Naming an app can feel like a small decision until you try to do it.
The idea may already be clear. You may know the problem you are solving. You may have wireframes, a prototype, a waitlist, or even the first version built. Then you start looking for the name and the matching domain, and everything slows down.
The clean names are taken. The obvious names are expensive. The available names often feel too long, too awkward, or too close to something else.
That is where NotRenewing can help.
NotRenewing lists domain names at a flat price of $99. For app builders, product teams, indie hackers, and founders, it gives you a practical place to look for app domain names without auctions, broker conversations, or premium-domain pricing.
The app name has to work in more than one place
An app name does not only live on the website.
It may show up in an app store, a browser tab, a login screen, a support email, a demo video, a social profile, a pitch deck, a push notification, or a recommendation from one user to another.
That is why the name matters.
A good app name should be easy to say and easy to remember. It should look credible when someone sees it for the first time. It should not create friction before the product gets a fair chance.
At the same time, the name does not need to explain every feature. Most apps change. The first version is rarely the final version. A name that gives the product some room can be more useful than one that describes only the first feature you built.
Why affordable app domains matter
There is a big difference between naming an app that already has traction and naming one that is still being tested.
If the product is proven, a larger domain purchase may make sense. But most apps do not start there. They start with an idea, a first version, a landing page, a small user group, or a test to see whether people care.
At that stage, spending thousands of dollars on the domain can be hard to justify.
That does not mean you should ignore the name.
A weak domain can make a real product feel temporary. A long domain can make sharing harder. A confusing name can make people hesitate before they even understand what the app does.
The domain should match the stage of the product.
A $99 app domain can give you a better starting point than a forced hand registration, while still leaving room in the budget for the work that actually builds the app.
What makes a good app domain name?
A good app domain name should be simple enough to remember after someone hears it once or twice.
It should be easy to spell. If every conversation turns into a spelling lesson, the name is probably costing you attention.
It should be short enough to use comfortably in a website, email address, social profile, and app listing. It does not have to be tiny, but it should not feel like a sentence.
It should also fit the feel of the product. Some apps need to sound professional. Some can sound playful. Some should feel fast, useful, secure, creative, or simple. The right name depends on the product and the audience.
A good app name should also leave some room. If the app grows beyond the first feature, the name should not become a problem.
App naming mistakes to avoid
One mistake is choosing a name only because the domain is available.
Availability matters, but it should not be the only test. A name can be available because it is too long, too confusing, too hard to spell, or too forgettable.
Another mistake is chasing a name that sounds like every other app in the category. If users already see ten similar names in the same space, a slightly different version may not help you stand out.
Some builders also make the name too narrow. They name the app around one feature, one platform, or one use case, then outgrow it once users start asking for more.
The goal is not to find a perfect name. The goal is to find a name that lets you launch, learn, and keep building.
A practical way to judge app domain names
When you are browsing possible app names, try asking better questions than "Is this perfect?"
Ask:
Those questions are closer to how a name actually works in the real world.
A name becomes stronger when it is connected to a useful product, clear positioning, and real users. The domain is the starting point, not the whole story.
Who this page is for
This page is for people building apps and digital products.
That could include:
You do not need to be a domain investor to use NotRenewing. You just need a name that can help the app feel real enough to launch, share, and test.
Why NotRenewing uses a flat $99 price
Buying a domain can turn into a guessing game.
Some names have hidden prices. Some sellers ask for offers. Some names go to auction. Some require a broker conversation before you even know whether the price is realistic.
NotRenewing keeps the decision simpler.
Every listed domain is priced at $99.
That does not mean every name will fit your app. It means you can browse without wondering what the price is. You can compare options quickly. You can decide based on fit, not negotiation.
For app builders, that matters. Momentum is easy to lose when a naming decision becomes more complicated than the product itself.
Browse app domain names
NotRenewing gives domain names one more chance to be found before they disappear.
If you are building a mobile app, web app, MVP, SaaS product, AI tool, or digital product, browse the current inventory and look for names that could fit the direction you want to take.
The inventory changes as names sell or are removed, so this should not be treated like a fixed list. Check back when you are naming something new, and move when a name feels right for the product.
Related domain name pages
If you are still comparing name ideas, these pages may also help:
FAQ
What is an app domain name?
An app domain name is the web address used for a mobile app, web app, software product, MVP, or digital product. It may be used for the marketing site, login page, support email, documentation, and launch materials.
How much are app domain names on NotRenewing?
Domains listed on NotRenewing are priced at $99.
Do I need a premium domain for an app?
Not always. A premium domain can help if the product is proven and the budget supports it, but many apps can start with an affordable, credible domain and upgrade later if needed.
What types of apps can use these names?
These names may work for mobile apps, web apps, SaaS products, AI tools, productivity apps, consumer apps, marketplaces, MVPs, side projects, and internal tools that may become public products.
What if I do not see the right name today?
Inventory changes over time. Some names sell. Others are removed. New names may be listed. If nothing fits today, check back when you are ready to name or rename a project.
Find an app name you can build on
An app name should help the product get moving.
It should be easy to remember, credible enough to share, and affordable enough that it does not slow down the launch.
Browse NotRenewing for flat-price $99 domain names and look for an app domain name that can help you move from idea to product.