Skip to main content
Back to Business generators

Business

Brand Tagline Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A brand tagline generator gives founders, strategists, and designers a working shortlist of options instead of a blank page. Choose from five styles — inspirational, bold, fun, professional, or witty — set how many taglines you want, and get results in seconds. The style selector is the key lever: it locks every result into the tone your brand needs before a single word is generated. Taglines appear on packaging, hero sections, pitch decks, and business cards, so getting the tone right matters as much as the words themselves. Run two or three batches with different style settings, compare the outputs side by side, then refine the lines that feel closest to your brand's voice.

Loading usage…

Free forever — no account required

How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Select a tagline style from the dropdown that matches the personality you want your brand to project.
  2. Set the count field to how many tagline options you want returned in a single batch — five is a good starting point.
  3. Click the generate button and read through every result, even the ones that feel slightly off-target.
  4. Copy the lines that come closest to your vision and paste them into a separate document for comparison or stakeholder review.
  5. Adjust the style setting and generate again to explore a contrasting tone, then compare both batches side by side.

Use Cases

  • Testing bold vs. professional tone before a startup's Webflow hero section goes live
  • Generating a shortlist of witty taglines for a DTC food brand's packaging copy
  • Briefing a Figma logo designer with a clear brand voice anchor before kick-off
  • Running an A/B test on two inspirational tagline variants in a Facebook ad campaign
  • Quickly filling the tagline field in a pitch deck for a pre-seed investor meeting

Tips

  • Run the same count across two different style settings and merge both lists — contrast forces clearer decisions about brand voice.
  • If a generated line is close but not quite right, change one word rather than discarding it entirely — structure often matters more than vocabulary.
  • Test shortlisted taglines by saying them aloud at normal speaking speed; anything that stumbles rhythmically will feel awkward in video or audio ads.
  • Avoid taglines that include your category name — if your company name changes or you pivot, a category-specific tagline becomes a liability.
  • Share a shortlist of three to five options with someone who doesn't know your business and ask them what company they imagine — alignment between their guess and your actual brand is a good signal.
  • For e-commerce brands, prioritize taglines that work as a six-word caption under a product photo, since that's where they'll appear most often.

FAQ

how many words should a brand tagline be

Two to six words is the sweet spot — short enough to fit on a business card and easy to remember after one read. Seven or eight words can work if the rhythm is strong, but anything requiring a comma to make sense is probably too long. Test it by saying it aloud; if it feels like a sentence, trim it.

can I use a generated tagline commercially

Yes, but treat it as a first draft rather than a finished product. Edit the wording to match your specific brand voice, then run a search on the USPTO database (or your country's equivalent) to confirm no one else has registered the phrase. A quick trademark clearance step before you print anything commercially is worth the effort.

which tagline style works best for a B2B company

Professional or bold styles produce lines that feel credible without sounding cold — a good default for most B2B brands. Inspirational works well for consulting or leadership-focused companies. Unless your brand deliberately differentiates on personality, avoid fun or witty styles; B2B buyers typically respond better to clarity and authority.