, `.app`, `.dev`, `.io`, `.sh`, `.page`, and more so you can make a naming decision around audience fit, not habit.
How to use an AI domain name generator well
Good domain research starts with constraints. Define the audience, the emotional tone, and whether the name needs to sound literal, technical, premium, playful, or strange. If you only ask for "startup domain ideas," you usually get generic output. If you ask for names that sound trustworthy for a developer tool, lyrical for a media brand, or crisp for a B2B SaaS product, the results improve quickly.
The next step is checking availability early rather than at the end. Many naming tools create attractive lists that collapse once you test them in `.com` or your preferred extension. BloomQuery keeps the availability step close to the idea-generation step so you can pivot before investing in a dead-end name.
When the obvious names are taken, switch from literal phrasing to adjacent language: moods, symbols, verbs, fragments, and two-word compounds. That is the kind of search space where Deep Search is most useful, especially for founders trying to find a name that feels brandable rather than purely descriptive.
Choosing between `.com` and newer TLDs
`.com` still wins on familiarity and default trust, especially for broad consumer products. But newer extensions can be strong when they sharpen the brand or match the product type. `.app` and `.dev` can work well for software launches, `.io` remains familiar in startup circles, and `.sh` can fit developer-native products with a sharper tone.
The right question is not "Which extension is best?" but "Which available name feels most credible to the people I need to convince first?" That audience-first framing usually produces better decisions than chasing `.com` at any cost. If you want a tighter comparison, read BloomQuery's domain extension guide.
BloomQuery works best for these naming jobs
- Founders naming a new SaaS product and checking whether the clean version of the name is still open.
- Indie hackers comparing a few TLD strategies before a launch.
- Agencies and freelancers building a shortlist of domain ideas for clients.
- Creators who want something less generic than a business name generator but less manual than registrar-by-registrar searching.
Try the workflow
Start with Instant search on BloomQuery if you already know the core word or phrase. If the obvious names are gone, switch to Deep Search and widen the brief instead of forcing weak variations.
After you settle on a domain direction, use Silicon Score to sanity-check crowded startup positioning, browse PX Icons for launch-ready product icon ideas, and keep the naming sprint tight with JobTimer.
FAQ
What makes an AI domain name generator useful?
A useful AI domain name generator should do more than brainstorm. It should surface multiple naming angles, keep the list relevant to your idea, and verify which domains are actually available before you fall in love with a taken name.
How is BloomQuery different from a generic business name generator?
BloomQuery is focused on domains, not generic brand lists. Instant mode checks live availability across selected TLDs, while Deep Search generates more creative candidates and validates them in parallel.
Should I search only .com domains?
Not always. `.com` is still the safest default for broad audiences, but product-led companies often consider `.app`, `.dev`, `.io`, or `.sh` when the name is stronger and the audience understands the extension.