Set up a charity
Name your charity
The official name of your charity is known as its 鈥榤ain name鈥�. Your charity may also have a 鈥榳orking name鈥� which is another name it uses.
Examples
The main name for Comic Relief is Charity Projects. Comic Relief is the working name.
The main name for NSPCC is the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. NSPCC is the working name.
Not all charities have working names.
Your charity鈥檚 main name or working name must not:
- be the same as or too similar to the main or working name of an existing charity
- use words you do not have permission to use, for example a trade mark
- use offensive words or acronyms
- be misleading, for example suggest your charity does something it does not
Search the charities register to check the names of registered charities. Unregistered charities will not appear in the register. You should search the internet to see if other charities or organisations have similar main or working names.
You may have to change your charity鈥檚 main or working names or stop using them. This can happen if they are too similar to another charity鈥檚 name or they use words that are not allowed. This can delay your charity registration.
Words you need permission to use
You need evidence that you have permission to use:
- the name of a famous or copyrighted work, such as a book or a piece of music
- the name of a famous person or character
- trade marks, such as Olympic or Paralympic
- royal titles, such as King, Queen, Prince, or His or Her Majesty
Using 鈥榗harity鈥� in a name
You can use the words 鈥榗harity鈥�, 鈥榗harities鈥� or 鈥榗haritable鈥� in your charity鈥檚 name but you need approval from the Charity Commission if you use them when you register a company name with Companies House.
Non-English names
You must include a translation of any non-English words in your charity鈥檚 name when you register.