What is WHOIS?
WHOIS is a registration lookup system used mainly for domains and some address resources. It can reveal registrars, status codes, nameservers, and sometimes ownership or abuse contacts depending on policy.
- What WHOIS can still tell you.
- Why privacy and registry rules limit some fields.
- How to use WHOIS alongside DNS and reverse DNS.
What it shows
Typical WHOIS output includes registrar details, registration dates, expiry dates, and nameservers for domains.
Depending on the registry and privacy settings, contact details may be redacted or omitted.
Why it is less complete now
Modern privacy policies and registry rules intentionally reduce personally identifying data.
That is why WHOIS is better for operational clues than for guaranteed ownership details.
Good use cases
Check expiry, status codes, registrar changes, and nameserver drift.
Compare WHOIS with DNS records when troubleshooting delegation or DNS migrations.
Bad assumptions
WHOIS data is not always current or complete.
Do not treat redaction as suspicious by itself.
Is WHOIS the same as DNS?
No. WHOIS is registration data. DNS is operational name resolution.
Can WHOIS tell me where a server is?
Not reliably. Use network and geolocation tools for that.
Last updated: March 29, 2026