How to Choose a Business Name: Legal Requirements and Brand Strategy
A practical guide to naming your business - covering legal requirements, trademark searches, domain availability, and the branding principles that make names stick.
Your business name does three jobs: it identifies you legally, it communicates your brand, and it helps customers find you. Getting it right saves years of rebranding headaches.
Legal Requirements for Business Names
State registration rules
Each state has naming rules for registered entities (LLCs, corporations):
- Must include an entity designator: “LLC,” “Inc.,” “Corp.,” etc. (required for formal entities, not for DBAs)
- Must be distinguishable: Your name can’t be identical or deceptively similar to an existing registered entity in the same state
- Restricted words: Certain words require special approval - “Bank,” “Insurance,” “University,” “Trust,” “Federal,” “National”
- Prohibited content: Names can’t imply illegal activity or be intentionally misleading
DBA (Doing Business As)
If you want to operate under a name different from your legal entity name, you file a DBA (also called a fictitious business name, trade name, or assumed name). For example:
- Legal name: Park Consulting LLC
- DBA: Bright Strategy
DBAs are filed at the county or state level depending on jurisdiction. Fees range from $10–$100.
Name availability search
Before filing, check your state’s Secretary of State business entity database. Most states offer free online searches. Search for:
- Exact matches
- Phonetic equivalents (“Klear” vs. “Clear”)
- Similar names in your industry
Trademark Considerations
State registration doesn’t protect your name nationally - trademarks do.
Federal trademark search
Search the USPTO’s TESS database (tess2.uspto.gov) before committing to a name. Look for:
- Exact matches in your industry class
- Similar names (sound-alikes, visual similarities)
- Related goods/services - a trademark in a different industry might not conflict, but if there’s overlap, it can
Common law trademarks
Even without federal registration, businesses establish “common law” trademark rights through use. A company using a name for years in your market could challenge you even without a registered trademark. Google the name thoroughly.
Should you register a trademark?
Not immediately necessary for most small businesses, but recommended once you have:
- Revenue and an established customer base
- Plans to operate in multiple states
- A name that’s central to your brand identity
- Budget for the filing ($250–$350 per class via USPTO, or $1,000–$2,000 with an attorney)
Trademark registration gives you nationwide protection, the right to use the (R) symbol, and legal presumption of ownership in disputes.
Domain Name Strategy
Check availability early
Your business name should have an available .com domain - or at least a reasonable alternative. Check availability before you fall in love with a name.
If exactname.com is taken:
- getexactname.com, exactnamehq.com, useexactname.com - functional alternatives
- exactname.co, .io, .app - alternative TLDs (acceptable for tech companies, less ideal for local businesses)
- Modify the name - sometimes a slight naming variation opens up a perfect domain
Domain pricing
- Standard .com: $10–$15/year from registrars like Namecheap, Google Domains, or Cloudflare
- Premium .com (already registered, available for purchase): $500–$50,000+
- Alternative TLDs (.io, .co, .app): $20–$60/year
Avoid:
- Hyphens in domains (hard to communicate verbally)
- Numbers (confusion between “5” and “five”)
- Domain names longer than 15 characters
- Unusual TLDs (.xyz, .biz, .info) for customer-facing businesses
Social Media Handles
Check availability on key platforms before finalizing your name:
- X (Twitter)
- LinkedIn (company page)
- Facebook (business page)
- TikTok
- YouTube
Tools like Namechk.com check availability across dozens of platforms simultaneously. Consistency matters - the same handle everywhere is easier for customers to find and builds brand recognition.
If your exact name is taken, consider:
- Adding a prefix/suffix: @shopexactname, @exactname_co
- Abbreviation: @exact if the full name is long
- But first ask: is the name too common if handles are already claimed everywhere?
What Makes a Good Business Name
Short and memorable
The best business names are 1–3 words. Longer names get shortened by customers anyway - better to control the short version yourself.
- Good: Stripe, Slack, Notion, Square
- OK: Blue Apron, Dollar Shave Club
- Avoid: Advanced Integrated Business Solutions Group
Easy to spell and pronounce
If you have to spell it out every time you say it, it’s a problem. Avoid:
- Unusual spellings (Lyft works because it’s a single letter change; “Kwality Kreations” does not)
- Words people confuse aurally (“Advise” vs. “Advice”)
- Foreign words your audience can’t pronounce
Distinctive, not descriptive
Descriptive names (Fast Plumbing, Best Web Design) are hard to trademark, hard to differentiate, and forgettable. Names that evoke a feeling or use metaphor are stronger:
- Amazon - vastness, everything (not “Online Bookstore”)
- Patagonia - adventure, wilderness (not “Quality Outdoor Clothing”)
- Mailchimp - playful, approachable (not “Email Marketing Platform”)
Passes the “radio test”
Can someone hear your business name spoken aloud and correctly type it into a browser without help? If yes, it passes. If they’d ask “how do you spell that?” or confuse it with another word, it fails.
Doesn’t limit your growth
“Portland Web Design” boxes you into one city and one service. “Bright Studio” allows expansion into new markets and services. Choose a name that works for where you’re going, not just where you are.
Naming Approaches
Founder names
Examples: Goldman Sachs, Ben & Jerry’s, Hewlett-Packard
Pros: Personal, unique, automatically trademark-able Cons: Hard to sell the company, can feel less professional for solo founders
Invented words
Examples: Kodak, Spotify, Zillow
Pros: Highly distinctive, easy to trademark, domain usually available Cons: No inherent meaning - requires marketing to build recognition
Real words, new context
Examples: Apple, Amazon, Uber, Slack
Pros: Already familiar, carries associations you can leverage Cons: Harder to trademark if the word is common, .com likely taken
Compound words
Examples: Facebook, WordPress, FedEx
Pros: Combines meaning, often memorable, unique enough for trademark Cons: Can sound forced if the combination doesn’t flow
Acronyms
Examples: IBM, BMW, UPS
Pros: Short, professional Cons: Meaningless without brand recognition, hard to differentiate, terrible for SEO initially
Avoid starting with an acronym. Companies that use them (IBM, AT&T) earned their recognition over decades. A new business named “JKR Technologies” is forgettable.
The Name Reservation Process
Once you’ve chosen a name:
- Search your state’s business entity database - confirm availability
- Search USPTO TESS - check for trademark conflicts
- Search Google - check for existing businesses using the name
- Check domain availability - secure it immediately
- Reserve the name with your state (optional, $10–$50, valid 60–120 days)
- Register social media handles - claim them even before you’re active
- File your LLC or corporation - this registers the name formally
- File a DBA (if operating under a different name)
- Register a trademark (when budget allows)
Quick Decision Framework
If you’re stuck between options, score each name on these criteria (1–5 scale):
| Criteria | Weight |
|---|---|
| Easy to spell and say | High |
| .com domain available | High |
| Passes trademark search | Must-pass |
| Memorable (distinctive, not generic) | High |
| Doesn’t limit future growth | Medium |
| Social handles available | Medium |
| You personally like it | Low |
“You personally like it” is last on purpose. The best name for your business is the one your customers will remember and find, not necessarily the one that’s your personal favorite.
When to Rebrand
Sometimes you outgrow a name. Signs it’s time:
- Your name describes a service you no longer focus on
- You’re expanding geographically beyond a location-based name
- Your name is frequently confused with a competitor
- You’ve received a cease-and-desist over trademark issues
Rebranding is expensive (new signage, marketing materials, SEO rebuilding, customer re-education), so it’s worth investing time upfront to choose a name that lasts.
Try the calculator: business name generator