The first domain name ever registered was Symbolics.com.
The First .com Domain Was Registered in 1985
On March 15, 1985, a computer manufacturer in Cambridge, Massachusetts did something that had never been done before: they registered Symbolics.com, the very first .com domain name in history. At the time, the internet was still in its infancy, used primarily by academics and researchers. The idea that domain names would one day be worth millions—or that every business would scramble to claim their own .com—was unimaginable.
Symbolics, Inc. wasn't just any company. They were pioneers in artificial intelligence, a spinoff from MIT's AI Lab that manufactured Lisp machines—specialized computers designed for AI research. These weren't your typical desktop PCs; they were powerful workstations that predated the term "workstation" itself.
The Dawn of .com
In 1985, the internet didn't have websites, social media, or even email as we know it today. The Domain Name System (DNS) had only been invented the year before as a way to replace the cumbersome numeric IP addresses with something humans could actually remember. Symbolics saw the potential and jumped on it.
Only five other companies registered domains that entire year:
- BBN.com (Bolt, Beranek and Newman)
- Think.com (Thinking Machines Corporation)
- MCC.com (Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corporation)
- DEC.com (Digital Equipment Corporation)
- Northrop.com (Northrop Corporation)
That's it. Six domains for the entire year. Compare that to today, where hundreds of thousands of domains are registered daily.
A Technical Asterisk
Here's where things get interesting for the pedants: while Symbolics.com was the first .com domain, it wasn't technically the first domain name ever created. That honor goes to Nordu.net, registered in January 1985 to serve as the identifier for the first root server. But Symbolics.com holds the crown for the first domain registered through the standard DNS process—and definitely the first .com.
The company itself is long gone—Symbolics filed for bankruptcy in the 1990s as the AI boom fizzled out. But the domain lives on. In 2009, it was purchased by investor Aron Meystedt, who transformed it into a web-based museum celebrating internet history. Visit it today and you'll find a digital time capsule, preserving milestones from the early days of the web.
Why It Matters
Symbolics.com represents more than just internet trivia. It's a reminder of how young the digital world really is. The .com boom, the dot-com bust, social media, smartphones, cryptocurrency—all of it has happened in the span of time since that single domain registration in 1985.
And unlike so many internet pioneers who faded into obscurity, Symbolics.com is still there, still online, nearly 40 years later—a fossil from the Cambrian explosion of the internet age.