What Most Website Rebuilds Miss About Domain Names
Most website redesign projects focus on design and content. And they should. Those are two of the biggest factors in how a website looks, feels, and performs.
One area that often gets overlooked is the domain name.
That oversight can create unnecessary headaches later. Not immediately, but months or even years down the road.
This is especially common when a business moves away from all-in-one platforms like Wix or Squarespace and rebuilds their site on WordPress.
What a Domain Registrar Actually Does
A domain registrar does not own your domain name. The client always should.
The registrar manages the domain on the owner’s behalf. Renewals. DNS records. Security settings. Transfers. All of the behind-the-scenes controls that keep a domain working properly.
At Full Scope Creative, we always make sure the client is listed as the domain owner. That matters. Ownership ensures the business controls the domain and its future use. We manage the technical side so clients do not have to worry about renewals, DNS updates, or security settings.
This distinction is important because not all registrars handle things well.
Some make DNS updates unnecessarily complicated. Others bury transfer codes behind multiple support requests. When changes are needed quickly, that friction becomes a problem.
Registrar quality directly affects flexibility. It affects how easily changes can be made. It affects how smoothly future transitions happen.
If You’re Leaving Wix or Squarespace, Your Domain Should Leave Too
This is the most important part of the discussion.
Wix and Squarespace are built as closed systems. They work well enough when everything lives inside their platform and stays there long term.
Once you move your website to WordPress, that advantage starts to disappear.
Leaving the domain behind can create ongoing friction. Old logins get forgotten. Access becomes harder to track down. DNS updates turn into a scavenger hunt. If the platform changes how something works, you are stuck adapting to it.
Moving the domain out avoids that.
It creates cleaner DNS management. It removes reliance on an old system you no longer actively use. It simplifies long-term maintenance when the domain is managed alongside the new website.
This is not an urgent, high-risk issue. It is a smart long-term decision that helps avoid headaches later.
Where Should the Domain Go Instead?
The goal is not to chase the perfect registrar.
The goal is stability.
A good registrar should offer clear DNS access, auto-renewal, two-factor authentication, and straightforward transfer processes. It should be easy to log into and easy to manage.
That is it.
The registrar should be reliable and uneventful. When something needs to be changed, it should not feel like work. It should just get done.
When Is the Best Time to Transfer a Domain During a Rebuild?
The honest answer is that it depends.
If the new site build is going to take a few weeks, transferring the domain early or at the start of the project can be a clean approach. It creates a fresh setup from day one.
Domain transfers can take up to seven days to complete, so timing matters. If you take this route, avoid updating contact information until the DNS update is made to launch the new site. Changing registrant details can trigger a sixty-day lock that prevents further changes.
If the rebuild timeline is tight, leaving the domain where it is during development is completely fine.
In that case, update DNS first to launch the new site. Let that change propagate and settle. Then transfer the domain once everything is stable.
There is no single right moment.
The goal is minimizing disruption, not following a rigid rule.
Does the Domain Registrar Impact SEO?
No. Not directly.
Where a domain is registered does not influence search rankings.
Problems only arise if renewals fail or DNS records break. Those issues can cause downtime, which can impact visibility. That is a reliability issue, not an SEO strategy.
What does affect SEO is the CMS.
The registrar does not influence rankings the way the CMS does. Platforms like Wix, Squarespace, and WordPress offer very different levels of control. Moving to WordPress opens more flexibility for content structure, technical optimization, and long-term growth.
But the registrar itself is not an SEO ranking factor.
Good Domain Management Means Fewer Headaches
These decisions are not about chasing perfection.
They are about removing friction.
At Full Scope Creative, we often manage domains, hosting, DNS, and websites together because it makes life easier for our clients. One place to call. One team that understands the full setup. Fewer things falling through the cracks.
If you are rebuilding a site and unsure what should move, when it should move, or why it matters, this is exactly the type of decision we help clients navigate every day.








