.ca Domain Name

With nearly three-quarters of Canadians active on the Internet, there’s never been a better time to register a .CA domain name. .CA is the country code Top Level Domain (ccTLD) for individuals, businesses, and groups located in Canada. Use yours to create an email address or Web site with a Canadian flair. Web site builder, email, photo album, blogcast, and more FREE with every .CA registration!

To be eligible for a .CA, you must be a Canadian citizen; permanent resident; Canadian corporation; registered trust or partnership; or an unincorporated association based in Canada.
NOTE: Providing incorrect or invalid registrant information may delay your .CA registration or forfeit your domain.

.ca is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Canada. Registrants of .ca domains must meet Canadian Presence Requirements as defined by the registry. Examples of valid entities include:

  • a Canadian citizenof the age of majority,

  • a permanent resident of Canada,
  • a legally recognized Canadian organization,
  • an Inuit, First Nation, Métis or other people indigenous to Canada,

  • an Indian Band as defined in the Indian Act of Canada,
  • a foreign resident of Canada that holds a registered Canadian trademark,
  • An executor, administrator or other legal representative of a person or organization that meets the requirements,
  • a division of the government,
  • Queen Elizabeth II in her capacity as head of state of Canada

Registrants can either register domains at the second level (e.g. example.ca) or at the third level in one of the geographic second-level domains defined by the registry (e.g. example.ab.ca).

History

The domain name was originally allocated by Jon Postel, operator of Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), to John Demcoof the University of British Columbia (UBC) in 1988.

In 1997, at the Canadian annual Internet conference in Halifax, Nova Scotia, the Canadian Internet community, with a view to liberalize registration procedures and substantially improve turnaround times, decided to undertake reform of the .ca Registry.

The Canadian Internet Registration Authority (CIRA) is a non-profit Canadian corporation that is responsible for operating the .ca Internet country code Top Level Domain (ccTLD) today. It assumed operation of the .ca ccTLD on 1 December 2000from UBC. On April 15, 2008, CIRA have registered its one millionth .ca Internet domain name.

Any .ca registration has to be ordered via a certified registrar.

Second-level domains

UBC’s registry operations once favoured fourth-level names (such as city.toronto.on.ca) for purely-local entities or third-level names for entities operating solely within one province. Federally incorporated companies could have a .ca domain, while provincially incorporated companies required the letters of their province, like .mb.ca. Only an entity with presence in two or more provinces was typically registered directly under .ca; this complex structure (and the long delays in getting .ca registration) caused many Canadian entities to favour the .com, .org and .net registrations, despite the then-higher cost.

Currently, any of the above listed parties can register a domain with a name of their choosing followed directly by .ca, with the following second-level domains existing primarily as a historical artifact from the time before CIRA managed the .ca domain:

  • .ab.ca — Alberta
  • .bc.ca — British Columbia
  • .mb.ca — Manitoba
  • .nb.ca — New Brunswick
  • .nf.ca — Newfoundland (no longer accepting new registrations, replaced by .nl.ca)
  • .nl.ca — Newfoundland and Labrador
  • .ns.ca — Nova Scotia
  • .nt.ca — Northwest Territories
  • .nu.ca — Nunavut
  • .on.ca — Ontario
  • .pe.ca — Prince Edward Island
  • .qc.ca — Quebec
  • .sk.ca — Saskatchewan
  • .yk.ca — Yukon

The second-level domain name ‘.gc.ca’ is commonly mistaken as one of the regional domains under which CIRA will allow Government of Canada registrations. gc.ca is actually a standard domain like all other .ca domain names. CIRA does not register domain names under .gc.ca directly.

The .mil.ca second-level domain name is also a standard domain and is registered to the Department of National Defence (DND). The .mil.ca suffix is used internally by DND on its intranet, the Defence Information Network (DIN) or Defence Wide Area Network (DWAN), to distinguish intranet-only websites.

Naming restrictions

In preparation for the implementation of internationalized domain names (IDN), domain names that begin with the four characters xn-- are not available for registration.

Names which match the name of an existing top-level domain, such as com.ca or ca.ca, are reserved and therefore not available for new registrations. Certain expletives are not accepted as names. Municipal names of individual cities and localities within Canada are also reserved nationwide although, oddly, all of these names are also reserved both at second and third level. However, entities with existing registrations (such as St. Lawrence College’s sl.on.ca) are able to retain them. There are a handful of existing .ca registered names as short as two characters in length, but these tend to be rare as many two-letter combinations match the names of existing country-code TLDs.

Names which exist at any of the levels (.ca or an individual province or territory) are blocked in their availability elsewhere in the .ca hierarchy. Registration, if it can be done at all, requires manual intervention by the prospective registrar and the permission of all existing registrant(s) must be obtained by CIRA. For instance, if the province of New Brunswick were to want to register “gouv.nb.ca”, CIRA’s normal automated WHOIS and registration tools would simply return the following error:

The domain name provided conflicts with at least one other registered domain name (e.g. xyz.ca conflicts with xyz.on.ca). Registering this domain name requires permission from the Registrant(s) that already holds the domain name(s): gouv.on.ca, gouv.pe.ca, gouv.qc.ca. Contact CIRA for more information.

Since Ontario, PEI and Québec already use “gouv” on their provincial second-level domains for the French-language versions of their government websites, this domain is unavailable through the normal registration process. However, with the agreement of these three parties New Brunswick would indeed be able to register and use gouv.nb.ca.

Expired domains

After a thirty-day redemption period, intended to provide the original registrant one final chance to reclaim a suspended name, the expired names are assigned a to-be-released (TBR) status. These names are made available through a weekly auction process, in which lists of available names are posted online and advance bids are placed by prospective registrants through the various .ca registrars.

Domains which receive no bids are then released and made openly available for new registrations.

Register or Transfer

.ca Domain Names are available for registration or transfer from:

Overview

.CA is one of a special category of Top-Level Domains called country code Top-Level Domains (ccTLDs). There are more than one million .CA domain names currently registered.

  • Business. Speak directly to the 450,000 Canadians who order goods and services online with a domain name they recognize and trust, and protect your Canadian brand from competitors.
  • Individuals. Create a patriotic email address or launch a blog site that has Canada written all over it.
  • Not for profit. Reach out with a Web site address that identifies your organization with Canadian values.
  • Available to Canadian citizens and businesses, organizations and community groups located in Canada.

How .ca Registrations Work?

To register a .CA domain, here’s all you do:

  • Check the availability of your .CA domain name by typing the name you want into the domain search box at RuchieDomains.com.
  • Select a domain name from the available options.
  • Specify your preferred language, registrant name and legal type.
  • Complete your registration.
  • Receive an email from CIRA directing you to www.CIRA.CA where you will validate your registrant information (new registrants only).
  • Once your account is approved by CIRA, you can log in to your Account Manager on RuchieDomains.com to manage your new .CA domain name.

Facts

FREE with every domain purchase:

  • Photo Album
  • Quick Blogcast
  • Hosting with Web site builder
  • Personalized Email Account
  • Starter Web Page
  • “For Sale” Parked Page
  • Domain Forwarding
  • Domain Masking
  • 100-Pack Email Forwarding
  • Total DNS Control
  • Change of Registration
  • Status Alerts
  • Domain Locking
  • Learn More…

Domain Services

Private Registrations

Protect yourself from spam, scams, prying eyes and worse.

Transfers

Fast, automated and risk-free. Transfer your domains to RuchieDomains.com. Includes a 1-year extension.

Backorders

Monitor vital changes to any domain. And secure your chance to backorder that domain at special savings. From $5.99/yr

Special Bulk Pricing

If you are registering or transferring multiple domain names at once you can get special bulk pricing!

Internationalized Domain Names (IDN)

With our Internationalized Domain Names search capabilities, you can register .COM and .NET domain names in over 100 native languages (non-ASCII characters) such as Chinese, Japanese and Arabic.

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