Use this checkout page to confirm buyer information, registrar transfer details, selected domains and preferred cryptocurrency. Wallet address, payment hash and transaction proof are handled later on the invoice page after the invoice reference is generated.
This page does not collect crypto wallet addresses, blockchain transaction hashes or payment confirmation screenshots. Those payment validation details belong on the invoice page after the buyer receives a secure invoice reference.
Before continuing, confirm the selected domain names, USD total, buyer email and registrar account email. The invoice page will show the selected crypto payment method, invoice ID, payment instructions and validation form.
The checkout stage is designed to collect only the details needed to prepare an accurate domain purchase invoice. It separates order preparation from payment validation so buyers are not asked for blockchain proof before an invoice exists.
A professional domain checkout should confirm who is buying the domain, which registrar account will receive the domain, which crypto method the buyer prefers, and which domains are included in the order. The buyer should not be asked to enter a transaction hash at this stage because payment has not been made yet.
After the buyer submits the form, a unique invoice reference is created. That invoice can include the selected cryptocurrency, seller payment instructions, QR code, invoice expiry, buyer details and payment validation form. This makes the purchase process clearer and more trustworthy for premium domain buyers.
Wallet address, blockchain transaction hash and payment proof should belong to the invoice page, not the checkout page. This avoids confusion because the buyer must first receive a final invoice amount, invoice ID and selected payment instructions before sending funds.
When the invoice page opens, the buyer can review the seven-day invoice validity, selected coin, payment QR area and seller payment details. After payment, the buyer can submit transaction hash, name and email for validation. That validation submission can then be connected to your backend or email system for manual review.
This checkout page helps reduce transfer mistakes by asking buyers to verify critical details before they continue to the invoice.
Review every selected domain in the order summary. Make sure the names, niche, registrar and total price match your intended purchase.
Use the same registrar account email that matches the domain registrar. If domains use multiple registrars, add each account email in transfer notes.
Select only the preferred cryptocurrency here. Payment wallet and validation instructions appear on the generated invoice page.
These answers explain how checkout, invoice creation and crypto validation work for aged iGaming domain purchases.
The wallet address is intentionally removed from checkout because the buyer should first generate a final invoice. The invoice page is the correct place for wallet details, QR code, payment instructions and validation form.
The buyer submits the transaction hash after payment on the invoice page. That page can collect the buyer name, email and blockchain transaction hash for validation.
The checkout page prepares the invoice data but final reservation should be handled by your backend or manual team after invoice creation and payment validation.
A unique invoice ID is created, order data is saved to browser storage, and the buyer is redirected to the invoice page with the invoice reference in the URL.
Static HTML cannot send real emails by itself. The included JavaScript prepares invoice data for backend integration, but automated email delivery requires a server, email API or payment/invoice backend.