Last verified 2026-05-17
What this is
Cloudflare Registrar sells domain names at the wholesale price charged by the registry and ICANN — no markup, no upsells, and the renewal price is the same as the signup price. That's unusual: most registrars (GoDaddy, Namecheap, Google's old service) charge a markup, and many quietly raise the price at renewal. [Source: cloudflare.com/products/registrar (accessed 2026-05-17)]
What it costs
Pricing depends on the TLD (the ending —
.com, .org, .net, etc.) because each registry sets its own wholesale price. Cloudflare passes that through at cost.- .com runs roughly $10/year at wholesale.
- .org, .net, .dev, .app are also common nonprofit-friendly options.
- Cloudflare supports over 390 TLDs total. [Source: cloudflare.com/products/registrar (accessed 2026-05-17)]
The exact price for each TLD is shown in the Cloudflare dashboard before you buy.
Who this is good for
- Nonprofits and small organizations that want a
.orgwithout paying $20+/year of resale markup.
- Individuals registering a personal site, family domain, or portfolio.
- Anyone tired of registrars that double the price at renewal.
What you need to use it
- A free Cloudflare account with a verified email.
- A valid payment method (credit card).
- Willingness to use Cloudflare's DNS for the domain. Cloudflare Registrar requires you to point the domain at their nameservers; you can't keep DNS at another provider. The DNS service itself is free. [Source: developers.cloudflare.com/registrar/get-started (accessed 2026-05-17)]
How to register a new domain
- Sign in at dash.cloudflare.com.
- Open the Domain Registration → Register Domains page.
- Search for the domain you want. Cloudflare shows the at-cost price.
- Add it to cart, fill in contact info, pay. WHOIS privacy is included free.
How to transfer an existing domain in
This is the more common path — moving a domain you already own to Cloudflare so renewals stop costing $20+/year.
- At your current registrar: unlock the domain and request the authorization (EPP) code.
- Confirm the domain has been registered for at least 60 days and hasn't been transferred in the last 60 days (ICANN rule).
- In Cloudflare, add the domain as a site first (free plan is fine) so it's on Cloudflare's DNS.
- Go to Domain Registration → Transfer Domains, paste the EPP code, pay one year of registration (this extends the expiry by one year).
- Approve the transfer email if your current registrar sends one. The transfer usually completes in 5–7 days. [Source: developers.cloudflare.com/registrar/get-started/transfer-domain-to-cloudflare (accessed 2026-05-17)]
Things to watch for
- You must use Cloudflare DNS. If you rely on a hosting provider's bundled DNS (some shared hosts), you'll need to move DNS records to Cloudflare first. Cloudflare can import most records automatically.
- Some TLDs aren't supported for transfer or registration (especially certain country-code domains). Check Cloudflare's TLD policy page if you're after something unusual.
- No reselling. Cloudflare Registrar is for end users, not for buying domains to flip.
- Recently changed contact info can block a transfer — ICANN requires no registrant changes in the prior 60 days.
Where to get help
- Cloudflare support: live chat and email through the dashboard.
- Community forum: community.cloudflare.com — busy and reasonably helpful for registrar questions.
Why this matters for nonprofits
A small nonprofit running
yourorg.org will often pay $20–$30/year at a traditional registrar, plus $10+/year for WHOIS privacy. At Cloudflare it's the wholesale .org price (around $10/year as of 2026), privacy included, and the price doesn't jump at renewal. Over 5 years that's real money kept inside the mission.