Knowledge base article
Eligibility requirements for .au domains
View other pre-sales questions articles
Related articles
Cancel auto renewal on a domain registration
Complete a manual Change of Registrant (CoR) application for a .au domain
Other pre-sales questions articles
Can I test out your services for free?
Domain options for shared hosting
Getting Started with the Content Delivery Network (CDN)
Pointing your domain to Serversaurus
The SLA – Best effort versus 99.9% versus 100%
This article will guide you through the eligibility requirements to register and maintain a .au domain name license
Before we get started, here's some quick definitions for those new to the following references:
Eligibility Name | The entity name (ie: company name) associated with a ABN/ACN number. |
Eligibility ID | The ABN/ACN associated with a domain registration. |
Eligibility Type | The entity type associated with your ABN/ACN, for example: Company, Sole Trader, Non-profit Organisation. |
Registrant | The holder of the domain name licence. |
Registrar | The authority managing the domain registration. |
TLD | Top Level Domain (TLD) is the appended section of your domain name for example, .com, .com.au, .co. |
CoR | Change of Registrant. |
Register a .au domain
For successfully registration you must nominate an active ABN/ACN number and ABN/ACN holder which has either direct or sufficient relationship with the domain name. Upon successful registration, the ABN/ACN holder and ABN/ACN number nominated is now what is referred to as the domain registrant.
There are additional requirements which vary depending on the .au domain extension, please read AUDA's guide "About .au domain names" which explains the requirements of each available extension (for example, .com.au, .org.au or .edu.au domain extensions).
Maintain a .au domain licence
To remain eligible to hold the domain name licence during the registration period, the registrant eligibility ID (ABN/ACN) must remain valid for the period of the registration.
Be mindful The Australian Domain Authority (AUDA) requests domain registrars ensure all .au domain registrants are eligible to hold the domain. In the case the registrant eligibility is no longer valid, AUDA policy is to cancel the domain name license and delete the domain name within 30 days.
Read the full policy on the AUDA website for full disclosure of the eligibility requirements.
How do I check my Eligibility?
You can check your domain name registration details using the AUDA WHOIS service.
- Enter in the domain name
- Enter the captcha text
- In the results, scroll to the bottom section where it lists the registrant details (Registrant and Registrant ID). The entity listed as Registrant with the corresponding ID must be current.
- If you're still unsure whether the registrant is current, visit the Australian Business Register (ABR) website, enter the ABN/ACN number in the search bar, submit and then review the status declared in the results.
Reasons why a registrant is no longer eligible to hold a .au domain name licence:
- The domain name was registered using an ABN/ACN which is cancelled;
- The domain name was purchased as part of the business assets, but the registrant details were not changed;
- The name of the business or company has changed;
- The business name registration has lapsed;
- The business is operating under a new trading name or the domain name ownership has been transferred between business entities without updating the registrant details.
Changing the Domain Registrant
To change the domain registrant, a CoR application needs to be submitted to the domain registrar. Please refer to our Completing a CoR application for a .au domain guide for full instruction.
Last updated November 30, 2023