Last updated: February 2026
Curated Lists (also called Domain Categories) are four subscription-only lists of domains that UpSnatch pre-selects for specific goals. Unlike Magic Search or Local Search, there is no search box: each category is a fixed list that refreshes periodically.
This list focuses on domains that are suited for branding: readable, easy to remember, and typically "clean" names.

What you'll commonly see here:
short, pronounceable names or acronyms
often single-word or brand-like phrases without hyphens or numbers
popular extensions commonly used for brands and products (such as .com, .net, .ai, .io, .co, etc.)
How to use it:
browse for naming ideas and quick wins
filter by TLD (e.g., only .com, or include modern gTLDs)
sort by Valuation or Bids when you want to spot names that look more in-demand
This list focuses on domains that look strong for SEO potential. The goal is to surface domains that may have useful authority signals and history.

What you'll commonly see here:
domains with strong link-related signals, a high quality backlink profile + many referring domains
older, aged domains (domain age can matter as a signal)
domains that are still indexed and receiving traffic
listings where quality indicators (spam/adult) help reduce obvious risk
How to use it:
filter or sort on Backlinks, Domain Age, and (if shown) Pageviews
enable Expert Mode to review metrics like Trust Flow, Citation Flow, and TF/CF ratio
Due diligence
These are curated candidates, not guarantees. Always do your own due diligence.
This list focuses on domains with stronger traffic signals (or traffic potential). Many SEO experts believe that domains with existing traffic passes stronger SEO value (link equity).

What you'll commonly see here:
domains with higher Pageviews
domains with a decent amount of backlinks
How to use it:
filter by Pageviews and narrow by TLD / Country
quickly turn around the domain if you can get it to keep the traffic going
Spam checks are a bit less strict in this case, so make sure to review the domain and do your own due diligence if you’re planning to pick up the domain.
Traffic numbers
Traffic numbers are based on available provider signals and estimates and should be treated as indicators. Some domains typically also have bot traffic.
This list is built for buyers looking for domains with potential upside (e.g., demand, pricing, or valuation signals), and who want a pre-filtered stream of "worth a look" candidates.

Disclaimer
This is not financial advice. It's a curated list meant to help you discover candidates faster.
Number domains
Remark that this list often contains domains consisting of all numbers. You might wonder why these domains are listed here. The reason is that these domains are valuable in Asian markets. The numbers themselves have a meaning and when spoken they sound like words. For example 520.com means 'I love you'. Domains like 888.com were sold for millions. The number 8 (bā) sounds like "fa" which means "prosper" or "get rich" in Chinese (發/发).
What you'll commonly see here:
domains that show stronger market signals (depending on the source), such as:
active bidding / interest
valuation-style estimates (when available)
age, authority, or traffic indicators
lucky number domains (e.g., 520.com, 888.com)
How to use it:
sort by Valuation, Bids, or End Time depending on your strategy
filter down by price, TLD, and Spam Quality
treat this as deal flow: shortlist first, then verify before acting