Bluehost
Bluehost is a popular web hosting and domain services website used to launch websites, connect domains, manage WordPress, set up email, and maintain basic web infrastructure.
What Bluehost is
Bluehost is a website for hosting and managing websites. On Bluehost.com, users can buy hosting, connect or register domains, install WordPress, build pages, manage DNS, create email accounts, and add website security products such as SSL certificates.
Hosting and WordPress
Bluehost is closely associated with WordPress hosting. A hosting plan gives a site server resources, storage, databases, control panels, backups, and support tools. WordPress then runs on that hosting environment as the content management system for posts, pages, themes, plugins, and site settings.
Domains and DNS
A Bluehost user may register a new domain, transfer an existing one, or point a domain from another registrar to Bluehost hosting. DNS records and nameservers decide where website traffic and email traffic go, so domain setup is separate from building the site itself.
Website builder and ecommerce
Bluehost also offers website-building workflows and hosting plans aimed at small business and ecommerce use. These tools can reduce setup friction, especially for users who want templates, guided WordPress setup, store features, or bundled email and certificate options rather than a fully manual hosting stack.
Who uses Bluehost
Bluehost is used by first-time website owners, bloggers, local businesses, freelancers, agencies, nonprofits, creators, online stores, and WordPress users who want hosting with domain and setup tools in the same account. More technical users may also use it for staging, migrations, DNS, and multiple client sites.
What the account controls
A Bluehost account can control hosting plans, domains, DNS records, SSL certificates, email accounts, WordPress installations, backups, billing, and user access. These pieces are connected, but each has a different job. When a site is down, the cause might be hosting, DNS, domain renewal, application code, email routing, or certificate configuration.
Tradeoffs
Keeping domain, hosting, WordPress, email, and certificates with one provider can be convenient. It can also make a single account unusually important. Site owners should keep current backups, document DNS settings, enable two-factor authentication, monitor renewals, and understand how to move the domain or site if their needs change.
Why it matters
Bluehost matters because hosting is one of the practical foundations of the web. Services like Bluehost turn server setup, WordPress installation, domain connection, email, and HTTPS into workflows that many non-specialists can use to publish and maintain a website.
WHOIS domain data
Data pulled: May 20, 2026View current WHOIS record
- Domain
- bluehost.com
- IP address
- 104.18.41.208
- Registrar
- Domain.com - Network Solutions, LLC
- WHOIS server
- whois.domain.com
- Referral URL
- http://www.domain.com
- Created
- November 15, 2002
- Updated
- April 8, 2026
- Expires
- November 15, 2034
- Nameservers
- cody.ns.cloudflare.com (172.64.33.107); erin.ns.cloudflare.com (108.162.192.113)
- Domain status
- clientTransferProhibited; clientUpdateProhibited
- DNSSEC
- unsigned