What Georgia actually checks when you propose an LLC name.
Georgia entity suffix rules
Georgia requires one of these suffixes at the end of every LLC name: LLC, L.L.C., Limited Liability Company. Most owners pick "LLC" because it is the most familiar at banks and on contracts.
Distinguishable rule
Georgia will reject any name that is not distinguishable from an existing registered entity. Punctuation, articles (the, a, an), and entity suffixes do not count toward distinguishability. The pre-flight check flags this.
Restricted-word screening
Georgia restricts certain words (bank, insurance, trust, university, professional terms) that require regulatory approval or licensing. Using one without the approval triggers rejection. We flag these in the pre-flight check.
Name reservation (~30 days)
If you want to lock the name before you are ready to form, Georgia accepts a name reservation that holds the name for roughly 30 days. Useful if you are still finalizing partners or capital.
Public SOS lookup
Georgia publishes a public business name search at the Secretary of State portal. You can verify there too. We link to it directly; we never scrape or iframe the official site.
Name carries into formation
When the pre-flight passes, the Continue button takes you straight into the formation wizard with your chosen name pre-filled. No retyping, no losing the name to a hesitation.
Test your Georgia LLC name against the rules.
We check entity suffix, length, restricted words, and basic distinguishability. The live availability lookup with Georgia SOS happens during formation; this catches the rules that block names before you even file.
A clean handoff, in 6 steps.
Draft your candidate name
Pick a phrase that describes your business or invokes your brand. Georgia requires you to add one of these suffixes at the end: LLC, L.L.C., Limited Liability Company.
Run the pre-flight check
Paste your candidate above. We check entity suffix, length, restricted words, and distinguishability hints. Takes about one second.
Verify on the Georgia SOS portal (optional)
For extra confidence, cross-check the same name on the public Georgia Secretary of State business search. We link to it in the validator above.
Continue to formation
When the pre-flight passes, the Continue button carries your name straight into the formation wizard. The live availability check runs against Georgia SOS during filing.
Lock the name with reservation (optional)
If you need to hold the name before forming, Georgia accepts a name reservation that holds it for roughly 30 days. We file the reservation request inside the wizard if you select that option.
File formation
When you are ready, we prepare the Articles of Organization with your name, file with Georgia SOS, and return the stamped document to your dashboard. Formation service is free.
Formation is free. Everything else is optional.
We do not charge a service fee to form your LLC or Corporation. State filing fees still apply and pass through at cost. Add the Compliance Bundle to handle the year-one filings everyone needs.
- LLC or Corporation formation (any state)
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- Free BOS dashboard for ongoing visibility
- Filing receipts to your document vault
- Everything in Free Formation (no add-on fee)
- Registered Agent service in your state (1 entity)
- Annual Report AutoFile, filed every year on time
- Certificate of Good Standing (1 included per year)
- 1 Amendment included per year (address, member, name)
- Operating Agreement (LLC) or Bylaws (Corp)
- Deadline monitoring across all your filings
Common questions.
Is the Georgia LLC name search free?
Yes, checking availability on the Georgia business-name database is free, and you should always do it before you commit to branding or file. A name that clears the Georgia register can still collide with a federal trademark, so checking both saves you a costly rebrand later. We check the Georgia record for you and flag trademark risk before you file, so the name you like is one you can actually keep.
What entity suffixes does Georgia accept for LLCs?
Georgia requires an LLC name to include a designator that signals the entity type, usually "LLC," "L.L.C.," or "Limited Liability Company," and some states also allow "Limited Company" or short forms. The exact accepted forms are set by Georgia statute, so you have to pick one from the approved list. We confirm your chosen suffix is valid in Georgia as part of the name check, which prevents a rejected filing over a formatting technicality.
What makes a Georgia LLC name distinguishable?
Georgia rejects a name that is not distinguishable on the record from an existing entity, and that bar is higher than most people expect. Adding "the," changing punctuation, swapping "and" for an ampersand, or making a word plural usually does not count, so a near-match to an active company will bounce. We test your name against the Georgia distinguishability standard, not just an exact-match lookup, so you find out it is too close before the state does.
Which words are restricted in Georgia LLC names?
Like every state, Georgia restricts words that imply a regulated activity or a government tie, such as "bank," "insurance," "trust," "university," or terms that suggest a state agency. Using one typically requires licensing proof or extra approval, and a few words are barred outright. We screen your name against the Georgia restricted list up front, so you are not caught off guard by a hold or a document request after you have already filed.
Can I reserve a Georgia LLC name without filing?
Yes. If you have the right name but are not ready to form, Georgia lets you reserve it for a set period so no one else claims it while you prepare. Reservation is a separate short filing, and the hold length and whether it renews vary by state. It is worth doing when branding or funding is in motion; we can file the reservation and then roll it straight into formation when you are ready.
What happens if my Georgia LLC name is already taken?
If your first choice is taken in Georgia, you have a few options: adjust it enough to be distinguishable, keep a different legal name and operate under a DBA, or, if the existing entity is inactive, check whether the name will free up. What you should not do is file something too close and hope it clears. We help you land on a name that both passes the Georgia check and does not walk into someone else's trademark.
Can I use a name in Georgia that is taken in another state?
Usually yes. State name databases are separate, so a name in use elsewhere generally does not block you in Georgia, and the reverse is true too. The catch is trademark: a company operating nationally can hold rights that reach into Georgia no matter where it formed, and registering in Georgia does not give you nationwide rights. If the brand matters, pair the name check with a trademark search and, later, registration.
How does the Georgia LLC name relate to my DBA?
Your Georgia LLC has one legal name, the one on the Certificate of Formation, and a DBA, also called an assumed or trade name, lets that same LLC operate under a different public-facing name without forming a new entity. Plenty of owners keep a plain legal name and brand under one or more DBAs. A DBA does not change ownership or liability; it is a registered alias, and we can file it alongside or after formation.
Does Georgia require an LLC name to relate to my business activity?
No. Georgia does not require your LLC name to describe what the business does, so you are free to choose something abstract or brandable. The real constraints are the ones above: it must be distinguishable, carry a valid designator, and steer clear of restricted words. Picking a broad name rather than a narrowly descriptive one also gives you room to expand later without a rename or a new DBA.
Where to next?
Every filing connects into your File.Business operating system. Pick where to go from here: we keep the rest tracked.