Caligo.com was successfully sold for $8,250, becoming a highly anticipated example of a premium domain name. Registered in 1996, this domain is a rare asset that combines etymological depth, memorability, and a .com top-level suffix.
The domain name that sold for the highest price that day was Looma.ai, which sold for $19,995 to a private seller.
Recently, Corgi.com was sold for a high price of $118,000, once again breaking the record for the sale of pet-related domain names.
The highest-priced domain name sold that day was OmegaClaw.com, which sold for $20,000 on Spaceship.com.
The highest-priced domain name sold that day was OpenPay.com, which sold for $310,000 on the DropCatch platform.
On that day, there were 693 domain name transactions with a price exceeding $100, totaling $704,646, with an average price of $1,016.81 per transaction; there were also 2,312 transactions with a price below $100, totaling $33,185.
Recently, a statement by Nvidia founder Jensen Huang has completely ignited the AI and Token industry: "If an engineer earning $500,000 a year doesn't consume at least $250,000 worth of tokens, I would feel deeply uneasy."
The median price for domain name transactions on the Sedo platform was $818, while the median price for the traditionally dominant .com domains was only $595. The median price for .ai domains has quietly surpassed that of .com domains.
The domain name that sold for the highest price that day was MSL.net, which sold for $50,000 on the Afternic platform.
The bidding for the .agent top-level domain community will officially begin next month. To date, more than 700 companies and more than 2,300 developers have formed a core community.