The latest IDN Market Report 2026 confirms that the global adoption of Internationalised Domain Names (IDNs) remains limited, despite continued technical progress and growing awareness of digital inclusion issues.
The report shows that the IDN market remains highly concentrated, with just ten top-level domains accounting for approximately 76% of all IDN registrations worldwide. This concentration highlights how adoption continues to depend heavily on a small number of mature local markets, while broader uptake across the global domain ecosystem remains slow.
Although overall growth remained negative in 2026, the pace of decline slowed compared to previous years. Europe and Asia recorded widespread decreases across many country-code top-level domains (ccTLDs), reflecting a mature but stagnating market. In contrast, the Americas stood out as the only region showing mostly positive growth trends, suggesting that interest in multilingual digital identities may be stabilising in selected markets.
The report also points to a persistent gap between technical capability and real-world user adoption. Public awareness of IDNs remains consistently low across all regions, with little improvement year on year. Even where technical support has improved, many users continue to default to Latin-script domain names due to habit, familiarity, and perceptions around compatibility and usability.
At the same time, technical foundations continue to strengthen. The report highlights gradual progress in areas such as WHOIS and RDAP support, wider implementation of the IDNA2008 standard, and ongoing work toward Email Address Internationalisation (EAI), all of which are essential for improving the usability of multilingual domain names across digital services.
The findings suggest that technical readiness alone is no longer the primary challenge for IDNs. Instead, future growth will depend increasingly on awareness, user trust, and stronger promotion of local-language digital identities.
Outlook data from industry stakeholders reflects this cautious mood: 42% of respondents expect no significant market change in the coming years, while fewer respondents anticipate growth than in previous editions of the survey.
With almost 400 million domain names now registered globally across all TLDs, IDNs continue to play an important role in making the internet more multilingual and inclusive. However, the report makes clear that long-term growth will depend not only on technical improvements, but also on increasing public awareness and encouraging users to embrace online identities in their native languages and scripts.
For the full report and detailed market data, visit the official IDN Market Report.
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