WHOIS Lookup
Type a domain and read back the registrar, expiry, status codes and nameservers, with renewal risk and live DNS.
This WHOIS lookup takes a domain and parses the registration record into the fields that actually matter, instead of dumping a wall of registry text at you. You get the registrar, the created, updated and expiry dates, the nameservers, registry status codes, DNSSEC and abuse contacts, all lined up so a site owner can act on them. It estimates renewal risk from the expiry date, flags transfer locks, and compares the WHOIS nameservers against live NS, A and CAA records so you can confirm the delegation story before editing anything. Modern WHOIS hides registrant contacts for privacy, so this leans on the operational signals that survive redaction.
Queries run through the PeopleAreGeek lookup service. We log nothing.
Live domain utility
Type a domain. You get the WHOIS record back, but parsed into the fields that actually matter: registrar, expiry, status codes, nameservers. It also estimates renewal risk and lines the record up against live DNS. Honestly, raw WHOIS is a pain to read. So the point here isn't to dump a wall of registry text at you. It's to hand a site owner something they can act on.
Records look different from one registry or registrar to the next. Privacy protection and GDPR usually bury the registrant contact fields anyway, so lean on the operational stuff.
What a WHOIS lookup is useful for
A WHOIS lookup reads the public registration record bolted to a domain name. It can show you the registrar, a few dates (created, updated, when it expires), the nameservers, registry status codes, DNSSEC, abuse contacts. Modern WHOIS is way less personal than it used to be, because a lot of registries and registrars now hide registrant details for privacy. Nothing sketchy about that. And for technical work, the parts you actually want are the operational ones anyway.
It earns its keep right before you move a domain, renew one, migrate, or poke into who owns what. It will tell you if expiry is creeping up, if transfer locks are on, which registrar holds the name. And whether the nameservers are pointing where you think they're pointing. They often aren't, by the way.
How to read the important fields
- Registrar: the company the domain lives with. That's where you'd log in to renew or move it.
- Expiry date is the one to watch. It's the clock on renewal risk.
- Creation date gives you a rough sense of whether you're looking at an old established name or something registered last Tuesday.
- Name servers point at wherever the domain hands off its DNS control.
- Domain status codes spell out the locks and holds and transfer restrictions, plus whatever state the registry has flagged.
- DNSSEC just tells you if there's a signed delegation sitting at the registry.
Renewal and transfer checks
Let a domain lapse and the whole thing goes dark. Site, email, DNS, gone, even though the server underneath is sitting there perfectly fine. Maybe it's just me, but I think trusting one reminder email for a domain that matters is asking for a bad week. Lock down the registrar account. Turn on auto-renew if it fits. Double-check the card on file hasn't expired, and write down who actually owns the account, because that knowledge walks out the door when people leave. Planning a transfer? Check for transfer locks first and confirm the admin email path still works.
WHOIS privacy and accuracy
Hidden contact data isn't a red flag. GDPR, privacy proxies, plain old registrar policy: any of them will redact the registrant fields. So read WHOIS as a registry and operational signal. It's not an identity document, and treating it like one will burn you. If there's real abuse or legal or ownership work on the line, go through the registrar's abuse channels and the official process. A copied WHOIS page won't hold up on its own.
Frequently asked questions
Why is the owner hidden?
Most registrars just redact personal data by default now. You'll still get the registrar, the dates, status codes, the nameservers, even when the registrant's contact details are locked away private.
Can WHOIS tell me where a website is hosted?
Not really, no. WHOIS is about the domain registration, not the hosting. For where the site actually sits, DNS records and IP geolocation will get you closer.
Why do different WHOIS tools show different data?
Different sources, basically. One tool hits the registry and stops there. Another goes on to the registrar WHOIS server or RDAP. Then you've got timing, rate limits, and the fact that registries format their output however they feel like it.
What does the domain expiry date tell me?
It's the day the current registration runs out. Right after expiry there's a grace and redemption window where the owner can still claw it back. Miss that, though, and the domain drops. Then anybody can grab it.
What is the difference between a registrar and a registry?
The registry runs the top-level domain (Verisign handles .com, for instance). The registrar is who you actually buy from and manage the domain through, often the same hosting provider you are already paying.