Check if your business name is available in Vermont. Validate Vermont naming rules instantly, then confirm availability free through the Vermont Online Business Service Center at bizfilings.vermont.gov.
Reviewed by Slava Akulov, CEO & Co-Founder at Jupid · Last updated: July 2026
Validate the name format, then search the official Vermont Secretary of State — Business Search records.
1.Search the state registry (Vermont 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 for an LLC reserved name (fees vary by entity type)
Holds the name for
120 days (confirm with the Vermont SoS)
How to file
Online via the Vermont Online Business Service Center (bizfilings.vermont.gov)
Under 11 V.S.A. § 4006 the LLC reserved-name fee is $25, a profit corporation's is $40, and an assumed-name reserved name is $35. Vermont raised fees recently, so most third-party fee tables are stale — confirm the current amount and the exact duration with the Secretary of State.
Vermont handles business names through the Online Business Service Center at bizfilings.vermont.gov, where the Secretary of State's name search is free and formations are filed online. A Vermont LLC costs $155 to form, followed by a $45 annual report.
A word of caution on fees: Vermont raised its filing fees recently, so most third-party websites quote stale numbers. Under 11 V.S.A. § 4006, reserving a name costs $25 for an LLC, $40 for a profit corporation, and $35 for an assumed-name reserved name — the fee depends on entity type. The commonly cited duration is 120 days, but confirm it with the Secretary of State when you file, along with the current fee.
Vermont's availability standard is refreshingly human: a name must be distinguishable on the record, and if a requested name is so similar to an existing one that it "would confuse the public as to whom they are dealing with, it will be rejected." Examiners apply judgment, not just string comparison — so a technically-different name that reads like an existing brand can still bounce.
Use the tool above to open the Vermont Secretary of State — Business Search search and look up existing LLCs, corporations, and reserved names. Vermont raised its filing fees recently, so most third-party fee tables are stale — confirm current amounts on the Online Business Service Center before budgeting.
Search the USPTO database at uspto.gov — clearing the Vermont 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.
Vermont lets you reserve a name for 120 days (confirm with the Vermont SoS) for $25 for an LLC reserved name (fees vary by entity type) — Online via the Vermont Online Business Service Center (bizfilings.vermont.gov).
| Filing | State Fee | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| LLC formation filing | $155 | One-time |
| Annual report / recurring fee | $45 | Yearly |
| Name reservation | $25 for an LLC reserved name (fees vary by entity type) | Holds the name 120 days (confirm with the Vermont SoS) |
| Assumed Business Name registration | Filed statewide with the Vermont Secretary of State for $70 under 11 V.S.A. § 1621, renewable every 5 years for $70 — nearly three times the $25 LLC name reservation. | |
State filing fees as of 2026. See the Vermont LLC tax and fee calculator for the full annual cost picture.
Estimate your VermontLLC's filing fee, annual report costs, and recurring state charges before you form.
Calculate the estimated quarterly taxes you'll owe as a Vermont business owner or freelancer.
Name taken? Generate unique, memorable alternatives for your Vermont business with AI.
Official Secretary of State search portals for all 50 states — look up any registered company.
The Vermont Secretary of State's Online Business Service Center at bizfilings.vermont.gov is the single front door: free name search, name reservations, formations, and annual reports all run through it. The search covers registered entities, reserved names, and assumed business names.
Because Vermont's examiners reject names that would confuse the public — not just names that match on paper — search generously. Look for phonetic cousins, singular/plural variants, and names that share your distinctive words. If an existing business reads like yours to an ordinary customer, assume the examiner will see it the same way.
When the name is clear, the Articles of Organization cost $155 filed online. If you need a hold first, the LLC reserved name is $25 under 11 V.S.A. § 4006 — but verify both fee and duration on the portal before filing, because Vermont's recent fee changes have outrun most third-party guides.
Under 11 V.S.A. § 4005, a Vermont LLC name must contain "limited liability company," "limited company," or an abbreviation such as L.L.C., LLC, L.C., or LC — confirm unusual formats with the Secretary of State before filing. Corporations use "corporation," "incorporated," "company," or "limited," or an abbreviation, under the Vermont Business Corporation Act.
Vermont layers two tests. The name must be distinguishable on the record from existing and reserved names — the standard registry check. But the state also warns that a name so similar it would confuse the public about whom they are dealing with will be rejected, which gives examiners latitude beyond mechanical comparison. Two names can differ by a word and still fail if they read as the same business.
Regulated words follow the usual pattern: "bank," "trust," and "insurance" sit with the Vermont Department of Financial Regulation, and educational terms typically need approval. Build your candidate list with a genuinely distinctive lead word and the review gets much easier.
Vermont's DBA is the Assumed Business Name registration under 11 V.S.A. § 1621: filed statewide with the Secretary of State for $70, renewable every 5 years for another $70. That is nearly three times the $25 LLC reserved-name fee — an inversion of the usual pattern where the DBA is the cheap option.
The price difference shapes strategy. If you just need to hold a name while you organize, the $25 reserved name is the economical tool. Register the $70 assumed name only when you will genuinely operate under the brand — for example, an existing LLC launching a second product line under a different name.
Every business operating in Vermont under a name other than its legal name needs the registration — sole proprietors and registered entities alike, all at the state level. As always, the registration discloses; it does not protect. Exclusive rights come from the entity name or a trademark.
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