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New Hampshire state guide · Name search

How to search
New Hampshire LLC names

New Hampshire requires every LLC to have a unique, distinguishable name. Here's how the rules work, where to search, and how to reserve a name before you file.

Search onsos.nh.gov
Required ending"LLC" or "L.L.C."
ReservationOptional
State filing fee$100

The New Hampshire naming rules

Every state writes its own LLC naming rules. New Hampshire's rules cover three areas: what words you have to include, what words you can't use, and how distinct your name has to be from every other New Hampshire entity on file.

What you have to include

  • The name must end in one of: "LLC," "L.L.C.," or "Limited Liability Company." New Hampshire accepts variations in spacing and punctuation but the statutory ending is required.
  • The name must be in letters, numerals, or standard punctuation the New Hampshire Corporation Division's filing system accepts. Emoji, non-standard symbols, and most diacritics are rejected.

What you can't use

  • Words implying a different entity type: "Corporation," "Corp.," "Incorporated," or "Inc." are not permitted in LLC names.
  • Restricted professional terms ("bank," "trust," "insurance," "engineering," "architecture" and similar) usually require licensure and preapproval from the relevant New Hampshire regulatory body.
  • Names that could be confused with a government agency — federal, New Hampshire state, or municipal.

Distinguishability

New Hampshire will reject a name that is the same as — or confusingly similar to — an existing New Hampshire LLC, corporation, partnership, or reserved name. "Confusingly similar" is a judgment call made by the New Hampshire Corporation Division, not an algorithm; small differences like "Acme Holdings LLC" vs. "Acme Holding LLC" can be rejected.

New Hampshire note

Annual report $100 ($102 online) due April 1.

How to search the New Hampshire database

  1. I.

    Go to the New Hampshire Corporation Division search tool

    The New Hampshire business entity search lives at sos.nh.gov. Look for "Business Entity Search" or "Name Availability Search" in the main navigation.

  2. II.

    Search with multiple variants

    Don't just search the full name — try the distinctive keyword alone, the keyword with and without the "LLC" ending, and the plural/singular forms. A name that passes a "begins with" search can still collide on a "contains" search.

  3. III.

    Check for trademark collisions

    The New Hampshire database only tracks state entity names — it does not check federal trademarks. For a business you plan to brand nationally, also run a USPTO TESS search before committing.

  4. IV.

    Confirm the domain

    If the exact match .com is taken by a competitor, treat that as a warning flag — not about state availability, but about everyday confusion in the market.

Should you reserve the name?

New Hampshire allows name reservation for a fee, typically held for 60 to 120 days. If you're ready to file within a week or two, there's no reason to reserve — just file the Articles directly and the name locks when the LLC is approved. Reservation makes sense if you've picked a name, need to secure it, but aren't ready to file (for example, because you're still finalizing the operating agreement or capital structure).

When you reserve with us, we file the New Hampshire name-reservation form and hand you the confirmation. Reservation fees are a pass-through New Hampshire state cost; our service fee is still $299 whether or not you reserve.

What we check before filing

A formation specialist runs the New Hampshire database before submitting your Articles. If your first choice is taken or likely to be rejected for similarity, we call before filing — we do not submit a filing that isn't going to clear. You tell us your preferred name plus two alternates on the reservation form and we work through them in order.

What's included in the $299 flat fee

State filingArticles of Organization, by a formation specialist
EIN includedFederal tax ID, issued by the IRS after approval
Operating agreementDrafted to your ownership structure — not a template
Registered agentOne year included in New Hampshire, Concord on file
Ready to form in New Hampshire?

$299 flat, plus New Hampshire's $100 state fee.

Reservation takes three minutes. A formation specialist in Concord handles the rest.

Start your New Hampshire filing