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Ends: 2nd Jul 2025 Used: 1 time
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At some point in the last decade or so, buying a domain name went from being a mildly technical task for side hustlers and hobbyists to something closer to ordering coffee. Everyone has a brand now, even if it’s just their dog’s Instagram. The tricky part isn’t registering a domain…At some point in the last decade or so, buying a domain name went from being a mildly technical task…
Ends: 2nd Jul 2025 Used: 1 time
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
At some point in the last decade or so, buying a domain name went from being a mildly technical task for side hustlers and hobbyists to something closer to ordering coffee. Everyone has a brand now, even if it’s just their dog’s Instagram. The tricky part isn’t registering a domain - it’s deciding whether you’re a .co.uk traditionalist, a .ltd aspirant, or the kind of person who unironically chooses .guru. That’s where 123 Reg hopes to guide you, albeit with a price tag that’s often less than your morning flat white.
123 Reg is currently offering .co.uk and .com domain names from £0.01 for the first year - a price that’s either worryingly cheap or suspiciously generous depending on how cynical you are before caffeine. The caveat, of course, is that this is an introductory deal. After the first year, standard renewal rates apply (usually around £10-£15 per year, depending on the extension). Still, for anyone testing the waters of online entrepreneurship, it’s a low-risk way to claim your corner of the internet.
New customers can also use the discount code SMART10 at checkout for 10% off their first purchase, which isn’t going to buy you a villa in the Algarve, but every little helps. Especially when you’re trying to look professional on a budget.
The 123 Reg Website Builder starts at £5.99 per month (currently 25% off), and includes a free domain, email address and hosting. It’s aimed squarely at users who’d rather not touch code with a ten-foot pole. Templates are clean, if a little uninspired, and the drag-and-drop interface does what it says on the tin. It won't win design awards, but it will get your site online by lunchtime.
You also get basic SEO tools and email marketing features, which are nice to have - even if most users may never actually use them. It’s a bit like buying a multi-tool and only ever using the bottle opener.
For £2.99 per month, 123 Reg’s email hosting gives you a custom address like [email protected]. It’s a small detail that makes a surprisingly big difference - especially if you’re trying to convince clients or customers that you’re not still operating out of your uni inbox. Features include access from any device, antivirus protection, and calendar tools. It’s not glamorous, but it works, and that’s more than can be said for some larger providers that shall remain nameless.
The broader suite of 123 Reg services includes standard web hosting from £3.99/month, managed WordPress hosting, and SSL certificates (starting from £5/month). There’s also Microsoft 365 from £4.99/month - if you’re the sort of person who still uses Excel for things other than passive-aggressive household budgets.
Everything is priced to appeal to small businesses and side projects, not sprawling enterprises with their own IT departments. And the platform reflects that - it’s easy to navigate, does most of what it promises, and doesn’t smother you in jargon. Just don’t expect cutting-edge tech or the sleekness of high-end competitors.
123 Reg has been around since 2000, and it shows - in both the good and the slightly creaky ways. It’s familiar, UK-based, and built with normal people in mind. The deals are real (albeit short-lived), the tools are functional, and the support is... generally responsive. If you're launching a business, portfolio, or personal site and want to avoid a full-scale digital transformation, this is a reasonably fuss-free place to start.
Just be aware that the honeymoon pricing won’t last forever, and you’ll need to keep an eye on what you’re renewing - or you might suddenly find yourself paying £12 a year for a .info domain you registered for a joke.
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⭐ Rating: 4.3 / 5 (38 votes)