A Madrid Registrar for Spanish-Speaking Customers
Headquartered in Madrid, MrDomain operates as the Spanish-market consumer brand under Italy's Dada Register Group, with native Spanish-language interface, support, and documentation. The customer base skews heavily toward small businesses in Spain, individuals registering personal sites, and Latin American customers who prefer Spanish-language registrar interactions over Spanish-translated American registrar interfaces. The Spanish-language depth matters: while Cloudflare and Namecheap offer Spanish translations, MrDomain's Spanish is native rather than translated, and the cultural defaults (calendar formats, address structures, regional shipping assumptions) align with what Spanish customers expect.
A Domain Brand With Italian Parents
MrDomain sits inside the Register Group, the consumer brand portfolio of Dada SpA — an Italian internet company that built a portfolio of European domain and hosting brands across the 2000s and 2010s. The Italian ownership doesn't substantially change the customer experience for Spanish-market customers; the brand operates with substantial independence, the support team is in Madrid, and the pricing is in euros. The structural detail matters mainly for compliance and corporate concerns: MrDomain is part of an EU-headquartered group, with GDPR compliance built into the data-handling structure rather than retrofitted onto a US-based parent's policies.
Spain First, Latin America Second
At $18.66 for a .com registration with $18.66 renewal, MrDomain sits in the mid-range pricing tier — competitive within the Spanish market but uncompetitive against budget-focused English-language registrars on the global gTLDs. The 850 TLDs supported include .es (Spain's ccTLD, where MrDomain has direct registry relationships), Latin American country-code TLDs the Spanish market needs (.com.mx, .com.ar), and standard gTLDs at standard pricing. The cheapest entry point is .bond at $2.78. For a Spanish customer registering a .es alongside a hosting account, MrDomain's domestic presence offers convenience that doesn't translate into lower per-domain pricing.
Why English-Speaking Customers Don't End Up Here
For US, UK, or other English-language customers comparing registrars on price alone, MrDomain's pricing isn't competitive — NameSilo or Porkbun deliver the same .com registration at lower cost without any meaningful trade-off for an English-speaking customer. MrDomain's entire pitch is the Spanish-language native experience, and that pitch evaporates for customers who'd be using machine-translated documentation anyway. For Spanish-speaking customers who want a domain registered correctly the first time with support staff who understand the question without translation friction, MrDomain is one option; Marcaria is another (US-based but with similar Latin American specialty), and our comparison tool shows where MrDomain's premium produces editorial value versus where it doesn't.