Domains are split into labels for query purposes. For example, “ example.com ” is split into “ example ” and “com”.

If provided in a query, “dot” separator characters (.) between labels are maintained to enable position-dependent domain searches.

This has the following results:

  • Leading dot after the label, no trailing dot – Returns results for matching labels that are at the end of the domain name.
  • Trailing dot after the label, no leading dot – Returns results for matching labels that are at the beginning of the domain name.
  • Leading and trailing dots surrounding the label – Returns results for matching labels that are in the middle of the domain name (i.e., not the first or last label).
  • Two labels with a dot between them – Treated as a search for the entire phrase, and so returns results for domains that include the entire string.
  • No dot separators – Returns results for any domain that includes the query string anywhere in the domain name.

The following table provides examples of these different domain searches:

Search

If domain is example.com

If domain is example.com.au

domain:com

match

match

domain:.com

match

no match

domain:.com.

no match

match

domain:com.

no match

no match

domain:example.

match

match

domain:example.com

match

no match