Filter for pageviews
Start with a traffic or pageview filter to remove domains with no visible activity. This creates a smaller list worth checking manually.
Check whether the name explains the traffic
A domain with traffic should make sense. If the domain name, previous website, and current traffic signal do not match, investigate more carefully.
Review old content and backlinks
Traffic can come from old pages and links. Use history and backlink tools to understand where interest may be coming from and whether it is still relevant.
Avoid misleading traffic
Some traffic signals can be temporary, bot-driven, or unrelated. Be cautious with strange names, adult/spam history, and domains with no visible reason for visits.
Match traffic to a business use
Traffic is only useful if you can turn it into attention, leads, content visits, or brand value. Choose domains where the audience could match your project.
FAQ
Do pageviews mean guaranteed visitors after purchase?
No. Pageviews are a research signal, not a guarantee.
Are traffic domains better than aged domains?
Not always. Aged domains can be valuable too, but traffic adds another signal to investigate.
What should I check after finding a traffic domain?
Check archive history, search results, backlinks, pricing, and whether the domain fits a real project.
Find domains using live filters
Use the live ExpiredDomains.net table to compare traffic, age, bids, price, valuation and ending time.
Open domain search