Introduced | 8 May 1989 |
---|---|
TLD type | Country code top-level domain |
Status | Active |
Registry | INRegistry |
Sponsor | National Internet Exchange of India |
Intended use | Entities connected with India |
Actual use | Very popular in India. Liberalisation of registration rules in 2005 led to a large increase in registrations including overseas registrations. |
Registered domains | 3 million+ (May 2022)[1][2] |
Registration restrictions | No restrictions on who can register second-level domains or most third-level domains; various specific restrictions under some of those specialised subdomains. |
Structure | May register at the second level or at the third level beneath generic-category 2nd-level domains |
Documents | Policies |
Dispute policies | .IN Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (INDRP) |
DNSSEC | Yes |
Registry website | registry.in |
Introduced | 5 February 2011[3] |
---|---|
TLD type | Internationalised (Devanagari) country code top-level domain |
Status | Active |
Registry | INRegistry |
Sponsor | National Internet Exchange of India |
Intended use | Entities connected with India |
Actual use | Getting popular in India. |
Registration restrictions | Devanagari script. Also comply with certain Devanagari Phonological rules; restrictions under some specialized subdomains like सरकार.भारत (≈ gov.in) and विद्या.भारत (≈ edu.in) |
Structure | May register at the second level or at the third level beneath generic-category 2nd-level domains. |
DNS name | xn--h2brj9c |
DNSSEC | Yes |
Registry website | रजिस्ट्री.भारत (registry.bharat) |
.in is the country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for India. It was introduced in May 1989. It is currently administered by the National Internet Exchange of India.
The domain was originally managed by the National Centre for Software Technology (NCST) and its Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC). The Government of India issued an executive order in 2004 to transfer responsibility for managing .in domains to the newly created INRegistry under the authority of the National Internet Exchange of India (NIXI). The National Informatics Centre (NIC), ERNET, and the Ministry of Defence were appointed as registrars for the gov.in, res.in and ac.in, and the mil.in domains respectively.[4][5]
In August 2018, NIXI appointed Neustar Data Infotech (India), a subsidiary of Neustar Inc, to be the country's new registry services provider. Neustar completed migration of existing .in domains to its registry infrastructure in March 2019. Neustar added the ability to register Indian-language domains in native script by enabling end-to-end web portal language support.[6]
As of 2005[update], liberalised policies for the .in domain allow unlimited second-level registrations under .in. Unlimited registrations under the previously structured existing zones are also allowed:[7]
Zones reserved for use by qualified institutions in India:[7]
The domain .nic.in is reserved for India's National Informatics Centre, but in practice most Indian government agencies have domains ending in .nic.in.
The .in registry launched following sub-domains on Oct 29, 2021 to benefit the growing market:[10]
Before the introduction of liberalised registration policies for the .in domain, only 7000 names had been registered between 1992 and 2004. As of March 2010[update], the number had increased to over 610,000 domain names with 60% of registrations coming from India and the rest from overseas.[11] By October 2011, the number had surpassed 1 million domain names.[12] As of March 2016[update], the number has more than doubled to over 2 million domain names.[13]
As per the terms and conditions of the .in registry, domain privacy is not allowed.[14]
Recently updated EKYC guidelines were issued to all registrars to authenticate new registrants. Hence, the previous rule relating to bulk booking of .in domain names has been withdrawn. Now customers can book unlimited .in domain names as previously in line with promoting .in TLD on par with other popular TLDs like .com and others which also has no restrictions relating to bulk booking.[15]
India plans to introduce internationalised domain names in the 22 local languages used in the country. As of October 2016[update], fifteen of these internationalised domain names were accepted by ICANN:
Devanagari string | Transliterated string |
---|---|
भारत | .bharat |
कंपनी.भारत | company.bharat |
विद्या.भारत | vidya.bharat |
सरकार.भारत | sarkar.bharat |
In 2016, an application for eight further domains was accepted. While the Indian government also applied for .বাংলা (Bengali), it was given to a competing applicant, the Bangladesh Telecommunication Company Limited (BTCL).These domains were not available (as of October 2016[update]):[17] But, they were later on made available and now are open for domain registration in India.