Membership is FREE – with unlimited access to all features, tools, and discussions. Premium accounts get benefits like banner ads and newsletter exposure. ✅ Signature links are now free for all. 🚫 No AI-generated (LLM) posts allowed. Share your own thoughts and experience — accounts may be terminated for violations.
As TLDs go, .travel is more potentially useful than many other actual and proposed ones, though it's only useful if it's actually used (which hasn't happened much with any new TLD).
It's more likely to be widely used, anyway, than the other new TLD that's going forward, .post, which is for post offices -- a small market segment to begin with, and one that doesn't show any visible sign of wanting to use proper TLDs anyway (see the USPS's use of usps.com instead of the more proper usps.gov).
I am sure Hertz will switch from hertz.com to hertz.travel
and UAL from united.com and ual.com to united.travel and ual.travel
and Hyatt from hyatt.com to hyatt.travel
NOT
This extension will be valuable to registrars, cybersquatters, and attorneys
The generics, like hotel.travel may have some value, but only at the expense of everyone in the travel business with a trademark.
It is amazing what 'creative' idears people come up with these days to get new tlds.
I want a .beer tld for the beer drinking industry...
moveon people...
I am sure Hertz will switch from hertz.com to hertz.travel
and UAL from united.com and ual.com to united.travel and ual.travel
and Hyatt from hyatt.com to hyatt.travel
Perhaps one of them will buy travel.com ... then they'd would have the best of all worlds ... for example say Hertz did ...
hertz.com
hertz.travel
hertz.travel.com
They'd have all the bases covered, and just importantly "lock out" the competition in a sense that only one can own travel.com; create enough consumer confusion between the travel TLD and 2nd-level travel.COM domain to make the travel TLD less useful to competitors.