Learn the naming rules for a Nebraska LLC, how to search name availability, reserve a name, and register a trade name (DBA) with the Nebraska Secretary of State.
Bizee Editorial Staff
Editorial Team
Filing fee: [STATE_FEE]
Processing time: [PROCESSING_TIME]
State agency: Nebraska Secretary of State, Business Services Division
Annual report due: [STATE_FEE]
State tax rate: No state income tax on pass-through LLC income at the entity level; individual members pay Nebraska state income tax on their share
Naming your Nebraska LLC starts with two requirements: your name must include an LLC designator, and it must be distinguishable from every other business name already on file with the Nebraska Secretary of State. Get both right before you file your Certificate of Organization and you'll avoid the most common reason formation filings get rejected.
Nebraska law requires every LLC name to include the words "limited liability company" or "limited company," or an accepted abbreviation. The name must also be distinguishable from any other entity already registered with the Nebraska Secretary of State — not just identical names, but names that are deceptively similar.
Most people go with "LLC" or "L.L.C." — both are accepted. If you prefer "limited company," you can abbreviate it as "LC" or "L.C." You can also shorten "limited" to "ltd." and "company" to "co." in any of these combinations. The full phrase "limited liability company" works too, with no abbreviation needed.
Beyond the designator, your name can't mislead the public into thinking your LLC is a government agency, a bank, or a licensed profession it isn't. If your name implies a regulated activity — things like "insurance," "bank," or "attorney" — you may need additional state approval before the Secretary of State will accept it.
Before you file anything, search the Nebraska Secretary of State's Corporate and Business database to confirm your name is available. The search is free and covers existing LLCs, corporations, trade names, trademarks, and service marks — so you get a full picture of what's already taken.
The search tool gives you 4 options: Name Starts With, Name Keyword Search, Name Sounds Like, and Name Exact Match. Run more than one. A name that clears an exact-match search can still conflict with a similar-sounding name already on file. After entering your search term, complete the CAPTCHA and click "Perform Search" to see results. Each result shows the entity name, Secretary of State account number, entity type, and status — click "Details" to see the full public record.
If you want a written confirmation of availability before filing, the Secretary of State's Office accepts name availability inquiries by fax, email, or mail. That's worth doing if your name is close to an existing one and you want a definitive answer before paying the formation fee.
Nebraska lets you reserve an LLC name for 120 days before you're ready to file. You do this by submitting an Application for Reservation of Limited Liability Company Name to the Nebraska Secretary of State. If the name is available, the Secretary of State holds it for your exclusive use during that window.
Check availability through the Corporate and Business Search before submitting the reservation form — the Secretary of State won't reserve a name that's already taken. The 120-day hold gives you time to finalize your formation documents without losing the name to another filer.
If you want to run your Nebraska LLC under a name other than its legal name, you need to register a trade name — what most people call a DBA ("doing business as") — with the Nebraska Secretary of State. The trade name registration doesn't create a new legal entity; it just lets you do business under a different name.
To register, file the Application for Registration of Trade Name with the Secretary of State's Business Services Division. The form asks for the trade name you want to use, your LLC's legal name, a street address (no P.O. boxes), the date you first used the trade name in Nebraska, and a brief description of your business. You'll also identify your entity type — limited liability company — and the state where your LLC was formed.
You can file online through the Nebraska.gov Corporate Document eDelivery system or by mail to the Secretary of State's office in Lincoln. Before filing, search the Corporate and Business database to confirm the trade name isn't already in use — the same distinctiveness rules that apply to LLC names apply to trade names too.
Clearing your name with the Nebraska Secretary of State only confirms it's available at the state level. It doesn't tell you whether the name conflicts with a federally registered trademark. A name can pass the Nebraska business search and still put you on the hook for trademark infringement if someone else holds a federal registration for the same or a confusingly similar mark.
Search the USPTO's Trademark Electronic Search System (TESS) at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office before you commit to a name. If you find a conflict, it's far easier to pick a different name now than to rebrand after you've filed, opened accounts, and started marketing. A trademark attorney can help you figure out whether a similar mark is close enough to be a real problem.
Use the Nebraska Secretary of State's free Corporate and Business Search at sos.nebraska.gov. Enter your proposed name using one of 4 search options — Name Starts With, Name Keyword Search, Name Sounds Like, or Name Exact Match — complete the CAPTCHA, and click "Perform Search." Run multiple search types to catch similar names, not just exact matches.
Yes, there are 2 core rules. First, your name must include an LLC designator — "limited liability company," "limited company," "LLC," "L.L.C.," "LC," or "L.C." are all accepted. Second, your name must be distinguishable from every other business name already registered with the Nebraska Secretary of State. Names that are deceptively similar to existing names won't be approved.
File the Application for Registration of Trade Name with the Nebraska Secretary of State's Business Services Division. You can file online through the Nebraska.gov Corporate Document eDelivery system or by mail. The form requires your trade name, your LLC's legal name, a street address, the date of first use in Nebraska, and a description of your business. Search the Corporate and Business database first to confirm the trade name is available.
Yes. File an Application for Reservation of Limited Liability Company Name with the Nebraska Secretary of State. If the name is available, the state holds it for your exclusive use for 120 days. Check availability through the Corporate and Business Search before submitting — the Secretary of State won't reserve a name that's already taken.
Your LLC name is the legal name registered in your Certificate of Organization — it's what appears on state filings and legal documents. A trade name (DBA) is a separate name you register to do business under publicly. Your LLC can have one legal name and operate under a different trade name. Both must be registered with the Nebraska Secretary of State, and both must be distinguishable from existing registered names.
The Nebraska Secretary of State's Corporate and Business Search covers LLCs, corporations, limited partnerships, trade names, trademarks, and service marks registered in the state. Results show the entity name, account number, entity type, and status. You can click "Details" on any result to see the full public record. It's the right starting point before choosing any business name or trade name in Nebraska.