
How To Choose the Right Restaurant Name (With 118 Great Ideas & Examples)
Make your restaurant name something eye-catching and memorable.
Amanda McNamaraAuthor

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As a new restaurant owner, you're faced with tons of key business decisions before you even open your doors to the public — from developing your restaurant branding and logo to writing your mission statement and core values and from choosing your floor plan and kitchen layout to designing your restaurant menu.
And that's not even all of them! Of the many decisions you'll make when opening a restaurant, the most important is arguably your new restaurant's name. And, as many restaurateurs know, this can sometimes be the hardest part.
Whether you're launching a neighborhood coffee shop, a fast food restaurant chain, or a fancy fine dining restaurant, you need to whip up something memorable that'll help you stand out from the 1 million cafe spots and restaurants in America and set a good first impression.
You also need a name that represents your brand and describes your concept in a manner succinct and engaging enough to pique the public's interest.
In this piece, we'll walk you through:
Things to consider when naming a restaurant.
Restaurant name ideas and restaurant name lists to inspire you.
Helpful resources for new restaurateurs, including the steps to copyright or trademark your new restaurant's name.
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To get started, here's a brief overview of how to choose a restaurant name or start gathering ideas:
Write down your restaurant's mission, vision, purpose, core values, and unique selling points.
Spark new ideas and generate names with a name tool.
Ask your community and target customer base for restaurant name ideas.
Be descriptive and use your location.
Some folks get their start on an Easy Bake Oven™ in a childhood kitchen, while others' passion for food and hospitality gets ignited by a mentor at an impactful first job. However they got there, the restaurant industry has become home to over 15.3 million American workers, many of whom hope or plan to open up their own spot one day.
Naturally, many restaurant owners regard their first restaurant as their baby: the product of a lifetime of dreams, hopes, and wishes. As such, their first foray into restaurant ownership deserves nothing short of the perfect name.
As we touched on earlier, a lot goes into choosing the right restaurant name.
What Are Good Restaurant Name Ideas?
Your restaurant's new name needs to be equal parts eye-catching and unique, while also accurately conveying your brand identity and unique selling points — mainly what type of food people can expect to be served when they pop in for a visit.
It should seem cool without trying too hard, be trendy without hopping on a bandwagon, be easy enough to spell and remember, and (this one's extra important) not be too similar to any other restaurants or small businesses in your area — you don't want to inadvertently send foot traffic to the competition!
The Washington Post analyzed 40,000 Chinese restaurant names in the United States and found that over one third of restaurants (15,000+) included the word China or Chinese, indicating that being descriptive is helpful for brand recognition.
With all that in mind, here are some tips to get you started on the path to discovering the right restaurant name for your new spot.
1. Write Down Your Restaurant's Mission, Vision, Purpose, and Core Values.
Your new restaurant mission statement is more than just a business idea. It's part of your restaurant's autobiography.
It describes who you are, why you're here, and what you plan to accomplish as a member of the restaurant community while also acting as your guiding light for any and all business decisions that need to be made, both short and long term — including naming your restaurant!
Your restaurant's mission statement will play a massive role in choosing the right name for your restaurant.
Let's do a little exercise…
If you've developed a mission statement for your restaurant, have it close by; if not, that's fine, too. Grab a pen and paper and write down the following:
The type of cuisine you'll be offering
Your business plan and any long-term business goals you have, like being the first to serve food from a specific culture in your area or to run a zero-waste restaurant
Your restaurant's core values
The intended personality and vibe of your restaurant — is it a fine dining French restaurant or a chilled-out burger joint?
Adjectives you'd use to describe your restaurant
Your name (and the name of your business partners, if any)
Any family names that are important to you
The neighborhood or town where it will be located
The purpose of this exercise is to pull out words and phrases that describe your restaurant and have a positive connotation to your overall brand and vision. This list will also come in handy when building your restaurant business plan.
When you can't think of anything else to add, read back over your list of superlatives, adjectives, and descriptors and circle your favorites. These will be the building blocks of your restaurant name.
2. Choose a Name That Isn't Already Taken
This one's important: Before settling on a restaurant name or logo, do your research and make sure it isn't already taken by another restaurant or business, especially one that's in your area.
Aside from the obvious — confusing potential customers and sending business to the competition — you may also find yourself in legal hot water if you choose a name already taken by another restaurant or business with a copyright or trademark on one or more of the terms in your restaurant's would-be name.
Here are some resources you can use to look up business names:
Google search
Google My Business
The Yellow Pages (yep, still a thing)
The Better Business Bureau
The United States Patent and Trademark Office's Trademark Database Search
To learn more about copyright infringement, including what counts as copyright infringement and what doesn't, visit Copyright.gov.
3. Use a Restaurant Name Generator To Spark New Ideas.
Can't get your creative juices flowing? Believe it or not, restaurant name generators can lend a helping hand. If you think you're above it, consider this fun fact: Donald Glover (a.k.a. Childish Gambino) got his stage name from a Wu-Tang name generator.
We've rounded up five great sites that will give you a unique restaurant name in an instant. Some ask for guidance in the form of keywords (have your mission statement list handy), while others just assemble random combinations of words.
Restaurant Name Generators:
While some of the suggested names and combinations these restaurant name generators spit out will be completely silly and unusable, they'll help you get the ball rolling and narrow down what kind of name you are (and aren't) looking for. Who knows, you may even find a cool restaurant name that's a perfect fit!
4. Ask Your Community for Restaurant Name Ideas
If you're looking for inspiration or perhaps a tie-breaker on two restaurant name ideas, ask the public for their input. If they end up picking the name you run with, they'll be much more likely to support your business and promote it to their family and friends — after all, they helped you pick your name!
Here are a few ways to solicit feedback on your name from your community:
Take To Social Media: Encourage your target audience to pick a name by posting a public poll on your new restaurant's social media platforms, like Facebook and Instagram. (You may need to pay a little to advertise this poll to the masses since you likely won't have a big following of your own just yet.)
Conduct a Survey: If you don't have a list of people to ask, SurveyMonkey's Target Audience is a great paid resource. Write the questions you'd like answered — like "Which restaurant name do you like better"? — and SurveyMonkey will distribute them to predetermined target groups or include them as a bonus question on another company's survey.
Send Out Questionnaires: Send questionnaires with different business name ideas via snail mail to members of the community around your new restaurant's location asking for their opinion on your restaurant's future name.
To ensure you get responses, you can sweeten the pot with an incentive or two. Consider raffling off a free meal on opening night, inviting the decisive voter in for a ribbon-cutting ceremony and photo op, or naming a menu item after the respondent who suggests the best name.
It can also be helpful to look to other restaurants for inspiration, especially those that seem to share your restaurant's values, type of cuisine, or general vibe.
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Restaurant Name Ideas and Examples
Killer Pizza from Mars
Dubious Clams Brewing Company
The Drunken Taco
Sammie's
un·cooked
Water Pig BBQ
Fry the Coop
Egg Slut
Call Your Mother: A Jew-ish Deli
Foulmouthed Brewing
Old Bag of Nails - 5 Locations in Ohio
Odd Duck
Ltd Edition Sushi – Seattle, WA
Promiscuous Fork
The Catbird Seat
Hot Chix – Boston, MA
Obed and Isaac's
Fat Baby
Plan B Burger
Bun Huggers Old Fashion Hamburgers
118 Real, Creative Restaurant Name Ideas to Inspire You
When choosing a name for your new concept, there are a number of directions you could go in. From puns and plays on words to pop culture references, we’ve compiled restaurant names in a variety of categories to provide you with inspiration as you start spitballing, brainstorming, and pitching ideas to your team.
Unforgettable and Clever Restaurant Names
1. Killer Pizza from Mars — Oceanside, CA
2. Dubious Clams Brewing Company — Excelsior Springs, MO
3. The Drunken Taco — Fort Lauderdale & Coral Square, FL
4. Sammie's — Austin, TX
5. un·cooked — Chicago, IL
6. Water Pig BBQ — Pensacola Beach, FL
7. Fry the Coop — Chicago, IL
8. Egg Slut — Los Angeles, CA
9. Call Your Mother: A Jew-ish Deli — Washington, D.C.
10. Foulmouthed Brewing — Portland, ME
11. Old Bag of Nails - 5 Locations in Ohio
12. Odd Duck — Austin, TX
13. Ltd Edition Sushi – Seattle, WA
14. Promiscuous Fork — San Diego, CA
15. The Catbird Seat — Nashville, TN
16. Hot Chix – Boston, MA
17. Obed and Isaac's — Peoria, IL
18. Fat Baby — Boston, MA
19. Plan B Burger — West Hartford, CT
20. Bun Huggers Old Fashion Hamburgers — Flagstaff, AZ
21. Spanked Puppy — Colchester, VT
22. Holy Smokin Butts BBQ — Tucson, AZ
23. Tandem Coffee + Bakery - Portland, ME
24. Mr. & Mrs. Bun – Miami, FL
25. Phlavz — Chicago, IL
Rhyming and Alliteration Restaurant Names
26. Curry in a Hurry — New York, NY
27. Peg Leg Porker — Nashville, TN
28. The Angry Avocado — The Dalles, OR
29. Jajaja — New York, NY
30. Pork on a Fork — Phoenix, AZ
31. Mama Mai’s Noodles — Stevens Point, WI
32. Patati Patata — Montreal, Canada
33. No Name Restaurant — Boston, MA
34. Girl and the Goat — Chicago, IL
35. GRILLRILLA — Hanover, PA
36. Leaping Lizard Cafe — Virginia Beach, VA
37. He’s Not Here Bar — Chapel Hill, NC
38. 2 Dudes Brew & Que — Monroe, LA
39. Dough Doughnuts — New York, NY
40. Buck & Bull — Pittsburgh, PA
41. Lyla Lila – Atlanta, GA
Restaurant Names That Are Pop Culture References
42. Cookie Monstah — Boston, MA
43. Goldilox Bagels — Medford, MA
44. India Jones — Los Angeles, CA
45. The Slaw Dogs — Pasadena, CA
46. The Lockhart Bar (Harry Potter book/film series) — Toronto, Canada
47. 16 Handles (Sixteen Candles: 1984 film) — New York, NY, and others
48. Tequila Mockingbird (To Kill a Mockingbird: 1960 book) — New Canaan, CT
49. Life of Pie (Life of Pi: 2002 Yann Martel novel) — Ottawa, Canada
50. Lord of the Fries (Lord of the Flies: 1954 novel) — Melbourne, Australia
51. The Glass Onion (“Glass Onion:” 1968 Beatles song) — Falmouth, MA When the owners’ 2-year-old son suggested that the restaurant be named after one of his favorite Beatles songs, “Glass Onion,” they couldn’t say no.
52. Pita Pan (Peter Pan: 1904 play and later Disney movie) — New York, NY
53. Planet of the Crepes (Planet of the Apes: 1968 novel and later movie & TV show) — Tucson, AZ
54. Thai Tanic (Titanic, 1997 film) — Washington, D.C.
55. Santa Baby Bar (“Santa Baby,” 1953 Eartha Kitt song) — Chicago, IL
56. Jekyll & Hyde Club (Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde: 1886 novella) — New York, NY
57. BeetleHouse (Beetlejuice: 1988 film) — Los Angeles, California; New York, NY and Washington, D.C.
58. Rock Lobster (“Rock Lobster,” 1979 B-52s song) - Chandler, AZ
59. The Holy Grail Pub (Monty Python and the Holy Grail: 1975 film) — Plano, TX
60. Oliver's Twist – Seattle, WA
Funny and Punny Restaurant Names
61. How Ya Dough'n - Boca Raton, FL
62. Cheesy Does It — Saratoga, NY
63. Bizzy B Cakes — Albuquerque, NM
64. The Dairy Godmother — Alexandria, VA
65. Kale Me Crazy — Atlanta, GA
66. Nacho Problem — Durban, South Africa
67. Nothing Bundt Cakes — Texas-based with locations nationwide
68. Lettuce Eat — Monroeville, PA
69. Juan More Taco — Fredericksburg, VA
70. Wild Thyme Gourmet — Highlands, NC
71. Hip Stirs Coffee House — Brookville, OH
72. What the Pho — Bellevue, WA
73. Divine Pastabilities — San Diego, CA
74. Rolling in Dough Bread Company — Moss Bluff, LA
75. Bite Mi Asian Kitchen — Long Beach, CA
76. Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises — Chicago, IL
77. Brew’d Awakening Coffeehaus — Lowell, MA
78. Pho With Us — Austin, TX
Restaurant Names By Cuisine
If you're looking for inspiration to name a restaurant in a specific cuisine, here's some inspiration from a few of our favorites. These range from punny to clever to descriptive and showcase their individual food category.
Best Italian Restaurant Names
84. Earth, Wind, and Flour — Santa Monica, CA
85. Pane e Vino — Providence, RI
86. L'unico — Portland, OR
87. Semolina - Red Bank, NJ
88. Piano, Piano — Toronto, Canada
Best Mexican and Latin American Restaurant Names
89. El Jardin - San Diego, CA
90. Uno Mas Taquiza — Portland, OR
91. Bueno y Sano — Various locations in Massachusetts
92. Havana Rumba, Louisville, KY
93. Quiero Cafe - Portland, ME
94. Juan in a Million — Austin, TX
95. Zocalo – Sacramento, CA
Best Chinese Restaurant Names
96. Ma's House — Laguna Hills, CA
97. Mei Mei — Boston, MA Mei Mei means “little sister” in Chinese
98. A Single Pebble — Burlington, VT
Best Spanish Restaurant Names
99. Toro — Boston, MA
100. Casa Mono & Bar Jamón — New York, NY
101. Bar Raval — Toronto, Canada
Best Japanese Restaurant Names
102. Sakura Japanese Restaurant — Christchurch, New Zealand
103. Ichigo Ichie — Montreal, QC The Japanese idiom “ichigo ichie” describes the concept of treasuring the moment because it’s fleeting
Best Seafood Restaurant Names
104. Codfather — Reno, NV
105. Frying Nemo — Northern Territory, Australia
106. Neptune Oyster — Boston, MA
107. La Mar — Miami
Best Indian Restaurant Names
108. Ghee Indian Kitchen — Miami, FL
109. Badmaash — Los Angeles, CA Badmaash means mischievous in Hindi
110. Tikkaway — New Haven, CT
Best German Restaurant Names
111. Wunderbar — Covington, KY
112. Hollerbach’s Willow Tree Café – Sanford, FL
Best Jamaican Restaurant Names
113. Just Jerks (Ena's Jamaican Grill) — Cincinnati, OH
114. Jamaican Patty — Springfield, MO
115. Rasta Pasta — Toronto, Canada
Best Thai Restaurant Names
116. Thai Basil — Manchester Center, VT
117. Jitlada — Los Angeles, CA It’s named after a royal palace in Bangkok
118. DakZen — Somerville, MA According to the Harvard Crimson, “The restaurant’s name breaks down to “dak,” a term used to describe enjoying food so much that “eating” is not sufficient to describe the experience, and “zen,” meaning noodles”
Open Your Restaurant the Right Way With Toast
Once you settle on a name for your new restaurant (congrats!), you’re ready to get movin’.
Toast has all the resources you need to start your restaurant ownership journey on the right foot.
Whether you’re launching a sophisticated Italian restaurant, a cute neighborhood coffee shop, a local seafood restaurant, or a high-spirited Mexican restaurant and tequila bar, our user-friendly tools, templates, and systems feature everything you need to manage, maintain, and organize your new business.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a Restaurant Business Name Have to Match the Domain Name?
For the sake of consistency, online visibility, and brand identity, it’s best to pick a web domain name that matches your restaurant name. When you pick a domain, always check the domain availability to ensure you have the right to use it.
If your restaurant name is taken, you can switch up the name slightly to ensure it still matches without clashing with other domains. For example, if your restaurant is called GrubHub, but the domain is taken, you can add a new relevant word or two to the mix, without changing your restaurant name, like GrubHubUSA.com or TheGrubHub.com.
How Can I Promote My New Restaurant Name?
It’s a good idea to get your restaurant name out there ahead of your grand opening to guarantee a big turnout on your first day of operations.
The best way to get the word out is through marketing. Take to social media and get posting, send out newsletters, hand out flyers, and offer limited-time promotions. You can even get a helping hand from local businesses by hosting joint events!
How Do I Come Up With a Unique Business Name?
If you’re stuck for names, don’t worry! There are loads of ways to conjure a unique business name for your restaurant. The key to a great restaurant name is catchiness. Make sure you pick something that’s short and easy to remember. It’s also important to make sure that your chosen name reflects your overall brand and unique selling points.
When choosing a name, you can brainstorm yourself or get help from the public by handing out surveys and conducting polls. You can also use online name generators — a great option if you want to save time!
Related Restaurant Names Resources
The Ultimate Guide to Restaurant Branding
Use this guide to get tips on how to create a restaurant brand that stands out, attracts customers, and drives repeat visits.

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