What is a website TLD?
TLD stands for Top Level Domain.
Let us explain it in simple terms.
A TLD is just the last part of a website address.
It’s the part you see after the dot.
Like: website.com, website.com.kh, website.vn
Some TLDs are global.
For example, .com.
It doesn’t belong to any country. People all over the world use it, which is why it feels familiar and trusted.
Some TLDs are country-based.
.kh for Cambodia, .vn for Vietnam, .jp for Japan.
When people see these, they usually know where the business is based.
Then there’s .com.kh.
This one combines both ideas.
It says: This is a business website, and it’s based in Cambodia.
They’re just part of how the internet knows where a website belongs.
When someone types your website name, the TLD helps guide them to the right place.
Here, another simple way to think about it:
Your domain name is your business name online.
Example: www.youcompanyname.com
(”www: is for World Wide Web, “youcompanyname” is your company name, .com tells that you’re a company, and last is .kh, tells that you’re based in or from Cambodia. Using .com.kh will help boost your credibility as a Cambodia business or “made in Cambodia” signal.
That’s it. Nothing complicated.
















