Check if your business name is available in Mississippi. Validate Mississippi naming rules instantly, then search the Secretary of State's online corporate portal free — in a state where business filings are essentially online-only.
Reviewed by Slava Akulov, CEO & Co-Founder at Jupid · Last updated: July 2026
Validate the name format, then search the official Mississippi Secretary of State — Business Search records.
1.Search the state registry (Mississippi Secretary of State — Business Search) for existing LLCs, corporations, and reserved names
2.Check federal trademarks at USPTO.gov — state approval does not protect you from trademark claims
3.Verify the .com domain is available for your name
4.Grab matching social media handles (Instagram, X, LinkedIn, Facebook)
5.Lock the name in by filing your formation documents — or reserve it first (details below)
Fee
$25
Holds the name for
180 days
How to file
Filed online through the Secretary of State's corporate filing portal
The reservation is nonrenewable — and under § 79-29-111(2), the same applicant cannot re-reserve the same name until at least 60 days after the reservation expires.
Mississippi moved its business filings almost entirely online: the Secretary of State's corporate filing portal handles searches, reservations, formations, and annual reports, and paper is the rare exception. The business search is free and covers the entities and reserved names your proposed name will be checked against.
The availability standard is the modern one — "distinguishable upon the records of the Secretary of State" under Mississippi Code § 79-29-109(1)(c). What sets Mississippi apart is the reservation mechanics: $25 buys a 180-day hold under § 79-29-111(2), one of the longest single terms anywhere, but it is nonrenewable, and the same applicant cannot re-reserve the same name until 60 days after expiration. There is no chaining reservations here.
The rest of the cost picture is friendly: the LLC filing fee is just $50, the annual report is required but free for domestic LLCs, and the optional fictitious-name registration is $25. If you want a cheap state to test a business idea under a protected name, Mississippi makes a strong case.
Use the tool above to open the Mississippi Secretary of State — Business Search search and look up existing LLCs, corporations, and reserved names. Mississippi's name reservation runs a generous 180 days but cannot be renewed — and the same applicant is locked out from re-reserving the same name until 60 days after it expires. Use the window or lose it.
Search the USPTO database at uspto.gov — clearing the Mississippi registry does not protect you from a federal trademark claim.
Check that the matching .com domain is available before you commit — renaming an LLC later means an amendment filing and new bank paperwork.
Confirm your name is free on Instagram, X, Facebook, and LinkedIn so your branding stays consistent everywhere.
Mississippi lets you reserve a name for 180 days for $25 — Filed online through the Secretary of State's corporate filing portal.
| Filing | State Fee | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| LLC formation filing | $50 | One-time |
| Annual report / recurring fee | $0 | — |
| Name reservation | $25 | Holds the name 180 days |
| Fictitious Business Name Registration | Filed with the Secretary of State (form F0070) for $25 at the state level — and unusually, registration is voluntary in Mississippi, not a prerequisite for doing business under the name. | |
State filing fees as of 2026. See the Mississippi LLC tax and fee calculator for the full annual cost picture.
Estimate your MississippiLLC's filing fee, annual report costs, and recurring state charges before you form.
Calculate the estimated quarterly taxes you'll owe as a Mississippi business owner or freelancer.
Name taken? Generate unique, memorable alternatives for your Mississippi business with AI.
Official Secretary of State search portals for all 50 states — look up any registered company.
The Mississippi Secretary of State's business search is free and lives inside the same online portal used for filings. Search for exact names, then word stems and variants — the "distinguishable upon the records" test means small cosmetic changes to an existing name will not clear a conflict.
Mississippi is essentially online-only: reservations, formations, and annual reports all flow through the portal, so there is no mail lag between finding a clear name and claiming it. That immediacy cuts the risk window that plagues paper states — you can search and file the same afternoon.
Filing the Certificate of Formation costs just $50, among the cheapest in the country. If you are not ready to form, the $25 reservation buys 180 days of protection — but read the fine print on renewal below before you rely on it.
Under Mississippi Code § 79-29-109(1)(a), an LLC name must contain "limited liability company," "L.L.C.," or "LLC." Corporations follow § 79-4-4.01: "corporation," "incorporated," "company," or "limited," or an abbreviation. The name must be distinguishable upon the Secretary of State's records from existing entities and reserved names.
The reservation, under § 79-29-111(2), is where Mississippi gets strict: $25 holds the name for 180 days, but the reservation is nonrenewable. When it lapses, the same applicant cannot reserve the same name again until at least 60 days have passed — a lockout designed to stop indefinite name-parking.
Practically, that means the 180-day clock should start only when your launch is realistically inside it. If you reserve too early and the window closes, your name sits exposed for 60 days during which anyone else — including a competitor — can take it.
Mississippi treats DBAs unusually: the Fictitious Business Name Registration (form F0070, $25, filed with the Secretary of State) is voluntary. You can lawfully do business in Mississippi under an unregistered trade name — most states make registration a legal prerequisite.
Registering is still usually worth $25. Banks often want the registration before opening an account in the trade name, and the public record establishes your dates of use — useful evidence if a name dispute ever surfaces.
As everywhere, the registration is not a trademark and confers no exclusivity. If the brand matters, clear it against the USPTO database and consider a federal registration; the Mississippi filing only records that you use the name.
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