All ccTLDs
48 TLDs match.
Country-code top-level domains (ccTLDs) are your first line of defense against centralized control. Each one sits under a different nation's authority, and that matters. A .ru domain lives in Russian jurisdiction. A .ch domain answers to Switzerland. A .ai answers to Anguilla. This fragmentation is the point. If you're building something that matters—journalism, privacy tools, crypto infrastructure, communities the US doesn't like—you need optionality. You need to know which registries actually ignore DMCA notices, which ones don't keep intrusive logs, which ones let you pay anonymous and ask no questions. The ccTLD category at bunkerdomains is your map through that landscape. We list the territories worth knowing: those with light-touch regulation, offshore-friendly registries, jurisdictions that don't bend to American pressure, and countries with actual free-speech traditions baked into law. Some are old-school cypherpunk havens. Others are just pragmatic about who their customers are. All of them give you geographic and legal redundancy that .com never will. No WHOIS, crypto-only payment, anonymous signup—that's how we register them for you.
We include ccTLDs with three criteria in mind: first, the registry must be registered to a real country or territory and subject to that jurisdiction's law, not a parent state's whim. Second, there must be legitimate use cases—tech infrastructure, journalism, privacy, adult content, crypto, communities exercising free speech—where that TLD's legal environment or operational stance offers genuine advantage over mainstream options. Third, the registry or registrars we work with must either skip DMCA compliance, offer anonymous registration, accept crypto payment, or some combination. We exclude ccTLDs that are pure cash grabs with zero jurisdiction independence, or where every registrar is locked into corporate compliance. We also favor territories where the actual government either can't or won't enforce censorship requests with teeth. The result: a curated set of TLDs that make sense for people building outside the American corporate consensus.
Matching TLDs
AI gold rush, but anonymous. Anguilla doesn't care about your business model.
Colombia's playground TLD. Fast, cheap, and nobody's watching.
Montenegro. About me, not about the lawyers.
Iceland. Strongest free-speech protection in the West. We host you here for a reason.
Liechtenstein. Banking-grade privacy in your TLD.
Switzerland. Neutral by treaty, neutral about your domain too.
Russian-controlled namespace. Outside Western takedown reach. Pricing's sweet too.
Belarus. Cheap, persistent, decidedly not in NATO's lap.
Kazakhstan. Neutral steppe, low oversight, decent peering.
Moldova. Eastern Europe's quietest TLD. No EU dragnet here.
Georgia. Neutral ground between East and West. Bring your own laws.
Armenia. Quiet TLD, decent jurisdiction, popular with .am punsters.
Tonga. Tiny island, big freedoms. Long-time offshore favorite.
Cocos Islands. The original .com backup, still no questions asked.
Palau. Cheap and obscure. Fly under most radars.
Germany. GDPR-strict on your data. Whois redacted by default.
France. EU jurisdiction, no public registrant data.
Italy. EU-shielded whois, surprisingly hassle-free for non-residents.
Spain. Open to non-residents, low whois exposure.
Netherlands. Liberal hosting culture. Ask any sysop.
Belgium. EU-shielded, fast, not picky about who registers.
Sweden. Strong free-speech precedent. Worth knowing about.
Norway. Restrictive in theory — for who qualifies, untouchable.
Denmark. EU but not picky. Whois redacted on request.
Finland. EU shield, technically rigorous registry.
Japan. Tightly run, but their legal system doesn't run on DMCA.
South Korea. Locally rigid, globally available. Outside Western takedown norms.
Singapore. APAC hub. Stable, neutral, no compliance theater.
Hong Kong. Asia-Pacific gateway. Choose your jurisdiction with eyes open.
Taiwan. Stable, free-press friendly, outside mainland reach.
India. Cheap, available, increasingly interesting for offshore.
Australia. Strict eligibility — but if you qualify, robust namespace.
United States. Yeah, we know. We register it. Use at your discretion.
Canada. Whois redaction by default. Quiet by Western standards.
Brazil. Local rules, but registration's open and prices are fair.
Mexico. Latin America's largest. Fast, cheap, discreet.
Argentina. Local market, but the door's open for foreigners.
Bahamas. Offshore TLD with the offshore-banking pedigree to match.
Belize. Offshore-friendly jurisdiction since the 90s.
Saint Vincent. Caribbean offshore. Tested, true, quiet.
British Virgin Islands. Where shell companies register their domains.
Ukraine. Resilient infrastructure under fire. Choose accordingly.
Samoa. Generic-TLD vibe, offshore reality. .ws as in websites.
Saint Helena. Tiny island, durable namespace. Distance is privacy.
Antigua. Offshore Caribbean. Open to anyone with a wallet.
Montserrat. Caribbean micro-state. Almost no Western oversight.
Niue. Pacific micro-state. Foreign-friendly, English-friendly.
Guernsey. Channel Islands. Banking-grade privacy carries to TLDs.