Luxembourg-Based and Built for European Business
Founded in 2002 in Luxembourg, EuroDNS positioned itself from the start as a registrar built for businesses needing professional-grade domain services across multiple European countries. The Luxembourg jurisdiction gives the company access to favorable corporate law and EU market integration; the small-country headquarters limits the company to commercial customers rather than retail-focused growth. EuroDNS is ICANN-accredited and holds direct accreditations with most European ccTLD registries — the technical layer most US-based registrars resell through intermediaries. The customer base skews heavily toward law firms, multinational corporations, and brand-protection agencies handling international trademark portfolios.
Built for Multi-Country European Registrations
For a US-based startup launching in Germany, France, and the Netherlands simultaneously, the standard approach involves three different registrars, three different invoicing currencies, three different support contacts, and three different DNS-management interfaces. EuroDNS consolidates all of that into a single account: register .de, .fr, and .nl from one dashboard, manage DNS for all three with the same tools, and receive consolidated invoicing. The 907 TLDs supported include essentially every European ccTLD plus most major non-European ones; the cheapest entry point is .digital at $3.37. For domain-only single-country customers, this consolidation isn't worth the premium pricing it commands.
Where European ccTLDs Pay for Themselves
At $12.39 for a .com registration with $23.67 renewal, EuroDNS sits in the premium pricing tier — well above NameSilo or Cloudflare on the standard gTLDs. The premium math doesn't work on .com alone, but it does work on European ccTLDs where EuroDNS's registry connections and consolidated management substantially reduce administrative overhead. A multinational managing fifty European ccTLDs will save more on staff time than the per-domain premium costs in registration fees. For customers buying a single .com, our comparison tool makes the price gap against budget alternatives obvious.
Why Multinationals End Up Here
The typical EuroDNS customer is a corporate brand-protection team or an international law firm managing domain portfolios spanning a dozen or more European countries. Brand-protection registrations — defensive holdings that prevent typosquatters and competitors from acquiring brand-adjacent domains — are particularly common, since EuroDNS can register obscure ccTLDs that specialist registrars in those countries handle with less English-language support. Smaller agencies handling a few client portfolios also use EuroDNS for the consolidation benefits, while individual domain investors typically don't because the pricing doesn't make sense at single-domain scale. For domain-only single-country customers, Namecheap, Porkbun, or INWX (which handles many of the same European ccTLDs at lower per-domain cost) are typically better matches.