Iโ€™ve used Namecheap before. Itโ€™s a good service, but their prices for renewals are more expensive than Porkbun, which is one of the main reasons I moved all my domains to Porkbun. Answer from deny_by_default on reddit.com
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Reddit
reddit.com โ€บ r/webdev โ€บ does anyone here have a domain at porkbun? is it worth buying there, or will i get tricked like i did with namecheap? t.t
r/webdev on Reddit: Does anyone here have a domain at Porkbun? Is it worth buying there, or will I get tricked like I did with Namecheap? T.T
November 11, 2024 -

So, I had a frustrating experience with Namecheap. They simply tripled the renewal price of my .com domain. I thought about transferring the domain and buying another one I need at Porkbun, but do they also have this kind of trick? Will they suddenly raise the price 3, 4, or 10 times? In my case, the price tripled in 1 year. Or is it better to just go with Cloudflare?

If anyone has experience with these domain registration sites, please clear this doubt for me.

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Reddit
reddit.com โ€บ r/webdev โ€บ cloudflare vs porkbun vs namecheap: an opinion, if it helps
r/webdev on Reddit: Cloudflare vs Porkbun vs Namecheap: An opinion, if it helps
April 16, 2024 -

Hey All - My Google Domains started getting moved over to Squarespace this past week, and it's been a less than stellar experience. Not only do I not to control what account these domains end up in, managing domains in Squarespace is not what I'd call straight forward.

As a result, I went to the Interwebs and Reddit to see what was recommended. The same 3 kept getting recommended: Cloudflare, Porkbun, Namecheap

The trend on Namecheap - which I used a decade ago - is that it is no longer actually cheap, with constant price hikes & advertisements, so I ruled them out and decided to split my domains between Cloudflare & Porkbun, to see how the experience was. Worst case, I move the domains again in 60 days, if one is really horrible (yes, I would need to pay the cost to extend one more year).

Since there have been a few threads on this topic, I figured I'd share where I fell out - with details, in case it helps you make your decision:

  • Cloudflare

    • Pros

      • Has every enterprise level feature & customization you could want, within policy (see below), although many of these are upsells

      • The transfer process is done in a way where it's very hard to screw up the DNS settings post-transfer (e.g. you need to move the NS over before you can initiate transfer)

      • Cheapest domains out there

      • Been around for a very long time, and relies on other revenue, so not likely to go out of business

    • Cons

      • The interface is very "heavy"; It's clearly built for Enterprises, not prosumers, and so it can take a bit of searching to find the thing you want

      • It feels like Cloudflare takes positions on the "right" way to do things, and for those things, there is no workaround. Examples include:

      • Not all ccTLDs supported yet (but the ~200 they cover were all I needed)

  • Porkbun

    • Pros

      • Simple & straightforward, albeit quirky, interface

      • You can pretty much do whatever you want, including domain masking & email forwarding without pre-approval (this could also be abused)

      • Probably the 2nd cheapest domains

      • Other redditors have commented that their customer service is fast & friendly

      • I didn't count but their supported domain list seems much longer than CloudFlare's

    • Cons

      • Been around as long as Google Domains, so unclear if this business model is sustainable

      • UI is not the prettiest, or the best laid out, but it's so simple that's it's pretty easy to figure out

      • Because you can do anything you want, you could transfer your domain and lose all your previous settings, which would mean you would need to figure out what those records would need to be/reverify your domain

A good example of the experience between these two is SSL.

  • Cloudflare: Since you had to have CF NS in order to transfer, CF automatically enables SSL (great!). To find that they did this, you would go to your domain, click on the SSL section, and see in the Overview that you have "Flexible" SSL on by default vs Full vs Full (strict) ... or off. Now they use diagrams to explain what each of these is, but you need to dig to understand what the difference is here vs a standard LetsEncrypt cert on a server. It turns out LE certs are equivalent to "full" (to my best understanding) and that "flexible" means just the connection between browser and CF is encrypted. So you can go and switch it to full ... for every domain you have.

  • Porkbun: They have a simple listing of your domains, where you click details. One section is "SSL". If you click the small edit button, it will tell you that they can only generate SSL for you if you use their NameServers, and they give you a single click button to make the switch. You push the button, they update, and tell you that a cert is being generated using LetsEncrypt. You need to check back to see status switch from "Nothing yet" to "Have certificate" in green. This takes 10-20 minutes. You could do this rapidly for all domains, as they are all listed in a flat list. If you switched to their NameServers during transfer, this step is automatically done.

For me, while Porkbun is a bit fast and loose (and doesn't have as many options as Cloudflare), it's been a more enjoyable experience. I also didn't like that Cloudflare prohibits me from masking, and I'm worried about what else they will prevent me from doing in the future. While I understand some of these settings can be abused, they also can allow me to provide a more pleasant experience for simple things, like not showing an "ugly" URL.

If I was running an enterprise site, where I needed to tweak the hell out of everything to ensure optimal load times, while fending off DOS attacks, and needed workers to handle different end points with different situations, Cloudflare would be a great fit. I'm not doing that though.

I'll probably let these domains sit on both of these registrars for another 6 months to see if anything really breaks (I still have to see how the Sites redirects land). If something major pops up, I'll update the post.

I hope someone finds this helpful. :)

UPDATE (2024.07): I'm all in on Porkbun. Cloudflare made basic changes complicated and Porkbun support is absolutely phenomenal.

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Reddit
reddit.com โ€บ r โ€บ PorkBun
Porkbun - Unofficial Community
August 28, 2016 - r/PorkBun: Unofficial community for Porkbun.com a ICANN accredited domain name registrar.
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Reddit
reddit.com โ€บ r/domains โ€บ where to get a domain? (namecheap, porkbun or hover?)
r/Domains on Reddit: Where to get a domain? (Namecheap, porkbun or hover?)
February 22, 2025 -

I've been struggling to decide between namecheap, porkbun and hover as a domain registrar. I'm setting up a shopify store for e-commerce. There are so many pros and cons, hundreds of YouTube videos, most of which are repeating the identical script they probably found from chat GPT. And my head is genuinely tarting to physically hurt. I'm so overwhelmed.

Which one should I go for. I don't know much about web development at all. But from what I've heard this is what I need.

  1. SSL certificates - the thing that makes my website safe and not look sketchy I guess??

  2. Custom email hosting - so I can have my own custom email @ which is very professional and very cool.

  3. Email forwarding so may all goes to my personal email?? (I guess this is good but I don't really know if I want that. I'd rather just log into my business email every time I want to respond to customers) - this just seems like it would inconvenience me and getting my way.

  4. Domain forwarding could be very useful, so even if someone types the wrong domain, they would still end up on my website. (But not a necessity I suppose idk)

  5. I barely even know what a sub domain is, but I think I need this. (Yes I will continue researching these things)

  6. DNS management - the most important of all I reckon. From what I've learnt this is the thing that ensures that there are no connectivity issues. When people type in my website name they actually end up on my site + with no slow loading time etc)

The lower the price the better, but not if it means I'm going to have a headache running this business. I see the extra prices as a way of delegating the hard work to somebody who isn't me. You're very important for someone running their first business on their own.

I tried asking chat GPT, I did it for hours actually. But it kept giving me false info, I was incredibly biased for some strange reason, telling me the price per month for certain companies but the price per year for other companies. When I calculated the numbers they were all wrong. And even I barely know anything I had to correct it, it would agree and explain again, still getting things wrong. So I'm overwhelmed and coming to Reddit for help.

I won't get it from shopify in case I feel like I need to transfer it later. I'd rather own the domain individually, so shopify won't be an option.

Thank you in advance.

Top answer
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Iโ€™ve used Namecheap before. Itโ€™s a good service, but their prices for renewals are more expensive than Porkbun, which is one of the main reasons I moved all my domains to Porkbun.
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I've been struggling to decide between namecheap, porkbun and hover as a domain registrar. Porkbun is head and shoulders above the other ones. SSL certificates - the thing that makes my website safe and not look sketchy I guess?? Porkbun offers free SSL, but if you use Cloudflare for DNS (which you should) you'll get it through them. Custom email hosting - so I can have my own custom email @ which is very professional and very cool. Porkbun offers email forwarding, which you could use. But you could just set up a free mailbox at Zoho. Email forwarding so may all goes to my personal email?? (I guess this is good but I don't really know if I want that. I'd rather just log into my business email every time I want to respond to customers) - this just seems like it would inconvenience me and getting my way. Then use Zoho. No need to pay for an email server. Domain forwarding could be very useful, so even if someone types the wrong domain, they would still end up on my website. (But not a necessity I suppose idk) Porkbun offers it, but if you set up your DNS with Cloudflare (which is free) you can do url forwarding. Cloudflare does it better though since you can use wildcard url forwarding (which has benefits over regular url forwarding). I barely even know what a sub domain is, but I think I need this. (Yes I will continue researching these things) example.com = root domain www.example.com , my.example.com, panel.example.com = subdomains All registrars offer this. DNS management - the most important of all I reckon. From what I've learnt this is the thing that ensures that there are no connectivity issues. When people type in my website name they actually end up on my site + with no slow loading time etc) Use Coudflare for DNS. Porkbun for your registrar, Cloudflare for your DNS, and WebHostMost for hosting. Thank me later.
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Reddit
reddit.com โ€บ r/domains โ€บ porkbun and cloudflare review. i really like them!
r/Domains on Reddit: Porkbun and Cloudflare Review. I really like them!
April 14, 2025 -

Hey guys just wanted to get the communities consensus on Porkbun vs Cloudflare?

EDIT: Afer reading the stories from user billhartzer of Cloudflare domains getting hacked (see comments below), I'll be sticking with Porkbun for the time being.

I've been using Porkbun them for the past 5 years and have only had good experiences with them but am interested to hear your experience vs Cloudflare?

It looks like Cloudflare has really good domain rates as .com renewals are $10.45/yr at the time of writing this. Porkbun renewal rates for .com domains are currently $11.06/yr.

In total I've been purchasing my domains with Porkbun then for web hosting I've been using Cloudways along with WordPress to build my websites as I believe it's the best web hosting provider.

If you're looking to do this same this tutorial will walk you through the process.

Anyways, in the past I used to use Namecheap but ever since they've increased their prices I've stayed away from them as they've significantly increased their domain rates and most definitely NOT cheap.

Overall across the board, it appears domain registrars have increased their pricing, even just a few years ago you could get a .com domain with Porkbun for ~$9/yr but that has since changed to ~11/yr.

This still wildly beats GoDaddy and Namecheap, their .com renewal rates are $22/yr and Namecheaps are $17/yr.

I always tell people to stay away from GoDaddy. Namecheap isn't bad but they're just more expensive. Most people haven't heard of Porkbun and find the brand amusing (I love it tbh). Cloudflare on the other hand is more well known especially amongst the tech literate crowd. I'm interested to hear your guys' thoughts on Cloudflare since I haven't used them in particular.

Thoughts?

Top answer
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I would stick with porkbun. I love the Cloudflare for dns and CDN services, but would never use them for a domain registrar. At least not for any domain that I care about. I run a stolen domain name recovery service and Iโ€™ve had to help clients recover way too many stolen domain names from Cloudflare. And Iโ€™m not a big fan of the fact that in order to submit a support ticket, like when your domain is stolen, you must pay them $350 or more. You have to be an enterprise customer at $350 or more per month in order to submit a ticket.
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Keep in mind GoDaddy is a has been and is one of the worse mistakes people make.. They think they will grow into the account features when in fact if and when you grow, you grow out of it. Cloudflare is fantastic but keep in mind you're the product and you have to use it understanding that. You're consenting to your data being used for overall security and other research which helps the community. I'm okay with that. Porkbun is great but they have a model of charging very little above their rate and make the money due to volume and low fees. Cloudflare has a model of making no money off of registrar fees. Keeping it real, Cloudflare has to be one of the best if not the best technical product that exist which is completely free. This is especially true when you embrace some of the absolutely free networking features such as custom redirects. Maybe I have an extreme advantage and bias because of my technical background, and I'm not claiming to be a Cloudflare expert. The network and domain features available via Cloudflare are simply insane! If you want to explore redirects and other custom things you really would be hard pressed to find a solution that does it faster or better than Cloudflare unless you spend a lot of money and have a network guru handy Cloudflare is maybe not the best option if you're looking to offload the domain. Using them for DNS, great! But the might not be the best option for domains you want to offload. Having said all that I use Cloudflare for my register on almost all domains that allow me to. I've got enough domains that even a dollar savings per domain a year is significant for me. But Porkbun is certainly my go to for TLD that Cloudflare does not support
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Reddit
reddit.com โ€บ r/domains โ€บ why porkbun is porkbun?
r/Domains on Reddit: Why Porkbun is Porkbun?
January 30, 2025 -

It's so unique. I'm curious to know why the Porkbun registrar names their brand like this, I mean to say..Neamcheap(cheap pricing). Hostinger(hosting+domain) all have some little relevance..but porkbun is out of the box. Is there any story with Pig, pork with the company...and all characters on the website are pig images? Is there in deep meaning for giving this name? Is there anyone who has an idea about it?

Top answer
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GoDaddy is the weirdest for me, sounds like a porn site.
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Well well, looks like it's story time! Gather 'round and let me tell you about how Porkbun became Porkbun. I think it can be best described as a well orchestrated fluke. Back in 2014 our parent company, Top Level Design LLC, was just an ICANN accredited registry. We were set to operate the TLDs .design, .wiki, .ink and eventually .gay and .tattoo as well. Registries cannot sell ICANN governed TLDs directly to consumers and have to go through ICANN accredited registrars to hawk their wares. It's not exactly easy as a registry to work with registrars to market and sell your TLDs; priorities don't always align, they usually move too slow, they don't have the right messaging you're looking for, etc. So, we decided to start our own registrar mainly so that we could more easily sell our domains using the TLDs we own. This is what ICANN calls vertical integration, when the same company owns both a registry and registrar. There are a lot of rules regarding separation and how a vertically integrated registry / registrar can operate, mostly around fair access to registry services and promotional pricing, but it would allow us to market our TLDs direct to consumer in a way we wanted. In the very early days the name of the registrar really wasn't very important to us, our strategy was to create branded sites on top of the registrar backend and market directly to industry organizations and customers in very niche markets. Our main focus was .design so think organizations like AIGA, IDSA, etc. We would also end up creating generic sites like get.design, get.ink, get.wiki, etc. But, our registrar needed an actual name and so we sat around and looked at what domains we already had in our possession. Our CEO had a collection of decent domain names and there were a few that seemed brandable and fun. I think we narrowed it down to porkbun.com and flyware.com (groan), by the grace of all that is holy and good porkbun.com won and Porkbun LLC was officially formed. As we registered more and more domains and our customer base grew there started to be a demand for folks to be able to have their other domains with us as well. We started onboarding with other registries like Verisign, Identity Digital (then Donuts), PIR, etc and we were starting to become a more generic registrar instead of one dedicated only to the registration of our own TLDs. We started heavily branding Porkbun around pigs, at first real pigs and then the cute cartoon pigs we all know and love (I'm projecting and assuming everyone loves them as much as myself). Eventually we consolidated everything on porkbun.com and shut down the niche sites. Mostly due to our low pricing, ease of use, and no nonsense approach Porkbun started gathering a following of loyal customers and was growing rapidly, we could tell we were on to something and although there was some early talk about rebranding we held strong and doubled down on what we believe is a fun memorable brand. We eventually sold all of our TLDs to GoDaddy in 2021 and 2023 and ever since have been a dedicated domain name registrar hellbent on sticking to our roots. It's a tough and competitive industry but we still believe that having the name Porkbun has helped us grow. It lets us have fun with the brand in a space that is mostly stale and boring and I think most can tell by the little jokes on our site, the puns in our marketing, and our overall quirky nature that the folks running this thing don't particularly like stale and boring ๐Ÿ˜‚ Edit: The other option wasn't registerfly.com it was flyware.com.
Find elsewhere
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Reddit
reddit.com โ€บ r/domains โ€บ move to porkbun or stay on namecheap?
r/Domains on Reddit: Move to Porkbun or stay on Namecheap?
June 25, 2024 -

I've heard great things and horror stories from Porkbun and I'm wondering if it's worth biting the bullet. I'm not interested in doing ID verification but that's the main downside I'm seeing. I don't own many domains (I use every domain I own for personal projects) so I would only save ~$10 a year. If anyone could give some advice/suggestions that would be much appreciated. Thanks!

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Reddit
reddit.com โ€บ r/domains โ€บ porkbun suddenly marked one of my domains as premium and is charging the premium renewal
r/Domains on Reddit: Porkbun suddenly marked one of my domains as premium and is charging the premium renewal
September 27, 2024 -

I am not sure if this is common, but this feels scammy. I started using Porkbun last year and my domains are getting to renewals this year. They did auto-renew a few domains at 3x the registration price (understandable), now one of my domains have been marked as premium. I bought this for USD 32, and now I am being asked to pay over USD 1100 to renew.

I don't think that's fair and their support has not reached back to any emails I sent to them. What kind of business is this? I am seeing spaceship for transfer at USD 32, but I have been reading about their horror stories as well.

WWYD?

Edit:

  • Found a similar thread of this happening to someone else

    • https://www.reddit.com/r/webhosting/comments/1fkx954/forum_domain_suddenly_jumped_from_4_to_1200/

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Reddit
reddit.com โ€บ r/dns โ€บ porkbun dns vs cloudflare dns
r/dns on Reddit: Porkbun DNS vs Cloudflare DNS
June 6, 2024 -

Cloudflare has a nice feature matrix to see what the free and pay tiers offer. I cannot find the same with Porkbun. It's difficult to make a comparison. However, Porkbun says it uses CF as its DNS.

How does Porkbun compare with Cloudflare on features? If Porkbun is my registrar, should I use Porkbun for DNS since it's using CF?

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Reddit
reddit.com โ€บ r/webdev โ€บ is porkbun in oregon?
r/webdev on Reddit: Is Porkbun in Oregon?
October 17, 2024 -

I've been with godaddy since they launched and am tired of their crap. I'm looking into transferring all of my domains to Porkbun as they start to expire. I want to know more about this company. The website says their physical address is in Sherwood, Oregon (i'm an hour away). When I look it up, it seems to be a mailbox at the UPS Store. It is a "Top Level Design" company which says on the front page is based in Oregon, but their operations are in Beijing, China... and their e-mail address is at a registry.godaddy domain (like, what?).

There's good reviews about them all over the place, but wondering if anyone knows if this is a US company, or a China-based proxy?

Top answer
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Hello. Thought we'd clear some things up. Top Level Design and Porkbun are in no way Chinese companies. Top level Design is the parent company and owns Porkbun. Both companies are incorporated in the United States and Top Level Design has a narrowly focused registered foreign business in China. Top Level Design was the registry for several TLDs, those TLDs were design, ink, wiki, gay, and tattoo. We recently sold the registry side of our business (the TLDs) to GoDaddy and are in a transition period, so in many ways this is all becoming irrelevant. In order to sell domains on top of these TLDs in China one must operate what is called a WFOE, which stands for wholly foreign-owned enterprise. You can read more about what a WFOE is here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wholly_Foreign-Owned_Enterprise . All registries outside of China that wish to sell domains on their TLDs in China and want them to resolve and function correctly must do this. Obviously, almost every registry does this so that they can offer domains to the Chinese market. None of this means that Top Level Design is beholden to Chinese laws or its government except for when it comes to those domains registered by Chinese citizens or Chinese companies in China, that's it. Porkbun is completely outside of the scope of the WFOE and it does not apply at all.
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Porkbun was founded by and remains headed by Ray King, an American. He also founded Top Level Design. His parents are from China, but he was born in the US. Top Level Design has a Beijing office and offers domain registration in China, but is not a Chinese company.
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Reddit
reddit.com โ€บ r/porkbun โ€บ why is porkbun pulling shady stuff like godaddy?
r/PorkBun on Reddit: Why is PorkBun pulling shady stuff like GoDaddy?
March 31, 2025 -

So I just registered a new domain name at PorkBun. As an aside, I have multiple domains at PB and have been a customer for over half a decade.

I was surprised to see that PB has stooped to GoDaddy-like shady tactics. Similar to how GD automatically publishes a BS "Coming Soon" AI website on your domain, PorkBun created a page to promote their Link In Bio (https://porkbun.com/products/webhosting/managedLinks) product and is automatically forwarding my domain to a .l.ink subdomain to promote their Link in Bio product.

Stuff like this is the reason people leave GD to move to PB. PB has been awesome, but with these tactics, I think I'm gonna have to look for another domain registrar next time. I guarantee it's some overly "smart" PM behind the scenes who thinks it's a good idea to automatically assume control over something a customer just paid for.

https://postimg.cc/gallery/XvM5fwf

I just paid for a domain. Leave my domain as is. Don't forward it, don't publish anything on it, if I choose not to do anything with it, just leave it alone for the duration of the subscription that I paid for without explicitly getting consent from the customer.

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Reddit
reddit.com โ€บ r/domains โ€บ porkbun sucks, need alternative
r/Domains on Reddit: porkbun sucks, need alternative
January 14, 2025 -

Their DNS requires hours or days to update.

Every registrar I've used in the past updated in minutes.

Their services are less than useless to me if they won't hear complaints about how slow their dns is until 48 hours after the last update.

I'm looking for a registrar who won't interfere with my development work by sitting on my dns updates without good reason.

Anyone else abandon porkbun?

Where did you go?

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Are you using Porkbun's DNS for managing records or are you modifying nameservers for a domain? Porkbun use Cloudflare for their DNS records which is one of the most reliable providers. I have hundreds of domains across dozens of TLDs with Porkbun and regularly manage the DNS and nameservers through Porkbun. The biggest issue I face is with nameservers because not all TLDs are created equal. For example, the .party TLD is janky and regularly stops working for some inexplicable reason. Porkbun's DNS system certainly isn't perfect but if you're regularly seeing hours or days for changes to be reflected it is almost certainly an issue at your end. If my changes take more than 60 seconds to be reflected, I'm wondering if there's an issue, I have never seen hours. How are you verifying the records are correctly set? Do you use a tool like whatsmydns.net or dig? Do you use your ISPs DNS for your local connection, or something like Cloudflare's or Google's? If you're unhappy with Porkbun's use of Cloudflare then you can switch to a separate DNS provider while keeping your domains with Porkbun. For my mission critical domains, I use Google Cloud's DNS or you could use Cloudflare directly. I like Porkbun but given they're a domain registrar, not a DNS company, I much prefer to use a dedicated DNS service when DNS is important. Cloudflare also offer domain registration at cost, although they have a limited number of TLDs: if I didn't rely on quirky TLDs then I'd use Cloudflare for my domain registration.
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Porkbun uses Cloudflare's DNS. Every time I've made changes to my DNS records at Porkbun, it took effect within minutes.
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Reddit
reddit.com โ€บ r/domains โ€บ alternative to porkbun who has locked 50+ of my domains with no support
r/Domains on Reddit: Alternative to Porkbun who has locked 50+ of my domains with no support
January 16, 2024 -

I was with porkbun for years now so I am out of the loop with bulk domain hosting. I have read some articles but who do you trust? I need to move all my domains and begin initiating the transfers ASAP - I just need a reliable, flexible registrar - it doesn't have to be cheap, just good customer service - right now I called and talked to India in customer service many times but you can only get resolution through email on "abuse" and I'm on day 2 waiting for them to simply tell me what's going on. Help please - anyone with a lot of domains on one registrar your advice?