Available 5-letter domains
Five letters is the length a lot of brands land on: long enough to be a word, short enough to stay sharp. Finding one open is the hard part. Here's where five-letter names still exist, checked live.
Reviewed May 2026
Each name runs five letters before the dot, across extensions where short names can still be found. Status is checked live when the page loads.
Five-letter .com is a stranger situation than four-letter. With four letters, every combination is registered. All of it, no exceptions. Five letters has more room: there are nearly twelve million possible strings, and not all of them are taken. But the unregistered ones are the junk. Anything that reads like a word, anything you'd actually want, went years ago. So 'available five-letter .com' is technically true and practically useless: what's left is unpronounceable.
Where five letters still works
Move off .com and the picture changes. On .io, .co, .dev, .app and the newer extensions, five-letter names are findable, because those namespaces are younger and there's been less time to pick them clean. You still won't catch a five-letter dictionary word sitting open (those are gone everywhere), but a coined five-letter name, something invented, is very gettable.
Why five letters is worth the search
Five letters gives you a syllable or two to actually work with. You can build something that feels like a real word, carries a bit of vowel rhythm, and survives being said out loud, which four letters sometimes can't. It's long enough not to feel cramped and short enough that nobody needs it spelled twice. Most names people genuinely remember land around here.
About the list
Every entry below is five letters before the dot, coined rather than borrowed, spread across extensions where five-letter space is still open. Each is checked live on load: a DNS lookup, then a registry check.
Some will already be taken; that's normal for short names. If the open ones don't fit, the generator will produce more at the same length.