Free Domain Name Picker
Find the perfect domain name for your lawn care or landscaping business. Generate SEO-friendly ideas like CityLawnCare.com or CityLandscaping.com that help you rank in local search results.
Use your city, suburb, or region name
For brandable domain options that aren't tied to location
Quick Guide: Picking a Great Domain
Do This
- •Include your city — helps with local SEO and tells customers where you operate
- •Use industry keywords — lawn, landscaping, turf, yard, green
- •Keep it short — under 20 characters is ideal
- •Make it speakable — can you say it over the phone without spelling?
- •Stick to .com — still the most trusted and memorable
Avoid This
- •Hyphens — hard to say ("is it dash or hyphen?")
- •Numbers — confusing ("4" or "four"?)
- •Creative spellings — lawn4u, gr8lawns, etc.
- •Limiting names — "Joe's Mowing" boxes you in if you expand services
- •Obscure TLDs — .xyz, .biz look spammy to customers
Pro Tip
Don't overthink it. A "good enough" domain today beats the "perfect" domain next month. Your execution matters more than your name. Pick one that works and start getting customers.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about choosing a domain for your lawn care business
Yes, including your city or service area in your domain is highly recommended. It helps with local SEO (showing up in Google searches for 'lawn care in [city]'), immediately tells customers where you operate, and builds local trust. Examples: DallasLawnCare.com, AtlantaLandscaping.com.
While other extensions like .co or .lawn exist, .com remains the most trusted and memorable. Customers instinctively type .com, and it conveys professionalism. If your ideal .com is taken, try adding 'pro', 'services', or your city name rather than switching to a less common extension.
Aim for under 20 characters if possible. Shorter domains are easier to remember, type, and fit on business cards and truck wraps. However, clarity beats brevity—'DallasLawnCare.com' is better than 'DLC.com' because it's immediately clear what the business does.
Avoid both. Hyphens are hard to communicate verbally ('Is that a dash or a hyphen?'), and numbers cause confusion ('Is it 4 or four?'). Stick to letters only for a domain that's easy to say over the phone or tell a neighbor.
Try variations: add 'pro', 'services', 'co', or your specific service area. For example, if DallasLawnCare.com is taken, try DallasLawnPros.com, NorthDallasLawnCare.com, or DallasYardCare.com. Don't settle for a completely different extension or add hyphens.
Technically yes, but it's not ideal. Changing domains means losing any SEO authority you've built, updating all marketing materials, and potentially confusing existing customers. It's worth spending extra time upfront to choose a domain you can grow with.
Ideally yes, but it's not required. If your business is 'Smith's Lawn Care LLC' but SmithsLawnCare.com is taken, SmithLawnCare.com or SmithLawnPros.com work fine. The key is that customers can find you and the domain feels professional.
Popular registrars include Namecheap, GoDaddy, Google Domains, and Cloudflare. Prices are typically $10-15/year for a .com. Avoid premium 'aftermarket' domains that cost hundreds or thousands unless you have a strong brand reason.
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