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Interior Design Business Name Generator

Your interior design business name will appear on a mood board before a client has seen your portfolio — so it needs to feel considered, confident, and unmistakably design-forward. Find one that looks as good on a proposal cover as it does on an Instagram handle, then secure the .com.

Add a word or two about your idea, or just hit Hatch. Click any name to check the domain.

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What makes a great interior design business name?

Strong interior design names tend to be spare and evocative — a single word or a clean two-word pair that carries taste without announcing it. Words drawn from the craft itself (palette, form, texture, layer) signal expertise, while architectural terms (arch, loft, sill) add a structural elegance. Avoid the temptation to describe your style ("Modern Minimalist") — a good name transcends any single trend. It should look as handsome on a white letterhead as it does printed small on a business card.

6 tips for naming your interior design business

Interior Design Business naming FAQ

What should an interior design business name communicate?
Taste, confidence, and the sense that you've thought about every detail — including the name itself. The strongest names in this industry say very little but imply a great deal. Spare, evocative words from architecture and craft tend to land better than lengthy descriptors.
Should I use my own name for my interior design firm?
Many respected firms do — a founder's name carries personal reputation and feels right in high-end residential work. If you plan to grow a studio or bring in other designers, a studio name separates the brand from any one individual and makes the business easier to scale.
Does an interior design business need a portfolio website?
Absolutely, and the domain name you choose determines how clients find it. A clean, memorable .com makes it easy to reference on business cards at a trade showroom, share in a client referral email, or include in a property magazine listing.
Can an interior design name be too minimal?
Rare, but possible. A single letter or a completely abstract word may look striking but can be hard to search for and easy to forget. One evocative word with a clear connection to space, craft, or sensory experience stays in a client's mind without being obscure.

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