
The other week I talked about medical domains, and today I’m going to dive a little deeper. I’ve got some inside perspective thanks to my wife, who’s been running health plans for 30 years, and business partners who are physicians with decades of experience.
Here’s how American healthcare works: Most doctors can’t go into private practice anymore because liability insurance is out of control. So they sign contracts with hospitals, and those contracts often come with non-competes. To make it worse, hospitals in many states have exclusive rights to offer services like CT scans, MRIs, and ultrasounds. That means nobody else is legally allowed to offer them. Not everywhere, but in a lot of places.
And somehow, it’s still legal for hospitals to own health insurance companies. So the same people who decide what care you need are also deciding what they’ll pay for. The only oversight comes from government regulators, which is the only thing that holds it together. Otherwise it would be a free for all.
But the tide is turning. States like Texas have figured out that costs for these services drop up to 80% when private practices are allowed to offer them. When hospitals are forced to accept those results. That opens the door for radiologists, physicians, and other professionals to start their own businesses and specialize. You can now bring your own MRI to your doctor. That’s a huge shift.
From a domain perspective, that means thousands of new businesses entering the health space. It’s going to roll out across every state—slowly, then all at once.
And those non-competes? They’re starting to get outlawed in several states, though they’re still being enforced in some places. But doctors have found a workaround: telemedicine. Most non-competes are based on location, but telemedicine isn’t local. A lot of doctors are now working part-time shifts in telehealth, getting paid more to review charts and ask a few questions from home. It’s also cheaper for employers, so insurance plans are increasingly including it—or even pushing it.
As these restrictions ease, you’re seeing companies like Hims explode. They started with low-risk treatments like hair loss, Ozempic, and ED. But what’s next? Blood work diagnostics. Preventative care. Real physicals. Orthopedics. Rehab. Heart testing. Full body scans. The kind of healthcare that actually checks if something’s wrong before you’re in trouble.
We’re on the edge of a healthcare revolution. Over the next 10 years, it’s going to change more than it has in the past 50. If I had to place a bet, I’d be shorting hospital stocks and going long on these new startups. The next generation isn’t going to accept the broken system we’ve lived with for decades. And no amount of regulation will stop it—because the results will speak for themselves. Cheaper. Better. More accessible healthcare.
And if you’re into domains: get them. Medical names are about to get even hotter
Just a reminder. Every Day Travis compiles all the auction results and puts them in a nice sortable table. You can come every afternoon to see the results Below is an example with the full set HERE

Interesting Links:
Quote of the Day: “There’s never enough time to do all the nothing you want.”— Bill Watterson,
Domain of the Day Medicab.com Medical transportation needs only grows. Going to go for a lot
Please Note: The list below contains affiliate links and/or names that have been posted for a fee. It is how we pay for our time since it is a free site. More details at bottom of page. Can go to any of the auctions by adding the names at the end like this one

Dynadot
Emancipacion.org Top name on the Dyna board today. Spanish but means a lot to some people and the dot org is perfect
BG8.com LLN and NNL have held good value for a decade now
NXIX.com Going to be a verbal name because its not an acronym
Hydroxy.com Still my favorite name right now at Dyna
Augmenter.com Evidently augmentor is also the correct spelling
NCall.com Call is the driver for me
BlockchainDigital.com These words go together pretty well IMO
Hooping.org Basketball is the play here
PythonScript.com Its a bit specific but gets a little traffic and cheap at $10 at press time
Namejet
CIA.org A few days left in the auction. Going to be confusing but that’s why its valuable
FirstDefense.com Love this one. Such a strong name
LIAT.com Was an airline. Now defunct
ActiveGuard.com Exudes 24/7 protection
Matata.com Means worry or trouble in Swahili. You throw Hakuna in front and you have no worries
TDTS.com and ERMS.com Two nice 4Ls with top tier letters
P38.com Reminds me of the workout videos
FirstPro.com Almost any major keyword in front of pro has value
Gacon.com Nice 5L although sounds like a Gay Convention
Atom – Active Auctions
Zeeds.com A few nice no reserve names today
BlueOrion.com Another no reserve. Love this brand. I am a bidder
Paperbacks.com This one was Adam Dickers and then I remember it being at auction a decade ago. It will find an end user soon
YBN.com Retail was $50k on it so should be a decently low reserve
Moonway.com Another nice sounding brandable
Moonfly.com Maybe I just like the word Moon
Centimeter.com Measurements make good brands. I like Yard.com
Sedo
YIBT.com Decent letters for $150
SummerOil.com Can be a lot of things but is a natural way to smother bugs. A lighter version of dormant oil
ZGD.ai Cheapest LLL.ai at Sedo at $200. Surprised its still there
CardConsumer.com A ton of money in credit card affiliate if you can get the right traffic
Receptacle.ai BIN at $400
DomainBrokers.ai Outbound domain broker agents
Buzzmaker.ai AI marketing
PAPO.ai At $999 BIN
Catched
Affair.it the Ashley Madison of Italy
Sovereign.fi Blockchain people LOVE the word sovereign
Founders.academy Where founders learn to be better founders
Auth.es Authentic, authorize
Blockchain.fo Still no bidders here. Afraid of dot fo
Viro.co I have had some success selling CVCV.cos
Suno.wiki Might be one of the first .wiki to make the list
YTech.news Hacker News
Godaddy Domains with Bids
WHK.com The 3 letters speak for themselves and the K isn’t great in English but works well in foreign languages
VTXX.com X is placeholder
HIA.net As good of letters as you get in a 3L.net
356.cc 3L.cc always brings it
ECSD.com Top tier
SocialGate.com The world runs on social
ZipGenius.com Fast or compress
SugarBears.com Snacks or Sex
OptimalSolar.com Exudes you’re selling the most efficient solar setup
YEPD.com Y is great in the first slot. Keeps it premium
TheCryptoGroup.com. Can only be one that owns the name despite being thousands of them
EliteInvesting.com Money in money
MegaFocus.com 100% going to be a supplement
Intelliagents.com Agents getst it done
Illusio.com Art and design
PaperTrades.com Practice being a better trader so you can join Elite Investing
VoicemailtoEmail.com Not sure if anyone needs this since 99% of voicemail is now spam
MoreCrypto.com This we always need
BestMessenger.com Can’t be the best if its not in the title right?
ImaginationWorks.com Audio Visual studio
Godaddy Names with 1 or NO Bids
Other GoDaddy Names With More Than One Bid
356.cc
600jili.com
7DaysFree.com
900jili.com
AdSart.com
AlexanderTech.org
amperio.com
b0w.com
BestMessenger.com
blackusdt.com
CarFresheners.com
CaspianCapital.com
CatalystForCats.org
crowthertrust.org
ecsd.com
EliteInvesting.com
EuropeDaily.com
euzw.com
FelineOutreach.org
feshy.com
freeim.com
genevieves.com
glycobiology.com
HawaiiGuardoHana.org
HeroFunding.com
hia.net
illusio.com
ImaginationWorks.com
intelliagents.com
lkgv.com
lumashop.com
medicab.com
MegaFocus.com
MoreCrypto.com
NeoMaven.com
NeoResearch.com
NewMicros.com
oecv.com
OptimalSolar.com
OrlandoPartyGuide.com
PaperTrades.com
PaulSimoNon.com
phreshbakedgoods.com
PurpleRoses.com
RoachMan.com
scitalk.com
ScoutBlythewood.com
SeattlePhotoBooths.com
SixCounty.com
SocialGate.com
SugarBears.com
sunshineingovernment.org
SwitchMarketing.com
TargetWorld.com
TheAlmondThief.com
TheCryptoGroup.com
tkw.us
TukwilaReporter.com
ufaq.org
unk.us
VerdeWheels.com
VillageOfDane.org
VoicemailToEmail.com
vtxx.com
vvy.net
whk.com
WholesaleBaby.com
WiseGuides.com
yepd.com
ZeroLevelFitness.com
ZipGenius.com
Have a name at auction and need more exposure? Send me an email. We Charge $10 per name per day. We may be able to help. If you have an auction you want to promote, email us for details.* All names chosen by us. (ie you click through and purchase a name you like) or an occasional paid listing. Everything we say is based on our own research or is opinion. Do your own due diligence. That means look it up yourself if you don’t think the stats or our opinion is correct. We hand choose the names but we are paid to make this list by both the auction houses, individuals that are auctioning names, and Godaddy affiliate links. Keep that in mind and only buy names that YOU think are good.

