ToolNimba Browse

🏢 Business Name Generator

By ToolNimba Editorial Team · Updated 2026-06-19

    Enter a keyword and press Generate names.

    This business name generator turns a single keyword into a batch of brand name ideas. Type a word that describes what you do, for example coffee, fit, or cloud, and the tool combines it with built-in prefixes, suffixes, adjectives, and catchy word endings to produce options like CloudHub, GetCloud, SwiftCloud, and Cloudly. Choose a naming style, pick the casing, and set how many you want. Everything runs in your browser using a secure random source, so you can press Generate as many times as you like and copy any idea, or the whole list, with one click.

    What is the Business Name Generator?

    A business name is the label a customer remembers, searches for, and recommends, so it carries a lot of weight for something so short. The strongest names tend to be easy to say, easy to spell, and clearly tied to what the business does. A common and reliable way to invent them is to start from a meaningful keyword and attach a small part to it, which is exactly the method this tool uses. Pairing a keyword with a familiar suffix such as Hub or Labs, a prefix such as Get or Go, or a descriptive adjective such as Swift or Prime gives you a name that signals your field while still sounding like a brand.

    The tool offers several patterns so you can match the feel you are after. Keyword plus suffix (CloudHub, CloudWorks) sounds established and businesslike. Prefix plus keyword (GetCloud, GoCloud) sounds active and modern, the kind of name many apps and startups use. Adjective plus keyword (SwiftCloud, PrimeCloud) adds a quality or promise to the name. Catchy endings transform the keyword itself by trimming a vowel and adding a flourish such as -ly, -ify, or -io, which is how many tech brands get their distinctive look. The Mixed style draws from all of these at once so you can scan a wide range quickly.

    Names are built locally using the Web Crypto API (crypto.getRandomValues) rather than the ordinary Math.random, and each word is chosen with a method that removes statistical bias so every option is equally likely. Duplicates within a batch are filtered out, so a list of twelve names is twelve different ideas. The generator does not check whether a name, domain, or trademark is available, because that would require contacting outside services. Treat the output as a brainstorming starting point, then run your favourites through a domain search and a trademark check before you commit.

    When to use it

    • Brainstorming names for a new startup, shop, agency, or side project from a keyword you already have in mind.
    • Breaking through a naming block by generating a wide batch of fresh ideas to react to.
    • Finding a brandable variation when the plain keyword is already taken as a name or domain.
    • Naming a product line, app, or sub-brand that should sound related to your main keyword.

    How to use the Business Name Generator

    1. Type a keyword that describes your business, such as coffee, fit, or cloud.
    2. Pick a naming style: Mixed for variety, or a single pattern like suffix, prefix, adjective, or catchy.
    3. Choose Title Case or lowercase, and set how many names you want (1 to 50).
    4. Press Generate names, then use Copy beside any idea or Copy all to grab the whole list.

    Formula & method

    name = pattern(keyword), where pattern is one of: keyword + suffix (CloudHub), prefix + keyword (GetCloud), adjective + keyword (SwiftCloud), or a catchy transform of the keyword (Cloudly). Each part is picked uniformly at random from a built-in list, and duplicates in a batch are removed.

    Worked examples

    Keyword "cloud" with the keyword-plus-suffix style.

    1. The keyword is cleaned to letters and capitalised: Cloud.
    2. A suffix is picked uniformly at random from the list, say Hub.
    3. The two are joined directly with no space: CloudHub.
    4. The name is checked against the batch so far and, being new, is shown.

    Result: CloudHub

    Keyword "cafe" with the catchy-endings style.

    1. The keyword core is cafe and a catchy ending is picked, say io.
    2. Because cafe ends in a vowel and io starts with a vowel, the trailing e is trimmed to avoid a clash.
    3. The stem caf joins the ending io to form cafio, then it is capitalised.
    4. The result Cafio is unique in the batch, so it appears in the list.

    Result: Cafio

    Naming styles and example output for the keyword cloud

    StylePatternExample output
    Keyword plus suffixkeyword + suffixCloudHub, CloudWorks, CloudLab
    Prefix plus keywordprefix + keywordGetCloud, GoCloud, MyCloud
    Adjective plus keywordadjective + keywordSwiftCloud, PrimeCloud, BoldCloud
    Catchy endingstransform of keywordCloudly, Cloudify, Cloudio
    Mixedany of the aboveA spread across all four patterns

    Checks to run on a name before you commit to it

    CheckWhy it matters
    Domain availabilityA matching .com or local domain is hard to find later and worth securing early.
    Trademark searchA registered mark in your field can block you from using a name legally.
    Social handlesConsistent handles across platforms make the brand easier to find and follow.
    Say it out loudA name that is clear on the phone and easy to spell spreads faster by word of mouth.
    Other meaningsQuickly check the word has no awkward meaning in the languages of your market.

    Common mistakes to avoid

    • Assuming a generated name is free to use. The tool does not check domains, trademarks, or existing companies. A suggestion may already be registered, so always run a domain search and a trademark check before you adopt a name.
    • Picking a name that is hard to spell or say. A clever spelling can look good but cost you when customers cannot find you. Say each shortlisted name aloud and ask whether a stranger could type it correctly after hearing it once.
    • Choosing a keyword that is too narrow. A very specific keyword can box your brand in if you later expand. If you might add products or services, start from a broader or more flexible word.
    • Stopping at the first idea you like. The first name that catches your eye is rarely the best available. Generate several batches, shortlist a handful, and sleep on them before deciding.

    Glossary

    Keyword
    The core word you enter that describes your business and seeds every generated name.
    Prefix
    A short word placed before the keyword, such as Get or Go, to start the name.
    Suffix
    A short word placed after the keyword, such as Hub or Labs, to finish the name.
    Brandable name
    A name that works as a distinctive brand rather than a plain description, often a coined or modified word.
    Domain
    The web address for a business, such as example.com, which you usually want to match the brand name.

    Frequently asked questions

    What is a business name generator?

    A business name generator creates brand name ideas for you. This one takes a keyword you enter and combines it with built-in prefixes, suffixes, adjectives, and catchy endings to produce a batch of options you can scan, refine, and copy in seconds.

    Are the generated names available to register?

    Not necessarily. The tool builds names from word patterns but cannot check domains, trademarks, or existing companies. Treat the output as ideas, then run your favourites through a domain search and a trademark check before committing.

    How do I choose a good business name?

    Aim for a name that is short, easy to say, easy to spell, and clearly linked to what you do. Generate several batches, say the contenders out loud, check the domain and trademark, and pick the one that still feels right after a day.

    What naming styles does the tool offer?

    You can choose keyword plus suffix (CloudHub), prefix plus keyword (GetCloud), adjective plus keyword (SwiftCloud), catchy endings that transform the word itself (Cloudly), or Mixed, which draws from all of them at once for the widest variety.

    Is this business name generator free and private?

    Yes. It is completely free with no sign-up, and every name is generated locally in your browser using the Web Crypto API. Nothing you type or generate is sent to a server, logged, or stored, so your ideas stay on your device.

    How many names can I generate at once?

    You can create from 1 up to 50 names in a single batch, and duplicates within that batch are removed so each one is different. Press Generate names again for a fresh set, and use Copy or Copy all to save the ones you like.