DEV Community

Eddie Dev
Eddie Dev

Posted on

.com vs .ai vs .io — which extension actually helps you in 2026

You can ship a great SaaS on any of them.

But .com is still the default, .ai is the sharpest positioning weapon, and .io is the dev‑tool uniform.

I’ve spent too long in the domain mines. I built NameBuddy.ai after the 10th time a “perfect” name generator cheerfully suggested domains already taken. So let’s skip the vibes and look at what actually helps you in 2026.


The only question that matters

You’re not picking a religion.

You’re answering one question:

“If a stranger sees this domain for 3 seconds on X or in the SERP, what do they instantly assume about my product?”

Your extension is a positioning primitive.

Not a ranking factor. Not a growth hack.

So let’s break it down.


.com — default, boring, and still unfairly strong

Facts first:

That size and familiarity create three real advantages:

  1. Default mental model

    When people hear “Acme,” they still try acme.com first.

    If you’re on .ai or .io, you will leak some type‑in traffic.

  2. Broad trust

    Non‑technical buyers, enterprise folks, and older demographics read .com as “real company.”

    This still matters if you’re selling into boring industries.

  3. Cheapest sanity

    Typical price: ~$10–$20/year on most registrars.Most popular TLDs

    For most indie hackers, that’s “don’t think about it” money.

When .com helps you most:

  • You’re building a general SaaS, not specifically AI or dev‑tool.
  • Your main traffic will be word of mouth and referrals.
  • You plan to sell or raise from people who live in Google Sheets, not GitHub.

In 2026, a lot of guidance still says:

“Start with .com if available; deviate only when the alternative materially strengthens your brand.”What is .com domainMost popular TLDs

That advice is boring. It’s also mostly right.


.ai — you’re declaring “this is an AI product”

Reality check:

So why pay 3–4× .com pricing?

Because for anything AI‑native, “.ai” is copywriting baked into your URL:

  • loop.ai instantly reads as “AI product.”
  • loopapp.com could be anything from a to‑do list to a fitness tracker.

In practice, .ai helps when:

  • The product is useless without AI (agents, copilots, LLM infra, etc.).
  • You’re selling to founders, engineers, or AI‑curious users who already associate .ai with legitimacy.
  • You’re early, shipping fast, and don’t want to waste days hunting a clean .com.

Market behavior backs this up: newer gTLDs like .ai, .store, .shop grew ~29.9% YoY into 2025–26, while .com + .net only grew ~2.6%.Most popular TLDsDomain name market trends

The growth and energy are in the alternatives.

Downside: if AI becomes “just plumbing,” .ai will feel less special. But in 2026, it still carries clear positioning and social proof for AI products.


.io — dev‑tool chic with an invoice

Quick reality:

Within dev and startup culture, .io means:

  • “We build tools, infra, APIs, dashboards.”
  • “We are developer‑first.”
  • “We weren’t trying to look like a bank.”

It’s especially strong when your market is developers:

  • shiplogs.io → dev‑tool or infra, no confusion.
  • Great for CLI tools, SDKs, observability, hosting, infra SaaS.

Like .ai, .io is a branding choice, not a technical one.

Functionally, Google treats .com, .ai, and .io all as generic TLDs, with no direct ranking boost for any of them.What is .com domainAI TLD infoMost popular TLDs

Any SEO advantage is indirect: click‑through rate, links, user trust.

The real tradeoff is cost and leakage:

  • Higher annual burn than .com.
  • Some users will still default to .com out of habit.

So which one “helps” you in 2026?

Here’s the blunt version:

  • If you’re building AI‑native product and your users are tech‑savvy →

    Choose .ai if you can get a short, sharp name. It earns you context in 3 characters.

  • If you’re building general SaaS, B2B workflow, or anything for normies

    Choose .com whenever you can get something not‑embarrassing. It leaks less and converts more simply because people understand it.

  • If you’re building infra, dev‑tool, API, or something only engineers touch

    .io or .ai are both strong; pick the one that matches the story:

    “Hardcore dev stack” (.io) vs “AI‑powered engine” (.ai).

And beneath all of that:

A sharp name on the “wrong” TLD beats a clunky name on the “right” one.


Pragmatic playbook for founders

Use this and move on:

  1. Search your exact brand on .com, .ai, .io.

    If you want to skip manual checks, NameBuddy.ai and similar tools can automate the verification step and kill obviously dead names fast.

  2. If exact .com is available and not terrible → buy it.

    You can still run product on .ai or .io and keep .com as your future umbrella or redirect.

  3. If .com is taken but .ai/.io are clean → decide based on positioning:

    • AI‑heavy, model‑centric → .ai
    • Dev‑tool, infra, SDK → .io
  4. Don’t overpay early.

    Spending 5k on a domain when you have 0 MRR is ego, not strategy. Get something good‑enough, ship, and you can upgrade later once you have proof of life.

  5. Remember: traffic solves naming.

    Once you have real users, they’ll Google you, not guess your TLD.

In 2026, the domain extension doesn’t make your startup — but it does whisper a story before you say a word. Choose the story on purpose.

Top comments (0)