ICANN’s Next New gTLD Round: Timeline, Milestones, and What to Expect

ICANN’s Next New gTLD Round: Timeline, Milestones, and What to Expect (2026–2028)

 

The Internet’s naming system is about to enter another major expansion phase. In 2026, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) will reopen its New Generic Top-Level Domain (gTLD) Program, giving organizations the opportunity to apply for and operate their own custom domain extensions—such as .brand, .city, .community, or industry-specific namespaces.

The upcoming round is particularly significant because it will be the first major opportunity to apply for a new gTLD since the historic 2012 round, which introduced more than a thousand extensions including .xyz, .shop, .app, and .guru.

For companies, communities, governments, and entrepreneurs, the next round represents a rare chance to secure a piece of Internet infrastructure and create a new digital ecosystem around a unique namespace.

Below is a detailed breakdown of the ICANN New gTLD 2026 timeline, key milestones, and what applicants should expect throughout the process.


Understanding the ICANN New gTLD Program

A generic top-level domain (gTLD) is the final segment of a domain name—the part that appears after the last dot in a web address (e.g., .com, .org, .app).

ICANN’s New gTLD Program allows qualified organizations to apply to operate a registry for an entirely new TLD, effectively managing a new segment of the global Domain Name System (DNS).

These new TLDs can serve different purposes (previous round) :

  • Brand TLDs (.brand) – e.g., .google or .nike

  • Industry or category TLDs – e.g., .music, .bank, .tech

  • Geographic TLDs – e.g., .paris or .nyc

  • Community TLDs – designed for specific cultural or linguistic communities

Organizations that operate a TLD function as registry operators, managing domain registrations and policies for that extension.


The 2026 New gTLD Application Timeline

ICANN’s next application round officially opens 30 April 2026 and will remain open until 12 August 2026.

This roughly 15-week application window will allow organizations worldwide to submit proposals for new top-level domains.

Key Timeline Overview

MilestoneDate Done
Applicant Support Program (ASP)19 Nov 2024 – 19 Nov 2025
Registry Service Provider (RSP) Pre-Evaluation19 Nov 2024 – 20 May 2025
Applicant Guidebook Released16 Dec 2025
Application Window Opens30 April 2026
Application Window Closes12 Aug 2026
Initial Evaluations BeginLate 2026
Expected Delegations Begin2027–2028 (estimated)

ICANN estimates the evaluation and delegation process may take approximately 16–24 months or much longer, depending on objections, contention sets, and technical complexity.


The Application Window (April–August 2026)

The application submission period runs from:

30 April 2026 → 12 August 2026

During this window applicants must submit:

  • The proposed TLD string

  • Business plan

  • Technical infrastructure plan

  • Financial capability documentation

  • Registry service provider details

  • Policy and compliance procedures

Applications are submitted through ICANN’s TLD Application Management System (TAMS), the online portal developed for the program.


What Happens After You Apply?

Once the application window closes, ICANN begins a multi-stage evaluation process.

1. Administrative Check

ICANN first reviews applications for completeness.

This includes verifying:

  • Application fees

  • Required documentation

  • Technical information

  • Compliance with application format

Incomplete applications may be rejected or require clarification.


2. Initial Evaluation

Applications then undergo technical and financial evaluation, examining whether the applicant can safely operate a registry.

Key areas reviewed include:

  • DNS infrastructure and security

  • Registry operations capability

  • Financial sustainability

  • Compliance with ICANN policies

For straightforward applications, this stage may take roughly 13–18 months.


3. Objection and Dispute Resolution

Third parties may file formal objections against an application. Common objection grounds include:

  • String confusion

  • Legal rights violations

  • Community objections

  • Public interest concerns

If multiple applicants apply for the same TLD string, they form a contention set and must resolve the conflict through evaluation or auctions.

These processes can extend the timeline significantly.


4. Contracting and Pre-Delegation Testing

If an application successfully passes evaluation:

  1. The applicant signs a Registry Agreement with ICANN

  2. The registry system undergoes pre-delegation technical testing

This testing ensures the TLD can safely integrate into the global DNS.


5. Root Zone Delegation

The final step is delegation into the DNS root zone, meaning the new extension becomes officially live on the Internet.

After delegation, registry operators can launch:

  • Sunrise periods

  • Trademark protections

  • General domain registrations


Expected Timeline From Application to Launch

For most successful applicants, the timeline from submission to launch is expected to be:

18–24 months

However, this may vary based on:

  • Objections

  • Technical complexity

  • String conflicts

  • Policy review processes

Some TLDs may launch as early as 2028, while others may not go live until 2030 or later.


Why the 2026 Round Matters

The upcoming round is historically significant for several reasons.

1. First Opportunity in Over a Decade

The previous large-scale application round occurred in 2012, producing nearly 2,000 applications and over 1,200 delegated gTLDs.

The 2026 round represents the first major expansion opportunity in 14 years.


2. Rise of .Brand Strategies

Major corporations are expected to pursue brand-specific TLDs for:

  • Brand security

  • Marketing

  • Digital identity

  • Customer authentication

Examples from the previous round include:

  • .google

  • .bmw

  • .barclays


3. Growth of Web3, AI, and Digital Identity

New namespaces may emerge targeting:

  • AI ecosystems

  • decentralized platforms

  • digital identity frameworks

  • creator economies

This aligns with the broader evolution of Internet infrastructure.


Preparing for the 2026 Application Window

Organizations considering a gTLD application should begin preparations well before the window opens.

Key preparation steps include:

  • Selecting the desired TLD string

  • Securing executive approval and funding

  • Choosing a registry backend provider

  • Conducting technical and financial feasibility studies

  • Preparing application documentation

  • Reviewing the Applicant Guidebook

Given the limited 15-week application window, preparation is essential.


Final Thoughts

The ICANN New gTLD Program 2026 round represents a pivotal moment in the evolution of Internet naming.

Beginning 30 April 2026, organizations worldwide will once again have the opportunity to apply for and operate their own top-level domains—creating new digital ecosystems and redefining how identities and communities exist online.

For brands, governments, startups, and digital innovators, the message is clear:

The next expansion of the Internet’s namespace is coming—and the application clock will only run for about 15 weeks.

How to Evaluate the Right Registry Service Provider for Your TLD

ICANN’s RSP Applicant List Is Out — How to Evaluate the Right Registry Service Provider for Your TLD

With ICANN releasing the official list of Registry Service Provider (RSP) applicants, many prospective TLD operators are about to face one of the most consequential decisions in the entire new gTLD process: choosing the right backend partner.

An RSP is far more than a technical vendor. Your RSP becomes the operational backbone of your TLD—affecting uptime, policy compliance, registrar adoption, innovation velocity, and ultimately long-term commercial success. Selecting one based on reputation alone, or on a feature checklist, is a common and costly mistake.

Here is the ICANN list of Evaluated MAIN, DNS, DNSSEC, PROXY, and IDN Support Level Applications – Click Here

This moment is where experience matters.


What Is a Registry Service Provider—Really?

At a basic level, an RSP delivers the technical and operational services required to run a TLD:

  • EPP systems and registrar interfaces

  • DNS and DNSSEC infrastructure

  • WHOIS / RDAP services

  • Data escrow and ICANN compliance tooling

  • Abuse monitoring and reporting

  • Zone generation and publication

But in practice, an RSP also shapes:

  • Your pricing and premium-name strategy

  • Your ability to launch on time (and stay live)

  • Registrar confidence and onboarding speed

  • Your flexibility to evolve post-delegation

This is why not all RSPs are equal—and none are one-size-fits-all.


How to Evaluate an RSP Based on Your TLD and Business Plan

1. Match the RSP to Your TLD Type

Different TLDs have fundamentally different needs:

  • Brand TLDs prioritize stability, simplicity, and low operational overhead

  • Community or geo TLDs require nuanced policy enforcement and stakeholder governance

  • Commercial / generics / niche TLDs demand scale, premium controls, marketing flexibility, and registrar reach

An RSP optimized for corporate .brand clients may be poorly suited for a high-growth, creator-driven, or Web3-aligned namespace.

Key question: Has this RSP successfully operated TLDs similar to mine—not just in theory, but in market reality?


2. Evaluate Real-World Operational Experience (Not Just Specs)

Many RSPs can demonstrate technical compliance. Far fewer can demonstrate:

  • Multi-year production stability

  • Incident response under real-world stress

  • Registrar disputes and edge-case handling

  • Smooth migrations, transitions, or backend changes

Ask for operational war stories, not just SLA promises.


3. Understand Commercial Alignment

Your RSP should support—not constrain—your revenue model:

  • Premium and reserved-name flexibility

  • Promotional pricing and launch phases

  • Aftermarket integrations

  • Data access for analytics and growth

If your business plan requires agility, innovation, or non-traditional positioning, confirm the RSP can execute without friction or constant exceptions.


4. Look Beyond “Day One” Launch

The most overlooked mistake is selecting an RSP optimized only for application approval and delegation, not for years 3, 5, or 10.

Ask:

  • How easy is it to introduce new services later?

  • What is the exit or migration path if strategies change?

  • How does the RSP evolve with ICANN policy shifts?

Long-term success depends on adaptability—not just initial compliance.


Where BRS Registry Adds Unique Value

With nearly 30 years of real-world registry and domain-industry experience, BRS Registry brings a perspective that few consultants—or RSPs themselves—can match.

We have:

  • Worked with many Registry Service Providers

  • Operated and marketed successful ccTLDs and niche namespaces

  • Navigated policy cycles, backend transitions, and registrar ecosystems

  • Seen what works in production—and what quietly fails over time

Because of this, BRS Registry serves as an independent evaluator and strategic advisor, helping applicants:

  • Objectively compare RSPs beyond marketing decks

  • Align backend capabilities with business and branding goals

  • Avoid structural decisions that limit growth or optionality

  • Negotiate from a position of operational understanding

Our role is simple: make sure your RSP choice serves your TLD—not the other way around.


The RSP List Is Only the Beginning

ICANN’s release of the RSP applicant list is an important milestone—but it’s not the finish line. It’s the point where informed analysis, strategic alignment, and hard-earned experience matter most.

If you’re preparing for the next application round, now is the time to step back and ask the right questions—before technical decisions become permanent constraints.

BRS Registry is ready to help you evaluate, compare, and select the right Registry Service Provider—based on decades of real-world registry operations and long-term success, not theory.  Give us a call  @ +1.877.368.6853 (1-877-dot-nTLD)  or  registry@brsmedia.com

  • Here is a Registry Service Provider (RSP) Evaluation Checklist (.pdf)’

 

How to Apply, Launch & Run a New gTLD (From the Experts at BRS Media / BRS Registry)

How to Apply, Launch & Run a New gTLD (From the Experts at BRS Media / BRS Registry)

 

Your Complete Guide to Applying for a New gTLD: From ICANN Application to Successful Launch

 

Introduction

ICANN’s release of the 2026 New gTLD Applicant Guidebook (AGB) marks a historic moment for brands, communities, cities, and entrepreneurs ready to operate their own generic Top-Level Domain. Whether you’re considering a .BRAND like .ACME, a community gTLD like .CITY, or a thematic extension, this guide walks you through the entire process — from preparation and submission, through evaluation, to launching and running your TLD.

What Is the Applicant Guidebook?

The AGB is ICANN’s definitive rulebook for the New gTLD Program. It outlines everything applicants need to know — including eligibility, costs, application requirements, technical standards, evaluation criteria, and operational expectations. The official 2026 version was published on 16 December 2025 and serves as your roadmap for this competitive and complex process. newgtldprogram.icann.org


1. Strategic Preparation: Start Early, Plan Thoroughly

A successful gTLD application starts months (or years) before the window opens. Our experience with .FM and .AM shows that careful planning gives your project the best chance of success.

Build a Cross-Functional Team
Gather stakeholders from legal, finance, technical operations, marketing, and executive leadership. Understanding your use case, business model, and operational plan at a granular level will be essential.

Assess Value and Viability
Ask:

  • What is your strategic objective with this gTLD?

  • Who is your target audience?

  • How will you market and grow registrations?

Budget Beyond the Application Fee
ICANN’s evaluation fee is expected to be approximately USD 227,000, not including the costs of technical backend services, legal support, or marketing. newgtldprogram.icann.org


2. Crafting Your Application

Applications require detailed answers across multiple domains:

Technical and Operational Readiness
You must demonstrate that you or your backend provider have the capability to securely operate a TLD — including DNS infrastructure, abuse mitigation, data escrow, and uptime commitments.

Financial Strength
ICANN will scrutinize your financial plan to ensure long-term viability of the registry. Projects must show sustainability beyond the initial launch period.

Policy and Compliance Plans
Your application must include registration policies, rights protection mechanisms (like TMCH Sunrise), and dispute policies compliant with ICANN requirements.


3. Navigating Evaluation, Objections & Contention

After submission, ICANN conducts a rigorous evaluation:

  • String Review: Ensures your proposed TLD meets naming criteria.

  • Technical and Financial Evaluation: Assesses your capacity to run the registry.

  • Objections and GAC Input: Third parties may raise concerns; the Governmental Advisory Committee (GAC) may issue advice that affects outcomes. newgtlds.icann.org

If multiple applicants compete for the same string, they enter a contention set. ICANN’s public auction is the primary means to resolve such contention, and applicants can propose alternative strings to mitigate contention risk. newgtlds.icann.org+1


4. Contracting and Delegation

Successful applicants move to contracting with ICANN, signing the Registry Agreement and completing any pre-delegation testing. Once all requirements are met, your gTLD is delegated into the DNS root, making it live on the global Internet.


5. Launch and Long-Term Operation

With delegation complete, you enter the launch phase. Launch planning includes:

  • Sunrise Period: Trademark holders register first.

  • Landrush (Optional): Early or premium registrations.

  • General Availability: Open public registrations.

After launch, long-term compliance comes into play. You’ll submit reports, maintain services such as Whois and zone file access, and uphold abuse and dispute policies as required by ICANN’s compliance framework (per your Registry Agreement). ICANN


6. Why Partner with BRS Registry

At BRS Media, we’ve guided clients through domain registry strategy, launch, and ongoing operations for premium TLDs like .FM and .AM. Our team brings:

  • Technical expertise with secure, resilient backend operations.

  • Regulatory and compliance experience aligned with ICANN’s expectations.

  • Marketing and go-to-market strategy that maximizes adoption and brand impact.

Whether you’re exploring your first gTLD or expanding a digital ecosystem, we help you turn an ICANN application into a thriving registry.


Conclusion
Applying for a new gTLD is a significant commitment — financially, operationally, and strategically. But with careful planning, clear vision, and the right partners, owning a top-level domain can be a transformative asset for your brand or community.

Stay tuned for the April 2026 application window, and start your journey now. Let BRS Registry be your guide from concept to launch and beyond.


Get started with us today: 

 – Online: Contact Us
 – Meeting Registry/TLD Consulting