Protect your business name before you spend time and money on branding. Our Priority Path Trademark Search checks the USPTO database for identical and confusingly similar trademarks so you can see if your name is already taken or likely to be refused.
We perform a professional “knockout” search of live federal trademarks, looking not just at exact matches but also highly similar names in related classes of goods and services. You receive a plain‑English report that highlights potential conflicts, explains why they matter, and helps you decide whether to move forward, tweak your name, or pick a new one.
This service is perfect for new LLCs, e‑commerce brands, coaches, agencies, online stores, and local businesses that want to avoid rebranding, takedown notices, and ad account issues caused by trademark complaints. Instead of guessing in the USPTO’s complex search system, you get a clear view of risk before you file.
Priority Path is built on transparent pricing and straight talk. We don’t upsell you into expensive legal subscriptions or hide what’s included. You get a focused federal trademark search, a concise risk summary, and human‑reviewed results designed for real‑world branding decisions.
What’s included
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Search of the USPTO database for identical and highly similar word marks (live applications and registrations).
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Screening in the most relevant classes of goods and services based on your business description.
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Identification of obvious conflicts that could “knock out” your proposed name.
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Plain‑English summary of risk levels (low / medium / high) so non‑lawyers can understand.
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Practical next‑step recommendations (proceed, modify name, or choose a different mark).
Who this is for
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New businesses choosing a name for an LLC, corporation, or DBA.
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Online brands launching a website, Shopify store, product line, or marketing campaign.
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Creators, coaches, and agencies who want to build a brand that can be protected and scaled.
Important note
This is a clearance search and informational report, not legal advice. It focuses on likelihood‑of‑confusion risks in the federal trademark register and does not include a full common‑law search or a legal opinion from an attorney.
