Cloud & Software

Namecheap Small Business Week Sale 2026: Make More Online for Less (June 23–29)

Namecheap's Small Business Week Sale runs June 23–29, 2026. Here's what's in the lineup (domains, EasyWP, email, SSL), what's worth grabbing for a new business, and how to read a hosting deal so renewal doesn't surprise you.

Daniel Roth · Jun 16, 2026
Namecheap Small Business Week Sale 2026: Make More Online for Less (June 23–29)
Table of contents
  1. What's in the Namecheap lineup
  2. What's usually worth it during the sale
  3. How to read a hosting deal (so renewal doesn't sting)
  4. Who it's for
  5. Bottom line

Namecheap is running its Small Business Week Sale from June 23–29, 2026, under the theme "Make more online for less." It's one of the better-timed sales of the year if you're launching a website, moving a side project onto its own domain, or setting up the basics for a small business — domains, hosting, email, and security tend to be discounted together during this window.

Here's what Namecheap actually sells, what's worth grabbing for a new business, and how to judge a hosting deal so the headline price doesn't surprise you at renewal.

What's in the Namecheap lineup

Namecheap is best known for cheap domains, but its catalog covers most of what a small site needs:

  • Domains — a wide range of TLDs (.com, .net, .org, plus many niche extensions), with free WHOIS privacy included.
  • Shared hosting — entry-level cPanel hosting for brochure sites, blogs, and small stores.
  • EasyWP — Namecheap's managed WordPress hosting, built for one-click WordPress without the cPanel overhead.
  • Private Email — business mailboxes on your own domain (an alternative to paying per-seat for Google or Microsoft).
  • SSL certificates — from basic domain-validated certs up to higher-assurance options.
  • FastVPN and other extras — a VPN, site/logo tools, and migrations.

For a brand-new business, the common starter bundle is a domain + EasyWP (or shared hosting) + Private Email + an SSL — and those are exactly the categories a sitewide sale tends to cut.

What's usually worth it during the sale

  • A .com domain for your business name — cheap to register and the single most important asset to lock in early.
  • A year of hosting — sale pricing is best on the first term, so a longer initial term captures the discount for longer (see the renewal note below).
  • Email on your domain — a you@yourbusiness.com address looks far more credible than a free webmail address, and Private Email is inexpensive.

Exact discounts change each day of a sale and by product, so check the live promo page during June 23–29 for the current numbers rather than relying on last year's figures.

How to read a hosting deal (so renewal doesn't sting)

The one rule that saves the most money: the sale price is almost always the first-term price, and renewals are higher. Before you buy:

  • Note the renewal rate, not just the intro price — it's shown at checkout.
  • Pick a term length deliberately. A longer first term locks the discount in longer; a shorter one keeps you flexible.
  • Don't pay for tiers you won't use. A small site does not need the top hosting plan on day one — you can upgrade later.
  • Keep domain and hosting decisions separate in your head: a domain is portable and worth securing even if you host elsewhere.

Who it's for

This sale suits first-time founders, freelancers, and side-project owners who want a credible web presence — domain, site, and branded email — for as little as possible up front. If you already run an established site on a host you're happy with, the most useful move is usually just renewing or grabbing additional domains while they're discounted.

Bottom line

Small Business Week is a sensible moment to buy the unglamorous foundations of being online: a domain, hosting, and email. Grab the .com first, choose your term with the renewal price in mind, and skip anything you won't use this year.

Shop the Namecheap Sale