A domain is your website's address, the words people type to reach you, like yourbusiness.com.au. You do not strictly need one to test a site, but you need one to look real: a professional address builds trust, carries your email, and stays yours even if you change hosts or builders later.
Information current as at 5 July 2026
Every AI builder hands you a free web address to start, usually a long one with the builder's name in it. It works, but it quietly tells everyone your site is a hobby. A domain is how you stop looking like a test and start looking like a business.
Behind every website is a numeric address called an IP address, a string of digits no one could remember. A domain is a friendly name that maps to that number, so people type words instead of digits. When someone enters your domain, the internet quietly looks up which server it points to and loads your site. You are effectively renting a unique name and telling the world's address book where to send anyone who asks for it. You do not own it forever, you hold it on an annual registration, which is why keeping it renewed matters as much as buying it in the first place.
For a weekend of testing, no: the free builder address is fine. For anything a customer will see, yes. Three reasons. First, trust: people hesitate to buy from, or hand details to, a site living at a random builder URL. Second, email: a domain lets you have you@yourbusiness.com.au instead of a personal gmail, which again reads as a real business. Third, and most important, ownership and portability: your domain is yours, so if you outgrow the builder you started on, you keep your address and your visitors follow you. The free URL disappears the day you leave.
If you have made something and it needs to become real, send it over. We will tell you honestly what it needs to be live, safe and yours, whether that is a quick fix you can do or a proper build. No obligation.
For an Australian business, .com.au is usually the right call: it signals you are local and it hard-targets Australian search, which is where your customers are. It requires an ABN or ACN, which most businesses have. A plain .com is the global default and fine if you sell worldwide or cannot get .com.au. Avoid the cheap novelty endings for a serious business; they can read as spammy and some email systems treat them with suspicion. Pick something short, easy to say aloud, and hard to misspell, because you will be reading it down the phone for years.
This is the part people get wrong. Buy the domain in your own account with a reputable registrar, using your own email and card, not through a builder's "we will handle the domain for you" convenience option. When the domain sits in an account you control, you can move hosts, change builders, or hire help without begging anyone to release your address. Note the renewal date, turn on auto-renew, and keep the login safe. A lapsed domain can be snapped up by someone else within days, and buying it back can be expensive or impossible.
If you have made something and it needs to become real, send it over. We will tell you honestly what it needs to be live, safe and yours, whether that is a quick fix you can do or a proper build. No obligation.
Whether you can name exactly what you want built, or you just know something is leaking, the next step is the same conversation.