Yes, you can change the main domain name associated with your hosting account. To request the main domain change, go to the Product List in the Namecheap account. Also, you can contact our Hosting Support team or submit a Ticket form.
To transfer your domain name to another registrant, you can initiate a change of registrant by contacting your current registrar. Your registrar will then ask for your confirmation via a secure mechanism (which typically will take the form of an email to the registered name holder).
How to Transfer a Domain Name for FREE!(Step by Step)
- Bluehost. Bluehost is one of best web hosting services that offers free domain transfers to their customers.
- iPage. iPage is an excellent option for hosting your websites.
- InMotion. InMotion is a great web hosting service provider that lets you transfer your domain name from its Account Management Panel.
- Hostinger.
Let's recap the four steps you'll need to follow if you want to transfer your domain name to a new host:
- Remove your domain lock and get an authorization code.
- Initiate a transfer with your new host.
- Verify the transfer.
- Pay for your transfer and wait for the process to complete.
Transfer a domain name to another person
- Disable WHOIS/domain privacy.
- Ensure admin email is up-to-date.
- Unlock the domain.
- Get the transfer authorization code.
- Request a domain transfer.
- Approve transfer request email.
Point Your Domain to BluehostFirst of all, log in to your Namecheap account. On your dashboard, you'll see a list of your domain names. Click the Manage button beside the domain you want to point to Bluehost. In the Nameservers section, select Custom and tell Namecheap to use the Bluehost nameservers.
As it can be reversed by the registrar, some will allow this to be done almost immediately. Most transfers take no longer than 2-3 days; 5 days is already a stretch signaling some kind of problem with the transfer, while 7 days means the transfer got screwed up and the provider must be contacted.
If the status is Transfer Submitted, your transfer is progressing smoothly and the domain will automatically be transferred to your account in 5-6 days. To expedite the transfer, you will need to contact the losing registrar and ask them to approve the transfer.
You can check the status of your transfer using the steps below:
- Sign in to Google Domains.
- Under Pending domains, select the domain name to see more details. If the transfer is approved, you see a message with a green banner. If the transfer is unsuccessful, you see a message with a red banner.
If you use a third party to host your website and email, they should not be affected by the domain name transfer. If you host your website and email with your registrar, they may be affected. Some registrars will only host your website or email if you register a domain with them.
Your transferred domain will then appear in your control panel within 7-10 days. Please allow up to 48 hours for your email to arrive. These emails (and the website they direct you to) will take a different format from your usual 123 Reg emails.
At GoDaddy, Domain transfers are charged per name at a flat fee, so you'll pay nothing beyond this initial cost and ICANN registration, where appropriate. We also let you keep any time left on your current registrations — and throw in a free year of registration for each transfer*.
How to transfer your domain without interruption to your email or website
- Step 1: Purchase a transfer.
- Step 2: Edit the DNS records.
- Step 3: Make sure you can resolve DNS for your old name servers and your new ones.
- Step 4: Update the name servers at your old registrar.
- Step 5: Click the transfer approval link.
Generally, no. It's important to understand that the domain only references a nameserver; the DNS records aren't actually stored with the domain registration at all.
You can add DNS Hosting before transferring the domain. godaddy.com/help/add-dns-hosting-20165? Also you can check with your current registrar if you can manually approve the transfer after it's been initiated, if so the transfer can take a few hours instead of a few days.
Public nameservers are what identifies a certain web hosting server to the other computer that are trying to access content on that server. Nameservers would only be changed if the website was being moved to a different hosting provider. Either way, a change in nameservers means relocation of a website to another host.
- Before you begin.
- Step 1: Create a managed zone.
- Step 2: Export your DNS configuration from your existing provider.
- Step 3: Import the record set.
- Step 4: Verify DNS propagation.
- Step 5: Update your registrar's name server records.
- Step 6: Wait for changes and then verify.
- What's next.
Moving a master DNS name server to a different system
- Create a new DNS server.
- Import zone database files.
- Update the SOA and NS records in the zone files on the new DNS server.
- Start the new DNS server.
There are several reasons why you may not be able to transfer your domain: The domain is in "Registrar Lock" status. Registrar lock helps ensure that your domain is not transferred away by someone else. Please unlock your domain before attempting to continue the domain transfer.
Under the existing transfer policy, if you transfer a domain, it will be locked for 60 days. This is an ICANN policy so it affects all accredited registrars and domains—and is not specific to only Name.com. If you opt out you do NOT have to wait 60 days before you can transfer the domain.
60-Day Lock After Change of RegistrantAfter 1 December 2016, registrars must impose a lock that will prevent any transfer to another registrar for sixty (60) days following a change to a registrant's information.
Use WhoIs lookup anytime you want to perform a search to see who owns a domain name, how many pages from a site are listed with Google or even search WhoIs address listings for a website's owner.
A transfer lock is sometimes called a registrar lock or even a domain lock. In essence, the transfer lock is a way to prevent your domain from getting stolen or deleted. Just about every domain can be protected using the transfer lock, but there a few TLDs that use a different mechanism to lock a domain.
Process to transfer domain name from Go Daddy to Net4
- Make sure the domain name is registered 60 prior to the date of transfer.
- Make No domain name is not within 60 days of last transfer.
- The domain name is not in “Transfer Prohibited” Status.
- Domain status should be Ok OR Un-Locked.