The premium domain EXT.com has been brought to market by its current owner, who is now fielding offers from qualified parties. More information is available here. Three-letter .com domains are among the scarcest assets on the web, with only a few thousand in existence and most held long-term by established companies, which makes any availability notable to brand owners and investors alike.
Category-defining brands often trace back to a single short, clean name. Apple.com and Tesla.com became shorthand for entire markets rather than for their literal meanings, in part because short names are easy to recall, easy to type, and flexible enough to anchor a brand as it grows. EXT.com carries similar qualities, with the added distinction that its three letters map onto three expanding fields at once.
In artificial intelligence, the word "extension" describes how businesses now use AI to extend what their teams can do. The name suits platforms that consolidate scattered AI tools and workflows in one place, including arrangements where members operate under their own branded subdomains and matching email addresses, giving a collection of AI projects a single identity.
In the longevity sector, the same letters point to "life extension," a field being reshaped by AI and advanced modeling of human biology. Analysts tracking the space describe it as one of the larger economic shifts now underway, and a short, consumer-friendly term is widely seen as valuable for any brand hoping to lead that conversation.
The letters also read as shorthand for "extraterrestrial," a subject drawing record public interest as governments release more information about unidentified aerial phenomena. Because the full word is one many people find difficult to spell, a short and memorable name has room to become common shorthand for the topic.
"EXT.com sits at the intersection of three of the most talked-about stories of the decade, and a name like this only comes available once," said Chris Ryan, who is representing ownership.
Ownership is reviewing serious inquiries directly.
Contact: Chris Ryan, (619) 354-0122