Find your new favorite VC domain

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines uses the .VC domain extension

Buy the .VC domain name from the island nation Saint Vincent and the Grenadines for your website. This country is located in the Caribbean Sea and inhabited by 120,000 islanders. It gained international popularity as the filming location for the 'Pirates of the Caribbean' movies.

Apart from being used in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, the .VC suffix is popular for domain hacks and short domains. You can use .VC domains as abbreviation, e.g. 'Venture Capitalist' or 'Ventura County'. Registration of .VC domains is open to any company, organisation or individual worldwide. Purchase the .VC TLD (top-level domain) from this beautiful island for your own web address today.

Then put your vc to work

Get started with over 100 platforms using our simple plugin system. Just choose a hosted service and the DNS records will be added automatically. Abacadabra.

  • G Suite
  • Fastmail
  • ProtonMail
  • Zoho Mail
  • Weebly
  • Shopify
  • Squarespace
  • Big Cartel
  • Amazon S3
  • Cargo 2
  • GitHub Pages
  • Tapfiliate
  • Tumblr
  • WP Engine
  • Rebrandly
  • Bitly
See All Plugins

Your domain registration questions, answered

How does getting a domain work?

There are two pieces to this equation. First, there are domain registries that own the individual top-level domains (like Verisign, which owns .com, .net, and a few other TLDs). Then there's us, the domain registrar, which provides a big online store that houses all the TLDs in one convenient location. When you register a domain, we reserve it for you through the individual registries... like an Amazon of sorts if you were looking for an HDMI cable.

Are there any additional things I need to buy?

Nope, every domain we sell comes with all the bells and whistles attached. If the TLD supports WHOIS privacy, we turn it on automatically. If you want to transfer your domain to another registrar, we don't have any secret add-ons to keep you tied down. And we don't place any weird ads or parking pages on unused domains — we don't see that much anymore, but it was a thing companies have done in the past.