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Pricing Tier Name Generator

A pricing tier name generator offers four naming styles — simple, premium, playful, and professional — each backed by a curated sequence of six names ordered from entry-level to top tier. You choose the style and how many tiers you need (3–6), and the tool returns the first N names from that style's sequence, always in order. SaaS founders, product managers, and marketers use this when designing a pricing page and need names that signal the right progression and tone. The style selector is the key decision: simple names like Free and Pro are universally legible; playful names like Starter and Hero suit a consumer product; professional names like Team and Enterprise signal a B2B tool. Choosing the wrong style for your audience can cost conversions before a visitor reads a single feature.

Read the complete guide — 4 min read

How to use

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

Detailed instructions

  1. Choose a naming style.
  2. Pick how many tiers you want.
  3. Click Generate to produce tier names.
  4. Adapt them to your brand and plans.

Use Cases

  • Naming SaaS pricing plans
  • Labelling subscription tiers
  • Designing a clear pricing table
  • Naming product packages
  • Differentiating plan levels

Tips

  • Keep names short and clear.
  • Make the progression feel natural.
  • Match the tone to your brand.
  • Help buyers self-select quickly.

FAQ

What styles does this generator offer?

Four: simple (Free, Basic, Plus, Pro, Premium, Ultimate), premium (Essential, Signature, Elite, Prestige, Platinum, Reserve), playful (Starter, Sidekick, Hero, Legend, Champion, All-Star), and professional (Individual, Team, Business, Enterprise, Scale, Custom). Each is ordered entry-level to top so the sequence is ready to use.

What makes a good pricing tier name?

Clarity and a natural progression. Good tier names are short, instantly understood, and ordered so customers can tell which plan suits them without reading a paragraph of explanation. They signal who each plan is for at a glance.

How many tiers should a pricing page have?

Often three to four. Enough to serve different needs without overwhelming the buyer. A common pattern is an entry tier, a popular middle tier highlighted as recommended, and a premium or enterprise option — sometimes with a free plan at the bottom.

Should tier names match my brand's tone?

Yes. Playful names suit a consumer app; professional names like Business and Enterprise fit a serious B2B product. Mismatching the naming style to the audience creates friction before a visitor reads the feature list.

Why does the generator always return names in the same order?

The names in each style are curated to progress naturally from entry-level to top tier. Keeping them in order means you can use the output directly as your pricing sequence. If you want fewer tiers, reduce the count and the generator trims from the top.

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