Buy the domain first. Domain registration is nearly instant and first-come; a delay while you prepare the trademark application could let someone else register the domain and force you to negotiate or rebrand. The trademark application can follow within days or weeks after the domain is secured.
Secure the .com domain the same day you commit to a name — trademark application can follow within a week or two.
Domain registration is first-come at $10 to $50, while trademark applications take days to prepare; securing the cheapest layer first eliminates the fastest risk.
Register the domain today through a reputable registrar once you've cleared the name through USPTO TESS and other checks.
Domain registration is the most time-sensitive step in the naming process. Domain names are first-come, first-served through ICANN-approved registrars, and the registration window is sometimes measured in hours for popular names. Trademark applications, by contrast, can be prepared over several days without risk of someone else locking up the trademark equivalent.
The asymmetry makes the order clear: buy the domain first because the domain can be lost in hours, then file the trademark because the application is not as time-sensitive. The cost of reversing the order — file trademark first, lose domain to another registrant — is significantly higher than any benefit of delaying domain purchase.
Three specific risks come with delaying domain registration: someone else registering the domain (usually an investor or competitor), price inflation if the domain becomes perceived as valuable, and potential bad-faith registration by someone who discovered your intended name.
| Risk | Likelihood | Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Domain investor auto-registers | Medium — drop-catching services watch for expiring domains | Purchase price $500 to $25,000+ |
| Competitor registers | Low — requires knowing your plans | Forces rebrand or complex negotiation |
| Good-faith third party registers | Medium — coincidental registration | Negotiated purchase, usually affordable |
| Price inflation on a watched domain | Low — requires public visibility of intent | Higher purchase price |
The most common risk is automated drop-catching by domain investors. Specialized services monitor domain availability and register promising domains within seconds of availability, usually for resale at marked-up prices. A domain you could have registered for $12 today can become a $2,000 negotiation tomorrow. The simplest defense is to register the domain immediately after name commitment.
Domain registration does not directly affect the trademark application, but the two work together as complementary proofs of commercial intent. A USPTO application for a name that matches your existing domain is supported by the domain ownership as evidence of the broader commercial plan for the mark.
For intent-to-use applications, the domain registration strengthens the bona fide intent showing that the USPTO requires. For use-based applications, the domain’s website provides easy specimen material. Neither effect is dispositive, but both make the trademark application cleaner and more defensible through examination.[2]
Expensive domain negotiations can take weeks or months and sometimes fall through. For these cases, filing an intent-to-use trademark application in parallel with the domain negotiation can make sense — locking in trademark priority while the domain deal is still in progress.
For most small businesses, expensive domains (above $5,000) rarely justify the investment unless the domain is genuinely critical to brand strategy. Cheaper alternative TLDs, slight name variations, or backup candidates usually deliver comparable commercial value at a fraction of the price. The trademark filing can proceed regardless, securing the brand name rights even if the .com is never obtained.
The ideal timeline runs both processes in parallel within a two-week window. Domain registration happens on day one; trademark application follows within 7 to 14 days. Running both quickly prevents the most common naming failures and establishes comprehensive protection before public launch.
The total cost for domain plus trademark typically runs $300 to $500 in the first month, assuming a single class and the standard .com. Attorney involvement (optional) adds $500 to $2,000 for review and filing assistance. The entire protection package is modest compared to rebuild costs if the domain is lost or the trademark is contested, making the two-week sprint the right pace for most small businesses.[3]
Founders often treat domain registration and trademark application as separate projects with independent timelines. The separation creates gaps where one or the other lags behind the launch. A domain registered in month 1 but no trademark filed until month 8 leaves the brand name exposed to USPTO filing by a competitor for most of that window.
The better approach treats the two as one coordinated two-week sprint. Day 1: clear the name and register the domain. Day 7 to 14: file the trademark application. Day 14 forward: launch under the name with full layered protection. The total work is maybe 10 hours across two weeks. The total cost is $500 to $1,000 including USPTO filing fees.
This is where Responsible Asset-Building treats the naming sprint as a single atomic project. The worst-case scenario is a domain registered without trademark coverage, or a trademark filed without the matching domain. Running both together eliminates either failure mode. An educated consumer commits to the two-week sprint because the alternative — staging the two over months — is how naming disasters get assembled.
Very quickly for attractive domains. Professional drop-catching services monitor domain availability continuously and can register a newly-available domain within seconds. For generic or descriptive terms in popular categories, expiring domains are often caught the moment they become available. For distinctive or obscure names, the window is longer — hours or days rather than seconds.
Registering .com, .net, and .org together is typical for serious brand launches and costs a small multiple of the single-TLD fee. For most small businesses, .com plus two or three key alternates covers defensive needs. Country-code TLDs (.ca, .co.uk) become relevant only when expanding internationally. A portfolio of 5 to 10 key TLDs for $50 to $250 per year is reasonable defensive spend for meaningful brands.
Proceeding with an alternative TLD is possible, especially .co, .io, .ai, or .app depending on industry. Many successful brands operate on non-.com domains. But the .com remains the default customer expectation, and operating without it can create brand confusion and missed traffic. If the .com is only moderately expensive, purchasing it is usually worth the investment; if it's prohibitive, alternative TLDs can work but require more marketing effort to cement the brand association.
Yes, and this is a common strategy for expensive domains. A federal trademark registration strengthens your negotiating position with the domain owner — if the owner's use is minimal or appears to be cybersquatting, the registration may support UDRP or ACPA action. For good-faith domain owners, the trademark registration does not give you the right to take the domain but does strengthen your commercial case for purchase.
Yes, for most small businesses. Domain privacy services hide your personal contact information in the whois database, preventing spam and unsolicited sales inquiries. Privacy services typically cost $5 to $20 per year and are offered by most registrars. The privacy protection does not affect trademark rights or legal responsibilities — it only masks the public display of ownership information.
Register the domain immediately, use TM or SM on the name to claim common-law rights, and budget for the USPTO filing within the next few months. The domain registration is the fastest-decaying protection window; the trademark filing is less time-sensitive and can be deferred by weeks without major risk. Don't delay the domain to save for the trademark — both ultimately matter, but the domain matters first.
Understand your brand, see what's worth protecting, and walk into any attorney conversation prepared. Enter your name and email once to unlock all three.