LLC Name Rules and Requirements
Overview
Choosing the right name for your LLC is one of the first and most important steps in forming your business. Each state has specific requirements and restrictions for LLC names. This guide covers the essential rules you need to know.
General LLC Name Requirements
1. LLC Designator Required
All states require your LLC name to include a designator that identifies it as a limited liability company. Acceptable designators include:
- "Limited Liability Company"
- "LLC"
- "L.L.C."
Some states also accept:
- "Limited Company"
- "LC"
- "L.C."
2. Name Availability
Your LLC name must be distinguishable from existing business entities registered in your state. Before filing, you should:
- Search your state's business name database
- Check trademark databases (USPTO)
- Verify domain name availability
- Search social media handles
3. Restricted Words
Certain words require special licensing or are prohibited:
Commonly Restricted:
- Bank, Banking
- Insurance
- Attorney, Lawyer
- University, College
- Doctor, Medical
May Require Approval:
- Engineer, Engineering
- Accountant, CPA
- Real Estate
- Mortgage
4. Prohibited Content
Your LLC name cannot:
- Suggest government affiliation (FBI, Treasury, State Department)
- Imply illegal activity
- Use profanity or obscene language
- Mislead the public about your business purpose
State-Specific Considerations
Punctuation and Spacing
- Most states allow punctuation marks
- Spaces, hyphens, and ampersands (&) are generally accepted
- Special characters may have restrictions
Name Reservation
If you're not ready to file immediately, you can reserve your LLC name:
- Typical reservation period: 30-120 days
- Reservation fee: $10-$100 (varies by state)
- Can usually be renewed once
DBA / Trade Name
If you want to operate under a different name:
- File a "Doing Business As" (DBA) or trade name
- Your legal LLC name remains on official documents
- DBA allows you to use a more marketable name
Best Practices
1. Make It Memorable
Choose a name that:
- Is easy to pronounce and spell
- Reflects your business purpose
- Is unique and distinctive
- Works well in marketing materials
2. Think Long-Term
Consider:
- Future expansion plans
- Geographic limitations in the name
- Industry changes
- Brand scalability
3. Check Everything
Before finalizing:
- ✓ State business name database
- ✓ USPTO trademark database
- ✓ Domain name availability
- ✓ Social media handles
- ✓ Google search results
4. Avoid These Mistakes
- Using geographic limitations (e.g., "Miami LLC" if you plan to expand)
- Names that are too similar to competitors
- Trendy names that may not age well
- Names that are too long or complex
Name Search Resources
State Business Name Databases
Most states offer free online search tools:
- Secretary of State website
- Business entity search
- Real-time availability checking
Federal Resources
- USPTO Trademark Search
- EDGAR Company Search (for public companies)
Trademark Considerations
When to Consider a Trademark
- Your business name is a key brand asset
- You plan to expand nationally
- You want exclusive rights to the name
- You're in a competitive industry
Trademark vs. LLC Registration
- LLC Registration: State-level protection only
- Federal Trademark: National protection
- Common Law Rights: Limited to your geographic area
Cost and Timeline
- Federal trademark application: $250-$350 per class
- Processing time: 8-12 months
- Trademark attorney recommended: $1,000-$2,000
Changing Your LLC Name
If you need to change your name later:
- Check new name availability
- File Articles of Amendment with your state
- Update all business documents
- Operating Agreement
- Business licenses
- Bank accounts
- Contracts
- Notify relevant parties
- IRS (if needed)
- Vendors and customers
- Banks and creditors
Cost: $50-$200 (varies by state)
Next Steps
After choosing your LLC name:
- Select a Registered Agent
- File Articles of Organization
- Compare State Filing Costs
- Choose the Best State for Your LLC
Need Help?
Forming an LLC involves more than just choosing a name. Our comprehensive guides cover:
Ready to start? Check name availability in your state and begin your LLC formation today!
