.ch: Difference between revisions

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status=Active|
registry=[[SWITCH Information Technology Services]]|
registry=[[SWITCH Information Technology Services]]|
sponsor=[[SWITCH Information Technology Services]]|
sponsor=SWITCH Information Technology Services|
intendeduse=Entities connected with [[Switzerland]]|
intendeduse=Entities connected with [[Switzerland]]|
registereddomains=2,564,228|
registereddomains=2,564,228|

Latest revision as of 23:06, 24 June 2025

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.ch is the country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Switzerland in the Domain Name System of the Internet.

Naming

The domain ch, as with other ccTLDs, is based on the ISO 3166-2 code for Switzerland derived from Confoederatio Helvetica (Helvetic Confederation),[1] the Latin name for the country, which was used because of its neutrality with regard to the four official languages of Switzerland.

Registration

Made available in 1987,[2] only two years after .com, it is administered by SWITCH Information Technology Services.[3]

Second-level domain names must be at least three letters long. Two-letter subdomain names are restricted to the Swiss cantons, as well as the domain ch.ch of the Federal Chancellery of Switzerland.

The only exception has been the former domain of the Expo.02 which was held in Switzerland, www.expo.02.ch.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Registrations of internationalized domain names have been accepted since March 2004.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

In the Chinese domain market

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". .ch has been of a rising interest to Chinese domain investors for several reasons. According to EuropeID.com, the domain .ch still has many valuable English keywords and short letter and number combinations left.

A contributing factor may be because the majority of .ch registrations are in German, leaving many English words available.

In addition, with two million domains under .ch being registered, most of the reserved domains have the European market in mind, allowing valuable domains for other languages such as Chinese keywords in the Latin script being registered at a normal price.[2]

Domain hacks

The .ch domain is very popular in domain hacks, used to spell words and names that end in "ch".

For example, Techcrunch's tcrn.ch, as well as the University of Michigan's myumi.ch and umresear.ch.[4]

This phenomenon is not limited to English; to take another example, the domain scha.ch (Schach, German for "chess") has been registered.

.swiss

The Federal Office of Communications (OFCOM) has begun registering .swiss domains as of 7 September 2015[5] meant to augment the traditional .ch TLD.

Applicants must currently have a "registered place of business and a physical administrative base in Switzerland" to apply.[6]

References

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External links

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sv:Toppdomän#C

  1. From the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland
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