Extract Domains from Text Online
Quickly extract domain names from any text input, including URLs and HTML content. Simply paste your text, and our tool will identify and list all the domains for you, streamlining your data analysis and web scraping tasks.
Key Features
- Automatically extracts domain names from any text
- Option to extract base domains without protocol or www prefix
- Remove duplicate domains to get a clean list
- Sort domains alphabetically for better organization
- Extract domains directly from a website URL and its links
Common Use Cases
- Extract domain names from email content for analysis
- Create a clean list of domains from research documents
- Extract and organize website links from articles
- Identify domains in logs or data exports
- Discover all external domains linked from a specific website
How to Use
- Choose input mode: Text or URL depending on your source
- If using Text mode, paste your content containing domain names. If using URL mode, enter a website address.
- Select your extraction options (remove duplicates, domain only, etc.)
- Click "Extract Domains" to process your input
- Copy or download the results for your use
Frequently Asked Questions
This tool can extract most standard domain formats, including domains with various TLDs (.com, .org, .net, etc.), subdomains, and domains with or without protocols (http://, https://).
No, we do not store or save your text on our servers. All processing happens in your browser locally. For your convenience, the tool temporarily saves your input in your browser's local storage so you can refresh the page without losing your work.
URL mode is useful when you want to extract domains from an entire webpage, including all the links it contains. It's perfect for discovering all external domains a website connects to. Text mode is better for processing content you've already copied, like emails or documents.
The tool uses a regex pattern that covers most common domain formats. However, some highly unusual domain formats or internationalized domain names (IDNs) might not be captured correctly. If you're having issues with specific domains, try adjusting the text format.
Some websites implement security measures that prevent automated access. If a website blocks our tool from accessing it, you might see an error message. In such cases, you can try manually visiting the page, copying its content, and using the Text mode instead.