Add International TLD’s to the Quick-Access Keyboard in Safari for iOS

International TLD's visible in iOS keyboard of Safari Most iOS Safari users know by now that you can quickly type out TLD (top level domains) for websites in Safari by hitting the “.com” button on the keyboard, and that by tapping and holding on that same “.com” button a variety of TLD’s will be available that are relevant to your default keyboard language. That tap-and-hold menu helps you visit websites faster on the iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch, by reducing typing, and in the USA you will find options for .com, .us, .net, .org, and .edu in that pop-up menu. If you’ve ever wished there were additional TLD’s for other countries too, you will be thrilled to find out you can easily add international domains to that quick-access menu as well, all you need to do is enable their respective keyboards on your iOS device.

Open Settings in iOS, then go to “General” followed by “International”
Select “Keyboards” then choose “Add New Keyboard”
Choose the countries corresponding to the TLD’s you want to add. For example, add “English (UK)” to bring .ie, .eu, and .co.uk to the TLD menu
Exit out of Settings when finished

Quick side note: while you’re in the International settings, consider adding the Emoji keyboard as well so that you can type and receive the funky and often hilarious emoji icons.

Add International Keyboards to bring more TLD's to iOS keyboard

Now go back to Safari and tap the URL bar to bring up the keyboard that has the TLD option, tap and hold on “.com” and you’ll find the new list. This should work the same for both US and internationally configured iOS devices, though there does appear to be some limitations on the TLD’s and not all foreign keyboards will add the top level domain for their country.

Here is what it looks like with the above international keyboards added:

Accessing the international TLD's on an iPhone with Safari

Notice the Bahasa Indonesia keyboard did not add the .id domain, but the English (UK), English (Australia), and English (Canada) did add their respective countries. This could be a localization limitation, or perhaps Apple simply hasn’t added every single countries unique domains yet to the TLD quick menu.