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Why .Pay Is a Critical New Domain for Brand Owners in Payments, Fintech, and Financial Services

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) is rolling out a new generic top-level domain (gTLD): .pay. Marketed by the registry as an extension dedicated to enabling secure online payment transactions, .pay is positioned to become a high-value namespace for any business that accepts, processes, or facilitates payments online.

The word “pay” already appears in a disproportionate share of phishing and fraud-oriented domain names. Because .pay will not initially be covered by the major domain blocking services (such as GlobalBlock or AdultBlock), brand owners cannot rely on a defensive blocking subscription to keep bad actors from registering [brand].pay. Securing the name during the priority registration windows is, for many companies, the only practical option.

If your brand is associated with payments or any other financial service (or simply takes payments through a website or app) you should evaluate now whether to secure your core marks in the .pay domain.

Who Should Register a .Pay Domain

  • Banks, credit unions, and other deposit institutions
  • Payment processors, acquirers, gateways, and card networks
  • Fintech companies, neobanks, and digital wallet providers
  • Cryptocurrency exchanges, custodians, and stablecoin issuers
  • E-commerce, marketplace, and retail brands that accept online payments
  • Insurers, lenders, and consumer finance companies
  • Subscription, SaaS, and platform businesses with recurring billing
  • Charities and nonprofits that solicit online donations

The Launch Schedule

The .pay registry is following the standard ICANN phased rollout. The current schedule is:

Phase

Dates

Who Can Register

Sunrise

April 13, 2026–May 13, 2026

Holders of marks validated with the Trademark Clearinghouse (TMCH)

Limited Registration Period

May 13, 2026–February 1, 2027

Registrants conducting online payment transactions through an approved payment service provider or third-party payment processor

General Availability

To be announced (2027)

Open to the public on a first-come, first-served basis

 

Eligibility for the limited registration period (LRP) is restricted to entities that actually conduct online payment transactions through an approved payment service provider or third-party payment processor. Companies that do not qualify under the LRP criteria, and that miss the sunrise phase, will have to wait for the general availability phase.

What You Should Do Now

  • Identify priority marks. Inventory the brands, product names, and house marks for which a [brand].pay registration would be valuable from a brand protection or commercial use perspective.
  • Confirm TMCH validation. Sunrise eligibility requires a current TMCH Marks that are not yet TMCH-validated should be submitted as soon as possible to participate in the sunrise phase window closing May 13, 2026.
  • Assess LRP eligibility. If your business accepts online payments through a recognized provider, you may qualify to register additional marks during the LRP phase without TMCH validation.
  • Build a watch list. Because .pay is not covered by the major blocking services, ongoing monitoring and an enforcement plan using the Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution Policy (UDRP) and Uniform Rapid Suspension (URS) should be put in place for variants and typosquats that you do not register defensively.
  • Budget. Standard .pay registration fees are reported at approximately $50 per domain per year, exclusive of registrar and sunrise phase application fees. Premium names may carry significantly higher pricing.

How We Can Help

Our Intellectual Property, Data, and Technology Practice regularly counsels clients on new gTLD launches, domain portfolio strategy, TMCH submissions, defensive registrations, and enforcement against cybersquatters and fraudsters via UDRP, URS, and the federal Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act. Contact us to audit your existing trademark portfolio against the .pay namespace and recommend a registration strategy.

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