Boutique and shop name generator.

For boutiques, online shops, Instagram-shops, and clothing stores. A retail name lives in three places at once: on a hangtag, on a shopfront, and as an @handle on Instagram or Telegram. Generate candidates, then check the domain (ccTLD, .com, plus a thematic like .shop, .store, or .boutique), the social handles, and how the name reads across your customers' languages.

Try it free

Describe the project — get first names with status.

Domain and Telegram status checked free, right here. The full Telegram report checks 12–15 more domain options, Instagram and language risks.

Examples

What good shop and boutique names tend to look like.

Short enough to print on a hangtag, distinct enough to remember after one Instagram scroll.

Norra

Scandi-feeling one-word. Soft consonants, easy spell, prints cleanly on a small label. The downside of short names is the .com is usually gone — ccTLD and .shop become the play.

boutiqueone-word

Halt.

Period as part of the brand. Reads modern indie-retail, signals confidence. Works for one-product lines (e.g. a single bag, a tee brand) better than for full ranges.

indie retailsingle product

Westline Goods

Geographic-feel + plural noun. The US-indie-shop shape — concrete, hand-made-feeling. The “Goods” suffix is saturated but works because it explains the category in one word.

indie shopmulti-product

Edith

Given-name. Reads vintage, works for second-hand or curated-vintage shops. Owner-name-as-brand is a long-standing retail pattern — and the personal-name domain is often a coin-flip.

vintagegiven-name

Cardamom & Wool

Spice + material. Concept-duo names work when the shop spans multiple categories that you couldn't easily put on a single label. The “&” format is long but unambiguous on social bios.

lifestylemulti-category

Crane Shop

Concrete noun + venue. The simplest possible shape — one image-word, one functional word. Easy to spell over the phone, easy to remember from a Story.

generalconcrete

Pitfalls

Three places retail naming usually breaks.

The name doesn't fit on a hangtag.

A six-syllable name reads fine on a homepage and badly on a small label sewn into a garment. Print legibility caps practical brand-name length around 14–16 characters total for retail. The CFO test: write it on a sticky note and squint.

Instagram-only shops have a different bottleneck.

If the entire storefront is the Instagram bio and DMs, the domain matters less and the handle matters more. We've seen IG-only shops grow to 50k followers with no website — but a parked handle would have killed the brand at month two.

Generic suffixes are saturated.

“Studio”, “Co”, “Goods”, “House”, “Atelier” — all useful, all overused. A name built from two saturated parts (“Forest Goods”, “Studio Co”) reads generic even when each half is intentional. Distinctiveness usually comes from the non-suffix word.

Try a brief.

One or two sentences about what you sell and to whom. You'll see 3–5 candidates with domain and handle status in under a minute.

Open in Telegram

free preview · paid report inside Telegram