Check if your business name is available in South Dakota. Validate SD naming rules instantly, then confirm availability free through the Secretary of State's portal at sosenterprise.sd.gov.
Reviewed by Slava Akulov, CEO & Co-Founder at Jupid · Last updated: July 2026
Validate the name format, then search the official South Dakota Secretary of State — Business Information Search records.
1.Search the state registry (South Dakota Secretary of State — Business Information 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
Holds the name for
120 days
How to file
Application for Reservation of Name — online via sosenterprise.sd.gov or by mail
Once a reservation expires, the same name generally cannot be re-reserved until at least 60 days have passed — confirm the current rule with the Secretary of State.
South Dakota runs its business filings through sosenterprise.sd.gov, the Secretary of State's online portal, where the name search is free and covers registered entities, reserved names, and DBA registrations. Forming an LLC costs $150, followed by a $55 annual report — and with no state income tax, South Dakota keeps its spot among the lighter-touch formation states.
A name reservation costs $25 and holds your name for 120 days, filed online through SOSEnterprise or by mail. One nuance worth planning around: once a reservation expires, the same name generally cannot be re-reserved until at least 60 days have passed — so a lapsed hold does not quietly roll into a new one. Confirm the current rule with the Secretary of State if your timeline is tight.
South Dakota's standout bargain is the DBA. The state-level "DBA — Business Name" registration costs just $10, filed online, and lasts five years — one of the cheapest trade-name registrations in the country. For a founder testing a second brand, ten dollars buys statewide registration that many states charge $50 or more for.
Use the tool above to open the South Dakota Secretary of State — Business Information Search search and look up existing LLCs, corporations, and reserved names. South Dakota's state-level DBA costs just $10 and lasts five years — one of the cheapest name registrations anywhere.
Search the USPTO database at uspto.gov — clearing the South Dakota 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.
South Dakota lets you reserve a name for 120 days for $25 — Application for Reservation of Name — online via sosenterprise.sd.gov or by mail.
| Filing | State Fee | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| LLC formation filing | $150 | One-time |
| Annual report / recurring fee | $55 | Yearly |
| Name reservation | $25 | Holds the name 120 days |
| DBA — Business Name registration | Filed statewide with the Secretary of State online for just $10 — one of the cheapest DBAs in the country. Renew every 5 years, within 90 days of expiration. | |
State filing fees as of 2026. See the South Dakota LLC tax and fee calculator for the full annual cost picture.
Estimate your South DakotaLLC's filing fee, annual report costs, and recurring state charges before you form.
Calculate the estimated quarterly taxes you'll owe as a South Dakota business owner or freelancer.
Name taken? Generate unique, memorable alternatives for your South Dakota business with AI.
Official Secretary of State search portals for all 50 states — look up any registered company.
The Secretary of State's SOSEnterprise portal at sosenterprise.sd.gov handles both search and filing. The business information search is free and returns entities, reserved names, and DBA registrations, along with status and filing history — the same records the examiner compares your name against.
South Dakota's standard is distinguishability upon the records of the Secretary of State, with a practical twist: a name similar to an existing one may still be approved if words are added to distinguish it. "Prairie Wind LLC" blocked? "Prairie Wind Outfitters LLC" may clear. That makes South Dakota more workable than states where any similarity triggers rejection.
When your search comes back clean, you can file the Articles of Organization ($150) directly through the same portal — online filings are processed faster than mail, and the name is only truly yours once the formation is accepted.
Under SDCL 47-34A-105, an LLC name must contain "limited liability company," "limited company," or an abbreviation: L.L.C., LLC, L.C., or LC — with "Ltd." and "Co." accepted as abbreviations of "limited" and "company." Corporations must include "corporation," "incorporated," "company," or "limited," or an abbreviation.
Watch the regulated words. South Dakota is a national hub for chartered trust companies, so "trust" in a business name draws Division of Banking attention; "bank" likewise requires regulator approval, and "insurance" falls under the Division of Insurance. Names implying a purpose the entity is not licensed for will be rejected.
If you reserve a name, mind the calendar: the $25 reservation lasts 120 days, and once it lapses the same name generally cannot be re-reserved until at least 60 days later. The safe pattern is to reserve once and file the formation inside the window, rather than planning on chained reservations.
South Dakota's trade-name filing is officially the "DBA — Business Name" registration, filed statewide with the Secretary of State through the online portal. At $10, it is one of the cheapest DBAs in the country — most states charge $25 to $100 for the equivalent filing.
The registration lasts five years and renews within 90 days of expiration. Set a reminder: the renewal window opens late, and a lapsed DBA means re-registering and hoping nobody claimed the name in the meantime.
As everywhere, a DBA is registration rather than protection — South Dakota does not guarantee exclusivity for trade names the way it does for entity names. But at $10 for five years, registering every brand you actively use is cheap insurance for keeping your public names documented and legal.
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