Own Your Domain Name Or Else!
Do you know who has the rights and therefore ownership of your domain name?
An even better question if you’re a home owner … would you sign over the deeds to your home and still expect to live there?
This is a serious issue and if you’ve allowed your webmaster to take control of registering your domain name, you NEED to read this blog post VERY carefully …
I have come across three situations in the past few years where my clients have either allowed their webmaster to register their domain name on their behalf or, in one case, my client was persuaded to sign over his domain name to his webmaster!
I can’t think of any other way of saying this so I’m just going to stick to Trish style …
Allowing your webmaster or anyone else to register your domain name is like signing
over the deeds to your house and still expect to have all the same rights to live there!!
In the event that you were allowed to live in your home after you sold the deeds you’d be a tenant right? Yes … and, you only have tenants rights … right? Which means the landlord can sell at any time. And when the landlord sells you have to take all of your belongings and find another address to live.
Well imagine your webmaster has registered your domain name and puts themselves down as the administrator … who do you think the Registrar is going to contact when it’s time for the domain name to be renewed? Yes, it’s the administrator and NOT the registrant!
So despite the domain name being registered in your name (making you the registrant) it’s the admin contact who is the person or entity if it’s a corporation, who is entrusted with the power to make significant changes to a domain name such as transferring ownership of that domain name to a different party, or moving the domain to a new Registrar – with or without your knowledge. And if your domain name Registrar does not have additional security measures implemented, such as notifying the registrant in the event of these changes being initiated, you could wake up one morning and find that you’ve been evicted while you slept.
In other words, the address still exists but you just no longer have access to it.
Fortunately, all of my clients have achieved successful outcomes, but I didn’t hold out much hope for one of my clients initially since their domain name, which seemed to have been renewed without their knowledge (in fact, they didn’t even know the domain name was due for renewal because they were not down as the administrator) had disappeared from their Registrar account. The hosting account was still active and they could see all of their files on the server, but without that domain name – the address – having an active hosting account was meaningless.
Thankfully, this is resolved and they have their domain name back.
So, what do you now need to do?
-
Go and check the ownership of your domain name … Go to www.WHOIS.net and check the registration details. What you want is for the admin details to be the same as the registrant name – i.e. YOURS!!

- Make any necessary changes to the admin if the registrar allows you to or, contact your webmaster or the person who registered your domain and arrange for them to update the admin details
- If necessary, move the domain from it’s current registrar and ensure that when you complete the registration information, you put yourself down as the admin contact for your domain name
- If all else fails, seek legal advice
If you’re facing this situation right now, I wish you every success for a favourable outcome.
And please, don’t penny pinch when getting your blog or website built by asking the webmaster to include the cost of domain name. They’re less than $10 from GoDaddy.com and for $10, you get to have “dominion” over your domain! With this, you can build Kingdoms!

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Trish, thank you for this amazing pearl of wisdom. You discovered something that I think a lot of non-geeks do not think about. I could have done this and just trusted my webmaster and not think twice about the long term repercussions. Thanks for this.
Iyabo Asani
Hi Trish. My gosh. I have one website hosted by someone. I had not thought of the issues you mentioned above. I was only concerned about access to the back office. I went on to whois.net and oh my gosh, my wesite is registered in my web developers name.
I am definitely going to work on getting it registered in my name
Thanks for the advice.
Christine
Trish,
I just popped by to say hello and as usual I got sucked into one of your awesome posts. You have such good reading on your site it is always a pleasure to browse here. I had to comment on this post since I have run into so many clients with this situation. So speaking as a Software Engineer with many years experience in the area of web development I can say Trish you are ON THE MONEY! A domain owner should register their domain themselves through any number of easy to use registration web sites.
If you trust your webmaster enough and you have contracted them to do any future work on your site then giving them the technical contact section is fine but the Registrant and Admin should always be yours! Giving Technical Contact simply tells the provider (or host) that is the person to contact for technical issues. This is a handy ability to have since more times than most the owners of a domain know nothing of the technical aspects of the server or its internal workings. And rightfully so I might add, I mean afterall…that’s what you pay guys like me for! =)
Awesome job Trish! Excellent advice!
Kind Regards,
RJ Levesque, Jr.
http://www.dreamwc.com
http://www.thelinuxguy.net
Thanks for sharing this serious issue with us!!
Thanks for the info – don’t forget to post about the Australian domain name industry – it’s really starting to take off… Thanks again
You’re welcome Iyabo,
This kind of thing is always done in good faith and the webmaster may not even be dishonest, they only have to stop doing what they do, change email address and forget that they have other people’s domain names to maintain.
Trish