Web2 domains do not last forever without action. Each domain has an expiration date, after which registries and registrars apply a series of status changes that determine whether you can still renew, how much it costs, and whether your website and email continue to work.
The exact timelines vary by TLD (e.g., .com, .net, and country-code TLDs), but the lifecycle usually includes three key stages after expiry: Grace Period, Redemption, and Pending Delete. Enabling auto renew and keeping payment details current is the safest way to avoid downtime.
Typical Timeline (for Many gTLDs, Your TLD May Differ)
Day 0 → Day 1–45 → Day 46–75 → Day 76–80 → Day 81+
Expiry → Grace Period → Redemption → Pending Delete → Available
These windows are indicative. Some TLDs have shorter or longer periods, and a few ccTLDs replace or rename stages. Always rely on the dates shown in your dashboard.
1) Grace Period – renewal still possible, services may stop
What it is: Immediately after the expiration date, many TLDs offer a Grace Period. You can still renew the domain at the standard renewal price. However, your registrar may pause DNS or place the domain on hold, which can stop the website and email.
What you can do:
Common reasons for trouble:
Good to know: Renewing during Grace usually keeps the original name and configuration; no extra recovery fee is charged.
2) Redemption – recovery possible, additional fee applies
What it is: If not renewed during Grace, the domain usually moves into Redemption. The registry flags the domain for deletion, but you can still recover it by paying the standard renewal plus a redemption fee. DNS is typically disabled.
What you can do:
Common reasons for trouble:
Good to know: Once restored, your domain returns to normal active state. Enable auto-renew to prevent repeats.
3) Pending Delete – no recovery possible
What it is: After Redemption, the domain enters Pending Delete, a short final window before permanent deletion. No renewals, restores, or transfers are possible.
What you can do:
Good to know: After deletion, anyone can register the domain. No guarantee you’ll reclaim it.
Why it matters: Auto renew attempts renewal before expiry. If the first attempt fails, systems retry, but don’t rely on retries alone.
How to set it up:
Safety checklist:
Can I transfer a domain while expired?
Sometimes, transfers are possible during the Grace Period, but policies vary by registrar and TLD. In practice, the safest option is to renew first, then transfer once the domain is active to avoid delays, failures, or unexpected restrictions.
Will DNS/site return immediately after I renew?
Usually your domain starts working again after the renewal posts successfully. However, if DNS was paused/held, you may still need to allow for DNS propagation, which can take hours. If your nameservers or DNS records were changed, propagation may take longer.
What is the redemption fee?
The redemption fee is a registry recovery fee added on top of the standard renewal cost when a domain is in Redemption. The amount varies by TLD and can be significant compared to normal renewal.
Can I skip Redemption?
Not reliably. If you do not restore the domain during Redemption, it will proceed to Pending Delete and then be deleted. You can try to re-register it after deletion, but there is no guarantee you will succeed—especially for popular names that may be backordered or drop-caught.
Does the timeline always match Day 1–45 / 46–75 / 76–80?
No. Those ranges are typical for many gTLDs, but timelines vary by TLD (especially ccTLDs). Always follow the exact dates shown in your dashboard for your specific domain.
Why did auto renew fail if it was enabled?
Common reasons include an expired/blocked card, insufficient funds, billing/address mismatch, or payment verification issues. Auto-renew systems may retry, but you should update the payment method and ensure your contact email can receive renewal notices.
What happens to my email during expiry stages?
Email depends on active DNS (especially MX records). If DNS is paused (Grace) or disabled (Redemption/Pending Delete), email may fail or bounce. Some email providers may delete mailboxes after a retention window, so renew early and monitor delivery.