Long time ago tried Gandi.net because of their "no bullshit" policy and stayed with them because it's true. Also looked at namecheap but when they insisted on copy of my id it ended with me never returning.<p>I use Kimsufi for hosting and never had any issues. Was a customer of online.net at the same time but only until the recent price hike.
There were two large-ish stories about domain registrars around two months back which triggered some side discussions about various registrars and their pros and cons if you dig a bit:<p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18059792" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18059792</a><p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18083641" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18083641</a>
I use Netlify (specialized in JAMstack / static sites). It has a generous free plan.<p>They can also register your domain, and the integrated interface makes it very easy to sping up a new site from a GitHub repo, assign it a new domain name, get SSL and be up and running in ~2 minutes.
I've been using namecheap. Their panel is straightforward, and prices are ok. $10/year for which tld? If .com they should be close, but above your target. For other tlds they have long price list.
In order to set some of Fastmail's domain security features (SPF, DKIM) I needed to add some txt records to my domain. My previous registrar only had some predefined fields in their web-form (like MX- , A-, AAAA- records, etc.) but there was no way to set these custom txt records.<p>After some research I landed at Hetzner who allow me to just edit the BIND zonefile according to my needs. No oversimplification that takes away features but also no hand-holding. I don't know why you asked for a 'nice web panel design' but afaik these providers usually don't have the HN-audience as their target. They target those 'non-techies' who need some sort of web-presence and to limit their support-needs they usually dump-down the UI to the basics.
I have used <a href="https://pair.com" rel="nofollow">https://pair.com</a> (or their domains side: pairnic.com which now seems to redirect to <a href="https://pairdomains.com" rel="nofollow">https://pairdomains.com</a>) since about 1994 and they have always been reasonably low-priced (I think it was $8-10 up front then ~$1/month for a domain) and they have always provided good support, clear policies, good documentation, and zero nonsense. I.e., just what I would want from a sustainable business that treats others the way they would want to be treated. (Same goes for their ubuntu or FreeBSD shell accounts and site hosting, etc.)<p>(ps: they are in the USA: Pittsburgh Pennsylvania, and maybe Nevada?)
Google Domains is cheap, and has a simple, fast interface (lightyears easier to use than GoDaddy, for example). No idea on if there are many missing features. Surely they have integrated it with APIs by now so you could programmatically add domain names, if needed.
Domain Registrar is now CloudFlare for me. Sadly it isn't yet GA, <a href="https://www.cloudflare.com/products/registrar/" rel="nofollow">https://www.cloudflare.com/products/registrar/</a>
Domains:<p>* namecheap.com: It's cheap and easy to use. Has a lot of TLDs to choose from.<p>* freenom.com: Started using free domains, dropped most of them, kept a few as paid domains, which I don't regret.<p>Hosting:<p>* server.lu (now part of server.com): Luxembourg is a great location for hosting, especially with a 1Gbit port. I still have my old contract which I don't plan on terminating as long as them don't force me. Getting the full bandwidth throughout Europe. Not the cheapest plan, but one of the best dedicated servers I ever owned.
> Which domain registrar<p>Gandi, I've used them for over a decade now and never ceased to be impressed.<p>> hosting provider do you prefer?<p>Joyent, (full disclaimer, I worked here previously) they really got containers right, just compare Fargate or ECS with Triton both as a developer and an operator. Joyent's path makes much more sense to me. Manta is also impressive, and being able to spin up a container right where an object lies is perfect for some workloads.
I use what I think is a fairly small registrar called Porkbun: <a href="http://porkbun.com" rel="nofollow">http://porkbun.com</a><p>I like that they at least seem smakk, their panel is great, I can buy a new domain in well under a minute, and their branding is a little funny.
Currently Hover for domain names (but will soon be transferring to Cloudflare Registrar when it's available).<p>For hosting, currently Linode, but I am also working on deploying to Digital Ocean in tandem for extra resiliency. I'll use failover GeoDNS to balance between the two.
I use Route53 from AWS for DNS, that way I can always move around regarding hosting and have full access to the records, I mostly use Hetzner, AWS and DigitalOcean for hosting. Registrar is Gandi at the moment, but might move if I find a decent replacement.
I use iwantmyname.com because I find their DNS configuration really simple compared to other registrars I have used. DigitalOcean for hosting, and as a business we use Cloudflare for DNS, but personally I just use the iwantmyname tools.
Namesilo ... Free privacy, api, bulk discounts... cost for a .com has just about always been 8.50'ish cheaper when they're having a special... they even have 2 facter authentication and other perks...
I've used a lot of registrars over the years, and overall Namecheap has been the best experience. I wish they supported U2F, but other than that, no complaints.
iwantmyname.com for domains, simple registration with very little upselling or marketing gumpf<p>CloudFlare for DNS<p>Vultr or DigitalOcean for hosting
I'll let others pick the registrar.<p>(The question becomes. What do you mean by manage domain names. The full shebang. Or only the simple stuff, like email & web forwarding.)<p>I use domain registrars from all over the world. And am familiar with domain registrars from all over the world. It's a result of the land rushes of the early 2000's. Where names were awarded in a round robin fashion. Pre-registering* with as many registrars as possible could increase the chance of obtaining a name. For the most part I've stuck with and had good experiences with the registrars that got me the domain names I was after. So you can just about pick any registrar and get a fairly good experience.<p>However; they have their quirks. I transferred some names to a register because their prices were low. But then found out they renew names once a year. As they're expiring, for only one more year. So every year I'm on pins and needles hoping my credit card won't be denied for some reason. I ran into trouble with some other companies in the fall this year when a new credit card was issued to me, and the old one stopped. Just as names needed to be renewed. Just as my Amazon Web Services bill came due.<p>Some registrars used to have clunky interfaces. Many have
upgraded and that's no longer the case.<p>I would want a registrar that allows multi-year registration and auto renewal. Email & web forwarding. The ability to easily change name servers and modify DNS records (you may need to provide domain ownership to your hosting provider through modification of your txt record). A registrar that makes it easy to lock and unlock a domain, and makes it easy to get the authorization code needed to transfer a domain. A registrar that let's you have your zone file when you want to transfer to another registrar. A registrar that let's you set a privacy policy so your email address isn't shown in the whois database and so you don't receive spam messages. I have somewhere shy of 140 2nd level domain names. And I used to see 140 of the same email. You want a registrar that gives you backup name servers and name servers that won't slow you up.<p>(I believe my .tw domains don't allow auto renewal; and you have to renew before the expiration date. A gotcha.)<p>There might be legal considerations. You might want to register domains in a country where the laws are different - to avoid trademark problems.<p>I would want a register that isn't on shaky financial footing. Where if the registrar went out of business my domains might be tied up and/or available. It's happened.<p>So I guess what I'm saying is there's a lot more involved then just price.<p>There are a lot of domains that are much more expensive then $10/yr. Maybe those expensive domains would be worth registering if you could get a more sensible name. Maybe an extension reserved for the business you're in. As an example; if you're Wells Fargo, wellsfargo.bank
$10/yr. seems kind of low. Unless the registrar tacks on charges for name servers, email & web forwarding, ... I think it used to cost $35 a year through the only registrar, Network Solutions. So I don't mind paying $15 or $20 at all. My .tw names are normally $40/yr<i></i>. And other extensions can be much, much higher.<p>Google domains is easy to use and doesn't cost any more then the other registrars I've been using.<p>* I ruefully found out how credit cards actually worked after the land rushes started. They can authorize transactions on your card even though you haven't won the domain name(s). So if you want to get involved in a round robin land rush. You really want to have a high credit limit.<p><i></i> I get .tw names from www.bookmyname.com (Online SAS) in France for less then half the cost