Creative
Fictional Business Name Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A fictional business name generator helps writers, game masters, and designers populate imaginary worlds with companies that feel genuinely real. Vague placeholders break immersion; a name like Halcourt Medical Partners or Veyron Logistics doesn't. This generator produces industry-specific names across tech, legal, medical, finance, retail, food, and more — including deliberately opaque front companies for crime fiction and thrillers. Filter by industry and choose how many names to generate. Screenwriters use results to dress storefronts and letterheads without trademark risk. Game masters generate a batch before a session so they're never caught off guard when players walk into a new district.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Select an industry from the dropdown — choose Any to get a varied mix across all sectors.
- Set the count field to how many names you want; aim for at least double your actual need so you have options.
- Click Generate to produce your list of fictional business names.
- Scan the results for names that match your story's tone — corporate, local, sinister, or approachable.
- Copy your chosen names directly into your script, notes, or design file, then run a quick trademark check before publishing.
Use Cases
- •Naming background shops and clinics in a tabletop RPG city district before a session
- •Dressing film and TV props — storefronts, letterheads, and ID badges — without real trademark risk
- •Creating believable shell companies for crime fiction and thriller antagonists using the Shady/Criminal filter
- •Populating UI wireframes and Figma prototypes with realistic company names instead of Lorem Ipsum placeholders
- •Building a fictional small town with named local diners, law firms, and medical practices for a novel
Tips
- →Generate with Any industry first, then switch to a specific sector — the contrast helps you spot what naming conventions define each type.
- →For antagonist corporations, the most chilling names are often the blandest — 'Meridian Group' unsettles more than 'EvilCorp'.
- →Run three or four separate generations and save the full lists; names you skip now often become perfect for a different business later in your project.
- →Combine two generated names — the first word of one and the suffix of another — to create something unique that still sounds structurally natural.
- →For RPG use, generate a batch of 12 before each session and assign them to a district map so you always have a name ready when players ask what shop they're standing in front of.
- →If a name almost works but feels off, try changing only the suffix: swapping 'Solutions' for 'Partners' or 'Group' often shifts the implied size and formality of the company.
FAQ
can I use a generated fictional business name in a published book or film
Yes, but run any name you plan to publish through a quick trademark search — USPTO in the US, or your regional equivalent. Randomly generated names can coincidentally match real companies. A two-minute check before you commit a name to print is worth doing.
what makes a fake company name sound believable in fiction
Believable names combine a neutral word or surname with an industry-appropriate suffix — Holdings, Partners, or Dynamics for corporates; a surname or place name for small local businesses. Avoid puns unless your story's tone calls for them.
how do I name a shady front company in a crime story
Real criminal fronts use deliberately bland names — consulting firms, import/export agencies, property management companies. Select the Shady/Criminal industry filter and look for the most forgettable result; that vagueness is exactly what makes them unsettling in fiction.