Free WHOIS Lookup — Domain Registration, Ownership & Expiry Information
ProxyDime's WHOIS Lookup tool retrieves full domain registration records from ICANN-compliant registries in seconds — including registrant details, registrar name, IANA ID, creation and expiration dates, DNSSEC status, privacy masking status, name servers, and current domain status. Enter any domain name or IP address to pull up its complete WHOIS record. No account required, no query limits, instant results.
Whether you are researching a competitor's domain history, verifying a vendor's legitimacy, checking a domain's expiration date before purchasing, or investigating a suspicious URL, WHOIS lookup is the definitive starting point. The WHOIS protocol has been a cornerstone of internet domain governance since 1982, managed under ICANN's oversight framework.
What Is a WHOIS Lookup?
A WHOIS lookup is a query to the public WHOIS database — a distributed directory maintained by domain registrars and overseen by ICANN — that returns registration information about a domain name or IP address. When someone registers a domain, ICANN requires the registrar to record and publish registration details including ownership contact information (unless privacy protection is purchased), the domain's creation and expiry dates, the managing registrar, and authoritative name servers.
The WHOIS system operates across multiple databases: generic TLDs like .com and .net use registrar-level WHOIS systems (such as MarkMonitor for enterprise domains), while country-code TLDs (ccTLDs) like .uk, .de, and .in maintain their own national WHOIS databases operated by their respective registries.
What Information Does a WHOIS Lookup Return?
| Field | Description |
| Created | Original domain registration date |
| Updated | Most recent modification to the registration record |
| Expires | Date domain registration lapses unless renewed |
| Domain Status | Active, Pending Transfer, Redemption Period, etc. |
| DNSSEC | Whether DNSSEC cryptographic signing is enabled |
| Privacy Masked | Whether registrant identity is hidden by a proxy service |
| Registrar Name | Company responsible for domain registration management |
| IANA ID | Internet Assigned Numbers Authority registrar identifier |
| WHOIS Server | Registrar's authoritative WHOIS server address |
| Name Servers | DNS nameservers resolving the domain |
Why Are Some WHOIS Records Privacy Masked?
When a domain owner purchases a privacy protection service from their registrar (often called WHOIS Privacy, Domain Privacy, or ID Shield), the registrant's personal contact information is replaced in public WHOIS records with anonymized proxy contact details provided by the privacy service. This prevents email scraping, spam, and personal information exposure. As of GDPR enforcement, many European registries now redact personal contact data from all public WHOIS records by default, regardless of privacy service purchases.
Privacy masking does not prevent legal investigations — law enforcement, intellectual property rights holders, and ICANN dispute resolution bodies can request registrar disclosure of the true registrant identity through proper legal channels.
What Is Domain Status in WHOIS Records?
Domain status codes communicate the current state of a domain's registration lifecycle:
- Active / clientTransferProhibited — Domain is registered and live; the registrar has locked it against unauthorized transfers
- Pending Transfer — A domain transfer to a new registrar is in progress
- Redemption Period — Domain has expired and entered a grace period during which the original owner can reclaim it (typically 30 days post-expiry)
- Pending Delete — The redemption period has elapsed and the domain is queued for deletion and re-registration availability
- serverHold — Domain is suspended by the registry, often due to abuse or legal order
How to Use WHOIS Data for Security Research
WHOIS lookup is a critical first step in cybersecurity threat intelligence. When investigating phishing sites, spam domains, or malware infrastructure, WHOIS data reveals:
- Whether the domain was registered very recently (days-old domains are a phishing red flag)
- Whether the registration uses privacy masking (common in fraud operations)
- The registrar used (certain registrars are notorious for lax abuse policies)
- Whether the name servers point to bulletproof hosting providers
- Whether the domain shares name servers or registrant patterns with known malicious infrastructure
How to Use WHOIS for Competitive Domain Research
Marketers and domain investors use WHOIS lookup to identify expiring competitor domains worth acquiring, trace the registration history of domains for brand protection purposes, verify that a business's claimed domain ownership is accurate before partnerships, and monitor domains in a competitive niche for ownership changes.
What Is DNSSEC and Why Does It Appear in WHOIS Records?
DNSSEC (Domain Name System Security Extensions) is a suite of IETF specifications that adds cryptographic authentication to DNS responses, preventing DNS cache poisoning attacks where attackers redirect domain queries to malicious servers. A WHOIS record showing DNSSEC: Unsigned means the domain does not use DNSSEC protection. Most small and medium business domains are unsigned; major enterprise and government domains typically enforce DNSSEC.
Frequently Asked Questions About WHOIS Lookup
Can I look up IP addresses as well as domains?
Yes. ProxyDime's WHOIS tool accepts both domain names and IP addresses. An IP WHOIS query returns the ARIN/RIPE/APNIC registration record showing the organization assigned to that IP block, their contact information, and the IP range's allocation history.
Why does a WHOIS lookup show no registrant information?
GDPR compliance requirements adopted by most global registrars redact personal data from public WHOIS records. The registrar field will still be visible, but registrant name, email, and phone fields may be redacted unless privacy policies allow disclosure.
How far back does WHOIS history go?
Standard WHOIS queries only return current registration data. For historical ownership records showing previous registrants and registration change events, specialized services like DomainTools WHOIS History maintain deep historical archives.
