A patient calls. They forget your URL halfway through dialing it back. They Google a competitor instead. The right domain prevents that — short, professional, easy to say once. This generator creates 100+ available practice domains in under 8 seconds, tuned for solo physicians, group clinics, and specialty practices.
Patients judge a private practice by its URL before they ever read a single line of content. A clunky drjohnsonfamilymedicineclinicllc.com looks like spam in a search result; a clean drjohnsonfamily.com looks like a real practice their neighbor recommended. The difference between those two URLs is roughly 3–5x in click-through rate when both appear in the same Google Business Profile pack — and that’s before anyone considers booking.
Most physicians inherit a domain from whoever built their first website ten years ago, and most of those domains were optimized for nothing. Either they’re too long, contain a former partner’s last name, lock you into a single specialty, or sit on a TLD that quietly tanks email deliverability (we’re looking at you, .info). A 2026 practice needs a domain that survives growth: adding associates, adding locations, adding telehealth, and eventually selling the practice.
Generate doctor-name + specialty combinations like drchenpeds.com or kaurfamilymed.com. Short, brandable, and they fit on the side of a coffee mug at the front desk.
Swap a personal name for a city + specialty pattern (austincardiology.com) so the brand outlives any single physician and doesn’t need rebuilding when partners change.
City + specialty domains rank disproportionately well for “dermatologist near me” queries because they earn local backlinks and reinforce Google Business Profile signals — exactly what TinyTools generates.
Direct-pay and concierge models need brand-first domains — parkviewmd.com or nuvuhealth.com — that don’t pigeonhole you to one zip code or one insurance network.
A personal physician brand domain (drmartinez.md) follows you across hospitals and contracts. Patients and recruiters can find you without going through a hospital portal that may shut off the day your contract ends.
Most generic domain generators spit out tech-bro names that sound great for a SaaS startup and absurd for a pediatric clinic. BuzzMango.io is not where any parent is bringing a sick toddler. The TinyTools generator is biased toward the patterns that actually work for healthcare:
drsmithdental.com, kimcardio.com. Strong for solo practitioners building personal reputation and Google reviews.denverortho.com, dallasderm.com. Strong for local SEO and groups expanding to multiple locations.parkviewfamilymed.com, mainstpediatrics.com. Friendly, memorable, and survives partner turnover.cardiopros.com, peds.health. Useful for telehealth and concierge brands that aren’t tied to one city.Every result is checked live against the registrar — you never see a name that’s already taken. .com is checked first, then .health, .clinic, .care, and .md as fallbacks. If your first choice is taken, the generator suggests three near-variants that are available so you don’t lose 20 minutes guessing.
uptowndentalboston.com is hard to expand to a second location.Generate 100+ available doctor and clinic domain names in under 8 seconds. Free, no signup, real-time availability across .com, .health, .clinic, .care and .md.
Try the Domain Generator →Last name is almost always better — shorter, easier to remember, and it survives a name change after marriage. drchen.com beats drjohnchen.com nine times out of ten unless your last name is already a generic word.
No. Patients understand from your title tag and Google Business Profile that you’re a physician. chencardio.com reads as professional and is shorter than drchencardio.com. The exception: very common surnames where adding “dr” helps disambiguate.
The domain name is public — it’s not a HIPAA concern by itself. What matters is what the domain points to: any patient-facing forms, portals, or appointment scheduling on that URL must be HIPAA-compliant on the backend. The HHS guidance on HIPAA for professionals covers the form-and-portal side; pick the domain freely, then make sure the hosting and forms behind it are compliant.
Yes, with one rule: keep the old domain and 301-redirect every URL to the new one for at least 18 months. Patients still have your old card in their wallet. Email signatures across the medical system still link to the old URL. The redirect preserves both the SEO equity and the patient who Googled you from a printed appointment reminder.
Under the hood, TinyTools uses a small LLM tuned on healthcare branding patterns plus a deterministic naming engine that combines: physician surnames, ~120 medical specialties (down to subspecialties like “pediatric endocrinology”), 15,000+ US city names, and a curated list of trust-signaling suffixes (Health, Care, Clinic, Medicine, Family, Wellness, Practice). It then filters the output for: pronounceability, length, trademark collision risk against the top 1,000 hospital and health-system brands, and availability across the registrar API. You see only names you can actually buy, ranked by how brandable they are.
For more on healthcare-domain best practices, the AMA’s digital practice resources are a useful read, and HealthIT.gov has guidance on patient-facing digital surfaces.
| TLD | Trust signal | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| .com | Highest | Always try first |
| .health | High, recognizable | Telehealth, brand-first practices |
| .clinic | High, descriptive | Specialty and group clinics |
| .care | Medium-high | Concierge, holistic, wellness |
| .md | Medium, popular with US physicians | Personal physician brands |
| .info / .net | Low | Avoid — reads as spam to patients |
The domain is the cheapest, longest-lasting branding decision a private practice will ever make. Spend an extra ten minutes here and you’ll save ten years of awkward URL on a business card.
Free, instant, no signup. Built for physicians, group practices, and telehealth brands.
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