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Check a domain's age, reputation and whether it's alive — in 5 seconds

This tool pulls a domain's real age via RDAP/whois: registration date, how many days and years old it is, the registrar, the expiry date and status. In parallel it checks domain reputation (malware/phishing) via Cloudflare's threat resolver — if the domain is blocked there, someone already burned it. As a third step it checks whether the domain resolves at all: is it alive, or dead/parked? It's all free, no signup, no limits. Before you send traffic to a drop or a fresh domain, run it here and don't waste budget on a burned one.

How it works

  1. Paste the domain — no https://, just example.com.
  2. The tool pulls the age via RDAP/whois, checks reputation (malware/phishing) via Cloudflare's threat resolver, and checks whether it's alive.
  3. Read the verdict — clean, risky or dangerous — and decide: run it, let it age, or drop it.

Why it matters

If the domain is burned in Cloudflare's reputation or too fresh for your geo, don't fight moderation. Order a ready-made white-cover page on a clean domain from WhiteLands and run traffic in peace.

FAQ

What does it mean if a domain has bad reputation / is flagged?
Cloudflare's threat resolver blocks domains seen in malware or phishing. If your domain is blocked there, someone already used it for something dirty and it got remembered. Running traffic on it is money down the drain: FB, Google and TikTok moderation watch reputation, antivirus and browsers cut your clicks, and your conversion craters. It's easier to grab another domain than to scrub this one.
How old should a domain be before running ads?
There's no hard rule, but a fresh domain (under 1–2 months) stays under moderation's suspicion — it has no history and is easier to kill at launch. A comfortable aging period is at least a few weeks, ideally a domain over a year old. Age alone is no guarantee, though: look at both the age and the Cloudflare reputation, not just one.
My domain is flagged — how do I clean it / get delisted?
First remove the cause: strip out malware/redirects, close the holes, stop whatever tripped it. Then file for delisting wherever the domain is flagged — many reputation services (for example Spamhaus or SURBL) have a lookup and removal-request form. The process is slow and offers no guarantees. Often it's cheaper and faster to just move to a fresh clean domain than to grind out a delisting for months.
Can you trust the age from RDAP/whois? (a dropped domain can be old by registration but dirty by history)
RDAP/whois returns the registration date accurately — it's the registrar's official record. But age doesn't equal cleanliness: a drop can be old by registration yet dirty by history, because someone ran something on it before you. So look at the age and the Cloudflare reputation together, not separately.

If the domain is burned in Cloudflare's reputation or too fresh for your geo, don't fight moderation. Order a ready-made white-cover page on a clean domain from WhiteLands and run traffic in peace.

Order a white page →