- What the All domains section is
- Which domains appear in All domains
- Why use the All domains section
- Table and actions in the UI
- How to use the section
- Related sections
What the All domains section is
All domains is a section of the Karma.Domains report database where domains from three typical sections — auctions, backorders, and expired domains — are gathered in one table. For each domain, the full Karma report remains available (Karma Score, SEO metrics, Wayback Machine, and more); the only difference is that you see the combined feed rather than a single section.
The section opens from navigation via “All domains”. The page title matches the section name — “All domains”.
Below the heading (for signed-in users when they tap the help icon next to the title, and for guests in the info bar), an explanation is shown:
Combined list of auctions, backorders, and sections with expired registration.
Which domains appear in All domains
In All domains, the same reports appear as in the narrower sections, but together:
- Auctions — domains with current or recent sales (as in the Auctions section).
- Backorder — a deferred order for a domain until it becomes available (as in the Backorder section).
- Expired — domains available for open registration according to the service (as in the Expired section).
The table includes a Section column (in the UI it may appear as “Section” or a label for the row type): it shows which of the three categories the domain belongs to — Auctions, Backorder, or Expired. That makes it easier to navigate the combined list and sort results with the domain’s origin in mind.
Why use the All domains section
- One screen instead of three — handy for searching “across the whole database” by metrics without switching between auctions, backorder, and expired.
- Comparing candidates — you can compare domains from different lifecycle stages (auctions, queue, open registration) in one table.
- The same filters and sorting as in the other databases: filters, column settings, and when needed CSV export.
- Domain type filter on the Source tab — you can limit results to only the sections you need (for example, auctions and expired only, without backorder).
Table and actions in the UI
Columns and sorting
The column set matches the “combined” table mode: besides the domain and metrics, there is a section column (source section), and when relevant — auction-related fields (venue, price, bids, dates, etc., when present in the row). Default sorting aligns with other “wide” databases (including the auctions section): emphasis on content quality from Wayback Machine history via the Karma Score of the median snapshot.
Opening the full report
When you open the report card for a row, the service applies the correct report type for that record (auction, backorder, or expired) so the full report matches the original section. The “All domains” section URL may stay the same while the actual row type is passed separately — you do not need to switch anything manually.
Copying domains
In the table header next to the domain column there is a copy button (“Copy all domains to clipboard”): the clipboard receives domains from the currently loaded page of the list (one per line). If the list is empty, the action does nothing.
How to use the section
- Open “All domains” from the report database menu.
- If needed, on the Source tab in filters set domain type (Domain type): add one or more options — Auctions, Backorder, Expired — to restrict results to the sections you need.
- Configure other filters (metrics, Wayback, SEO, etc.) and column sorting.
- Use the Section column to check a domain’s origin; open the full report on a row for details.
- Export the selection if needed, or copy domains from the current page with the button next to the domain column header.
Registration, auction bidding, and backorder are handled at the registrar or marketplace; Karma.Domains provides analytics and a unified search table.
Related sections
- Auctions — auction lots only.
- Backorder — backorders only.
- Expired — expired domains available for open registration only.
The All domains section merges these feeds. If you need a predictable feed of one type, it is sometimes easier to go to the narrow section or filter the table by domain type in All domains.
Reminder: rules for expired-domain availability and the “once per day” check apply to Expired domains; see the Expired section help for details.
In short, All domains is for anyone who wants to search and compare domains across all main database sources in one interface without losing which section each row came from.