Enter your keywords, choose your strategy, and construct a name.
Then check if the domain is available.
First, you generate. Then you experiment with structure. Then you evaluate strength. Then you go through the practical final checklist. Fill in what you know. The more specific you are, the better and more intentional the names will be. You do not have to fill every field, but start with what you have. Save your favorite name with the star so it can be used across the whole exercise.
Tip: Star the name you want first, then use the saved domain button below.
This tool is for inspiration. Before you buy a domain or build a full identity around a name, check whether it is legally clear, usable on the platforms you care about, and strong enough to grow with the business.
Saved name: Brand Name • brandname.com
Select one prefix only, one suffix only, or one prefix plus one suffix together. Click the rows you want to test. If you like the result, star it to save it across the exercise.
Add to the BEGINNING of a word
Add to the END of a word
Lead with meaning first so the name carries weight before it ever tries to sound clever.
Most beginners start by brainstorming words that "sound cool." The problem is that a name without meaning is hollow. It cannot do the work of explaining, attracting, and repelling the right people. Start with your core message and let the sound follow the meaning, not the other way around.
Sometimes the strongest names sound like a role, a craft, or a real category.
The "ist" suffix and others like it transform your brand from a thing into a role. "Garden Design" is a subject. "Garden Stylist" is a person. When you create a title that feels specific and useful, the brand starts to sound like a real craft instead of a random label.
Near-familiar words can feel memorable when the shift is small and readable.
The most memorable brand names are words your brain almost recognizes but not quite. The brain notices a familiar shape, then realizes it is something new. That little double-take is part of what makes a name stick.
A strong name does not have to be for everyone. It should feel right to the right people.
Great brand names are not trying to appeal to everyone. The name is supposed to say yes to some people and no to others. That is not a flaw. That is filtering doing its job.
A good name can give shape to a gap your audience already feels but cannot label.
The most powerful brand names can hint at a category people have not heard described quite that way before. A strong name helps people understand what kind of thing this is, why it matters, and why it feels different from the usual options.
The domain ending sends a signal too, so it should match the kind of business you are building.
.com is still the clearest default for most businesses because people assume it first. .shop can work when the business is clearly a store. .app is better when the thing is actually software or an app. The extension is not random. It sends a signal.
A name can quietly point to the result, relief, or direction the customer wants.
Some strong names suggest what changes for the customer. A name like ClearPath or FreshStart quietly hints at the outcome, not just the category. That can make the brand feel more useful right away.
A pointed name can work well when the brand has a clear point of view behind it.
Some brands win attention by pushing against the usual way of thinking. This style can be powerful, but only if the message behind it is clear and steady.
If a name is difficult to say, spell, or recall, the cleverness rarely pays for the friction.
If you are choosing between a name that sounds smart and a name that reads clearly, the clearer one usually wins early. People cannot recommend, search, or remember what they cannot understand.
Sometimes the word is already good. It just needs a stronger context around it.
Sometimes a strong name is not invented at all. It is a familiar word placed in a sharper context so it feels newly useful. This works when the word already carries a clear image, a helpful emotion, or a strong direction.
Can you write it on a napkin and hand it to a stranger who will read it correctly? If they misread it or misspell it, the name is working against you.
Can you say it out loud over the phone and have someone spell it correctly on the first try? If you have to spell it out every time, that is friction.
If someone hears your brand name once, can they remember it 24 hours later? If they cannot, the name may be too weak, too generic, or too hard to hold onto.
Type the name into Google. Does anything confusing come up? Can someone find you and only you? Unique names pass this test more easily than vague names do.
Imagine your brand bigger in ten years, in a different season. Does the name still hold? Names that grow with you are worth more than names tied only to one small offer.
Think carefully about this name as you score it. Brand Name
Run your saved name through each test and assign a score. A score is a discernment tool, not a fear tool. Some good names carry one weak spot and are still worth keeping.
The Exception Clause. Not every powerful name scores a 10. MPRINTAGE can stumble on the Phone Test because many people want to say “Emprint-age” before they see it written. Anchoracy can stumble on the Napkin Test because it is an invented word. But both names can still be the right call when the meaning, the memorability, and the 10-Year Test are strong enough to outweigh the friction. A score is a tool for discernment, not a disqualification. Use it to make an informed decision, not a fearful one.
This is the final review page. Use the saved name and check that the identity system makes sense across the places where people will actually see, search, and contact your brand. Your work is saved in this browser, so you can come back and keep testing until you finalize the right name.
You may have checked every box and still feel unsure. That does not always mean the name is wrong. It may mean you need to test it one layer deeper before you commit.
Can this name grow with you in three years? Would you feel confident saying it to someone you respect? Does it sound like a real brand or a temporary idea?
“Hi, my business name is ___.” “You can find me at ___.” “My website is ___.” It is important to say your business name out loud in several ways using real sentences you would use every day. If not these, then notice how you say it in your own way. If you hesitate when you say it, the name is not ready yet.
Does the name sound like a service, a system, or a movement? Does it point to what you do or leave people confused? Would someone guess your category from the name alone?
These are the social handles and this is how people usually find you on each platform. Your business name does not always have to be your handle. But when the handle matches the business and is clear, it usually makes the brand easier to remember and easier to find.
Once the domain direction is clear, look at how the name works in communication. The name should still feel strong in an inbox and in the everyday parts of the brand people actually use.