Naming a legal technology company is a balancing act: the brand must signal authority and trustworthiness to risk-averse legal buyers, while still feeling like modern software rather than a stuffy old firm. This generator pairs legal-domain roots with contemporary startup suffixes to produce names that hit both notes.
How it works
Each niche has its own pool of prefixes and suffixes. A contract product might draw the prefix Clause and the suffix flow to form Clauseflow, while a compliance product could combine Regula and guard into Regulaguard. The tool capitalises the prefix, joins the parts, and de-duplicates within a batch so you never see the same name twice. Each candidate is paired with a suggested top-level domain such as .com, .io, .legal, or .law.
Tips and notes
- Roots like Juris, Lex, and Counsel read as authoritative; pair them with a soft suffix to avoid sounding like a law firm rather than a product.
- A
.legalor.lawdomain can reinforce positioning, but a clean.comis still the strongest trust signal for most buyers. - Shortlist three to five names, then run each through trademark and domain checks before you fall in love with one.