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Posted on • Originally published at devtoolpicks.com

Namecheap vs Porkbun vs Cloudflare Registrar vs GoDaddy for Indie Hackers in 2026

Originally published at devtoolpicks.com


GoDaddy changed its Terms of Service in February 2026 and reclassified all 21 million customers as "Business Customers." That change stripped EU and UK consumer protections that previously applied to individual users and added mandatory arbitration clauses. Multiple independent registrar review sites now explicitly say they no longer recommend it.

This makes the domain registrar decision more clear-cut than it has ever been. Three genuinely good options remain: Cloudflare for cheapest renewal, Porkbun for the best all-round experience, and Namecheap for lowest first-year cost.

Here is the full comparison.

Quick Verdict

Registrar .com First Year .com Renewal WHOIS Privacy SSL
Cloudflare Registrar $10.44 $10.44 Free Free (Let's Encrypt)
Porkbun $11.06 $11.06 Free Free
Namecheap $5.98 $13.98 Free Free (Let's Encrypt)
GoDaddy $2-5 (promo) $21.99 Paid extra Paid extra

The cost difference compounds fast. On a single .com domain over 10 years:

  • Cloudflare: $104.40
  • Porkbun: $110.60
  • Namecheap: $131.80 ($5.98 first year + $13.98 × 9 renewals)
  • GoDaddy: $199.92 ($2 first year + $21.99 × 9 renewals, before adding WHOIS privacy)

That is a $95 difference between Cloudflare and GoDaddy on a single domain. Multiply by 10 domains and the math becomes obvious.

Cloudflare Registrar

Cloudflare charges at cost. The wholesale price for a .com is $10.26 (Verisign) plus the $0.18 ICANN fee, totaling $10.44. Cloudflare adds exactly zero markup. That first-year price is also the renewal price, forever.

What Cloudflare does well:

Pricing transparency is unmatched. You will pay exactly $10.44 per .com per year with no surprises. The DNS infrastructure is Cloudflare's core product. Registering your domain here means your DNS resolves through the fastest, most reliable DNS network in the world. DNSSEC, CAA records, and advanced DNS record types come included without extra configuration or fees.

For developers, the Cloudflare dashboard is genuinely useful. All your DNS records, SSL certificates, page rules, and domain management sit in one place. If you are already using Cloudflare CDN or Workers, consolidating your domain here removes an integration step.

WHOIS privacy is included free on all domains.

What Cloudflare does not do well:

Cloudflare does not sell domains for new registrations on all TLDs. You have to transfer an existing domain in from another registrar. Some less common TLDs are not supported at all. The interface assumes you know what DNS records are. There is no hand-holding for beginners.

Cloudflare also requires you to use Cloudflare's nameservers. If you want to manage DNS entirely elsewhere, Cloudflare Registrar is not the right choice.

Who should use Cloudflare Registrar: You already use Cloudflare or plan to. You want the absolute lowest renewal price. You are comfortable with DNS configuration. You are in the EU and want a registrar whose services comply with consumer protection standards (Cloudflare was unaffected by the GoDaddy ToS issue).

Who should NOT use Cloudflare Registrar: You want to register a brand-new domain without transferring first. You need a registrar-agnostic DNS setup where you control nameservers independently. You are a beginner who wants a simple guided experience.

Porkbun

Porkbun is an ICANN-accredited registrar operating since 2010 with over 2 million domains under management. The name is unusual by design. The pricing is not.

At $11.06 per year for a .com, Porkbun is only $0.62 more than Cloudflare and comes with a better interface, more TLD support, and fewer dependencies. The price for new registrations equals the renewal price equals the transfer price. No promotional tricks.

What Porkbun does well:

Free SSL certificates are bundled with every domain, not just pointed to Let's Encrypt separately. WHOIS privacy is free. The dashboard is clean and navigates intuitively. For a developer registering their third or tenth domain, Porkbun does not require learning a new system. It behaves like you expect a domain registrar to behave.

TLD support is broad. Porkbun covers the major TLDs and a wide range of niche extensions including .app, .dev, .io, .ai, and hundreds more, all at competitive pricing. If you register multiple domains across different extensions, Porkbun handles them in one place without surprise pricing on the less common ones.

Customer support has a strong reputation specifically among indie hackers and developers. Unlike GoDaddy and Namecheap, Porkbun does not optimize the checkout process for upsells.

What Porkbun does not do well:

Porkbun's DNS tooling is not as powerful as Cloudflare's. If you need Cloudflare-level DDoS protection, CDN, or Workers at the registrar level, you would still need to integrate with Cloudflare separately. The Porkbun API exists and is functional, but is less mature than Cloudflare's for programmatic domain management at scale.

Who should use Porkbun: You want the simplest path to a domain at a fair price with no renewals surprises. You want one registrar for many different TLDs. You are a developer who registers a few domains per year and wants a registrar that does not fight you.

Who should NOT use Porkbun: You need enterprise-grade DNS and DDoS protection baked into the registrar. You register hundreds of domains per month programmatically and need the most mature API available.

Namecheap

Namecheap's first-year .com price of $5.98 is the lowest of the four. The renewal at $13.98 is where the comparison changes. Over time, that $8 annual increase per domain adds up compared to Cloudflare or Porkbun.

What Namecheap does well:

The $5.98 first-year price is legitimately useful if you register domains speculatively or want to park a name while validating an idea. You are not committing to a $10+ annual payment until you know whether the domain is worth keeping. If you kill the project after year one, you spent $5.98 not $11.

WHOIS privacy (WhoisGuard) is free and included on every domain. The dashboard is well-documented and beginner-friendly. Namecheap supports a wide range of TLDs and has been operating since 2000 with a long reliability track record.

The API is mature and supports programmatic domain management, which makes Namecheap the default for agencies or developers managing large domain portfolios via automation.

What Namecheap does not do well:

The renewal hike from $5.98 to $13.98 is a significant percentage increase and catches first-time buyers off guard. It is still well below GoDaddy's $21.99, but it makes Namecheap more expensive than both Cloudflare and Porkbun over a three-year horizon. DNS management is competent but slower than Cloudflare's infrastructure.

Who should use Namecheap: You register domains to test ideas and often do not renew them. You want the lowest first-year cost with a safety net of deleting non-keepers. You value a mature, well-documented dashboard with strong API access.

Who should NOT use Namecheap: You keep domains for more than two years and want predictable flat pricing. You want the absolute lowest long-term cost.

GoDaddy

GoDaddy remains the largest domain registrar in the world by market share. For indie hackers, that is no longer a reason to use it.

The February 2026 ToS change: GoDaddy updated its Terms of Service to reclassify all 21 million customers globally as "Business Customers." For individual users in the EU, UK, and other jurisdictions with strong consumer protection laws, this classification strips access to statutory consumer protections that previously applied, including the right to cancel under EU consumer regulations, mandatory dispute resolution through local courts, and specific data rights under consumer law. The ToS also added mandatory arbitration clauses that limit individual legal recourse.

Multiple independent domain registrar review sites, including DomainDetails, now explicitly state they no longer recommend GoDaddy as a result of this change.

.com renewal at $21.99: Even before the ToS issue, GoDaddy's renewal pricing was the most expensive of the four. At $21.99 per year versus Cloudflare's $10.44, you pay an $11.55 annual premium per domain. The first-year promotional pricing ($2-5) exists to acquire customers who then face the full renewal cost.

WHOIS privacy costs extra. SSL certificates for business plans cost extra. Checkout consistently presents upsells for add-ons most developers do not need.

Who should use GoDaddy: At this point, the main reason to stay is migration inertia. You have many domains already registered and the transfer cost and friction outweighs the annual savings. If that describes you, it is worth running the math on whether transferring to Cloudflare or Porkbun pays back within 12 months. For most portfolios it does.

Who should NOT use GoDaddy: Anyone registering a new domain today. The pricing is the highest of the four, the ToS change is a real concern for EU-based founders, and the alternatives are straightforwardly better.

How to Choose

Lowest long-term cost: Cloudflare Registrar at $10.44/year. No markup, no surprises.

Best all-round experience: Porkbun at $11.06/year. The slightly higher price gets you a better interface, free SSL, and no DNS lock-in.

Lowest first-year cost: Namecheap at $5.98 for year one. Good for domains you are testing. Switch to Cloudflare or Porkbun on renewal if you plan to keep them.

Avoid: GoDaddy. The renewal cost is highest, the February 2026 ToS change is a real issue for EU founders, and the alternatives are cheaper and less friction-heavy.

For a broader list of domain registrar options including bulk-buying tools and reseller programs, the Best Domain Registrars for Indie Hackers post covers more alternatives in depth.

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