Open domains and policies
In addition to EU.org itself, the following subdomains
are already reserved and open to registration.
The idea is to avoid creating a flat and unmanageable namespace
in EU.org. Registration directly in EU.org is possible, but it
is advised that you register in one of the following subdomains
instead.
The policies for these domains are the
same as the general policy for EU.org, with
the addition that MX, wildcard MX
and CNAME records are allowed.
If the country (or other, like NET.eu.org for example) of your dreams
is not in the list below, and you can provide name
service and administration for it (this is now a required condition to
avoid creating many almost empty country domains that we then have to
manage), you can write to hostmaster@EU.org to request that
it is created and delegated to you. Note that, in that case, it must
obviously be open to everyone.
- International domains
-
- ASSO.eu.org
- Associations
- EDU.eu.org
- Educational sites
- INT.eu.org
- International domain
- NET.eu.org
- Network-related
- eu.org
- Organizations
There is no ORG.eu.org for organizations;
ASSO.eu.org or EU.org itself is supposed to serve that purpose.
- European Union countries already delegated:
-
- Other countries in Europe:
-
- AL.eu.org
- BG.eu.org
- CH.eu.org
- CY.eu.org
- LT.eu.org
- LV.eu.org
- MT.eu.org
- NO.eu.org
- PL.eu.org
- RO.eu.org
- RU.eu.org
- SI.eu.org
- SK.eu.org
- Other countries will be opened on request.
- Other countries:
-
- AU.eu.org (Australia)
- CA.eu.org (Canada)
- CD.eu.org (Democratic Republic of Congo)
- CN.eu.org (China)
- IL.eu.org (Israel)
- JP.eu.org (Japan)
- KR.eu.org (Korea)
- MY.eu.org (Malaysia)
- NG.eu.org (Nigeria)
- NZ.eu.org (New Zealand)
- US.eu.org (United States)
- Other countries will be opened on request.
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