Your domain doesn’t load anywhere — website and email are dead — and a WHOIS check shows clientHold or serverHold. This is a registrar/registry-level suspension, not a hosting issue. We diagnose the exact cause, clean any malware or phishing behind an abuse complaint, and prepare the registrar reinstatement so your domain resolves again.
Last updated: June 2026 · Reviewed by the FixHackedWordPress malware response team
Signs It’s The Domain
Fix-First, Pay-Later Guarantee
We diagnose and clean the cause first. If we can’t help you recover, you pay nothing.
Quick Answer
A domain suspension happens at the registrar or registry level — the domain name itself is put on clientHold or serverHold, which removes it from DNS entirely. Unlike a hosting suspension (where the server is disabled but the domain still resolves to a notice page), a suspended domain resolves nowhere: your website, email, and every other service on it go dark at once. The good news: the domain still belongs to you — it isn’t deleted or transferred, just switched off until the cause is cleared.
The most common cause is ICANN WHOIS verification failure — registrars must verify the registrant’s email within 15 days of registration or a contact change, and an ignored verification link triggers suspension. Other causes are expiry/non-payment, inaccurate WHOIS data, or an abuse complaint (phishing, malware, or spam reported to the registrar). The fix depends entirely on which one applies, so the first step is always reading the WHOIS status and the registrar’s notice.
Registrar level
The domain name is on hold
Nothing resolves
Site and email both go dark
Still yours
Not deleted — just suspended
$0
If we can’t help
Make Sure It’s The Domain
The tell is simple: if your email is dead too and WHOIS shows a “hold” status, it’s the domain. If the domain still resolves to a notice page, it’s the host. If the site loads but shows a red warning, it’s a blacklist.
| What you’re seeing | Where the problem is | Right fix |
|---|---|---|
| Nothing resolves — site and email dead; WHOIS shows clientHold | Your domain name (registrar) | You’re on the right page |
| “This account has been suspended” page; locked out of cPanel | Your hosting account (server) | Hosting suspension recovery |
| Site loads, but a red “deceptive / malware” warning shows | Google Safe Browsing (a warning) | Google blacklist removal |
Tip: run a WHOIS lookup and read the status. clientHold/serverHold means suspended; redemptionPeriod means it expired; ok means the domain is fine and the problem is elsewhere.
Each cause has a different path back. We identify which one you’re facing from the WHOIS status and the registrar’s notice, then handle the part that fits us.
The most common cause. ICANN requires the registrant email to be verified within 15 days of registration or a contact change; a missed link triggers suspension. Fixed by completing verification with your registrar.
A lapsed renewal can drop the domain into hold or redemption. This is settled with the registrar by renewing — we’ll confirm if that’s what the status shows.
If your domain was reported for phishing, malware, or spam, the registrar holds it until the offending content is removed. This is where our cleanup is essential before reinstatement.
Fake or outdated registrant details violate ICANN’s accuracy rules and can lock the domain until corrected with valid information.
If attackers got into your registrar account, securing it and removing their malicious content is part of getting the hold lifted — often alongside a site backdoor cleanup.
Court orders, UDRP disputes, or registry policy can place a serverHold. These are resolved directly with the registrar/registry and any relevant authority.
For abuse-related suspensions, we do the work that actually unblocks you: pinpointing the exact WHOIS status and cause, removing the malware, phishing, or spam the registrar flagged, securing the site so it can’t recur, and preparing a clear remediation summary for the registrar’s reinstatement request. That cleanup-and-evidence step is usually the real barrier.
Some steps are tied to your registrar account and have to come from you: clicking the ICANN verification link, paying an overdue renewal, or updating registrant contact details. We can’t bypass those — but we’ll tell you exactly which one applies and walk you through it, so nothing stalls. We’re honest about this up front rather than promising to “instantly unsuspend” any domain.
Methodology
Diagnose the real cause, clear the part that fits us, and guide the rest so the hold comes off.
We read the WHOIS EPP status (clientHold, serverHold, redemption) and the registrar’s notice to pinpoint exactly why the domain is suspended — verification, abuse, expiry, or data accuracy.
If it’s an abuse hold, we remove the malware, phishing, or spam the registrar flagged across files and database, and secure the site and registrar account so the issue can’t return.
We tell you precisely what only you can do — verify your email, renew, or correct WHOIS — and walk you through it so the account-side requirements are met.
We prepare the remediation/reinstatement request, then confirm the hold is lifted and the domain resolves again once DNS propagates.
Simple Pricing
No tiers, no upsells. One price to diagnose, clean, and guide your domain back online.
$75 flat, to start
Diagnosis, abuse cleanup & reinstatement support — one domain.
Fix-first, pay-later · you only pay once it’s resolved
A hosting suspension disables the server, but your domain still resolves to the host’s notice page. A domain suspension puts the name itself on hold, so it resolves nowhere — site and email both go dark. The quickest tell is whether your email is also down and whether WHOIS shows a “hold” status.
No. A suspension (clientHold/serverHold) means the domain is switched off, not deleted or transferred — it still belongs to you. It’s restored once the cause is resolved. Left unaddressed for a long time, though, an expired domain can eventually be released, so it’s worth acting promptly.
We’ll confirm that’s the cause and guide you through it, but the verification link is sent to your registrant email and has to be clicked from your side. Once you verify, the hold is removed and DNS propagates. We can’t click it for you, and we’re upfront about that.
This is where we add the most value: we remove the flagged content, secure the site and your registrar account, and prepare the remediation summary the registrar needs to lift the hold. Abuse suspensions won’t clear until the content is genuinely gone.
Verification holds often lift within about a day once you verify; abuse holds depend on cleanup plus the registrar’s review. It’s a flat $75 to start, fix-first and pay-later — you only pay once it’s resolved. Send us your domain to begin.
A suspended domain takes your whole online presence — site and email — offline at once. We diagnose it, clean what’s flagged, and guide the reinstatement — and if we can’t help you recover, you pay absolutely nothing.
Flat $75 · Fix-first, pay-later