20 best domain names for an Fit First Furniture.
Fit First Furniture is a mobile app that scans a renter's room with LiDAR or photogrammetry and surfaces only the furniture SKUs guaranteed to fit, previewed in AR before checkout. The wedge is a free room scanner that turns casual browsers into high-intent buyers, and the moat is a proprietary fit-compatibility dataset that compounds with every scan.
Reading the room.
Spend an afternoon in the App Store searching 'room scanner' and a pattern jumps out fast. Almost every serious player is doing one of three things with their name: bolting a Greek or Latin prefix onto the word 'room' (Metaroom, Roomle, RoomPlan, RoomScan Pro), leaning on a parent brand that already owns the customer relationship (IKEA Place, Houzz Pro, Wayfair, Amazon's 'View in Your Room'), or going full utility-belt descriptor with a number tacked on for technical credibility (Planner 5D, Live Home 3D, Home Design LiDAR 3D Scanner). It is, frankly, a sea of beige. The category has not yet had its Airbnb moment, the name that stops sounding like a feature and starts sounding like a place you go.
What's interesting is what these names refuse to say. None of them mention fit. None mention renters, apartments, or the actual emotional problem, which is the dread of a $900 couch arriving and not making it through the door. The incumbents all sell themselves on the scan, which is the technology, not the outcome. Roomle promises 'try before you buy.' Metaroom talks about point clouds and CAD exports. RoomPlan Pro talks about USDZ files. I keep thinking a 27-year-old in a Brooklyn studio does not care about USDZ files. She cares about whether the West Elm sectional she's been stalking is going to swallow her living room.
That gap is the opening. The available domains in this niche skew heavily toward two pots: 'fit' compounds (snugfit, padfit, nestfit, scalefit, voxelfit) and 'nook' or 'roost' style coziness words (perchy, scannook, trynook, getroost). Both pots gesture at the thing the incumbents are too engineer-brained to name. A brand here could win by sounding less like a CAD plugin and more like a friend who measured your room for you. The risk with 'fit' is that it's already crowded, both inside furniture (Burrow, Floyd, Article all flirt with it in copy) and outside (every fitness app on earth). The risk with the cozy-animal-noun route is that it can read twee, especially to men. The sweet spot is probably a name that hints at fit without saying the word, and feels apartment-sized rather than house-sized.
Six rules for naming a Home & Decor product.
Not general naming advice — these are patterns that work specifically for this niche. Apply them to the shortlist below.
Avoid the room-prefix trap
Roomle, RoomPlan, RoomScan, Roomvoxel, Roomtly. The category is saturated with 'room' compounds and they all blur together in App Store search. Pick a word that does not start with R-O-O-M unless you have a very strong reason.
Signal fit without saying fit
Incumbents talk about scanning and modeling. Your wedge is the fit guarantee, so the name should imply snugness or precision. Words like tuck, snug, nest, perch get there without joining the crowded 'fit' suffix pile.
Sound apartment-sized, not house-sized
Your buyer is a renter in a 600 sq ft one-bedroom, not a homeowner planning a remodel. Avoid grand domestic words like Estate, Manor, Homestead, Abode. Smaller, friendlier syllables read truer to the actual customer.
Stay short and thumb-typeable
This is a mobile-first app where people will share scans by text. Five to seven letters is the sweet spot. Anything over nine letters competes with Planner 5D and Live Home 3D, which is the wrong neighborhood.
Skip the AI and Voxel cliches
Names like fitvoxel, voxelfit, depthai, scaneo signal the technology rather than the outcome. Renters do not buy LiDAR, they buy confidence. Tech-prefix names also date fast, the way every 2015 startup was 'something.ly.'
Earn the .com or pick a credible .app
Furniture is a trust purchase with real shipping costs. A .ai or .io domain reads like a beta tool. If a clean .com is reachable (tuckio, perchy on .app, trynook on .co), it is worth the higher price for conversion alone.
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'Tuck' perfectly implies snug fit and precision placement — exactly the confidence renters need before buying furniture for a tight apartment.
best: namecheap $9.99godaddy $10.69vercel $11.25netim $19 - 02
'Nook' evokes cozy apartment-scale living and the idea of everything fitting perfectly into its own small corner.
best: vercel $17.99netim $21.5godaddy $485.99 - 03
Combines the scanning action with the cozy nook metaphor, making it clear this app helps renters find furniture that truly belongs in their space.
best: namecheap $9.99godaddy $10.69vercel $11.25netim $19 - 04
'Ply' suggests layering and precision, signaling smart spatial planning without leaning on tired tech-prefix clichés.
best: namecheap $9.99godaddy $10.69vercel $11.25netim $19 - 05
Playful and apartment-sized, 'perch' implies finding the perfect spot — ideal for renters visualizing where each piece lands before buying.
best: netim $13vercel $14.99godaddy $23.99 - 06
Directly evokes the snug, apartment-friendly guarantee renters want without sounding like a generic fitness or tech brand.
best: netim $13vercel $14.99godaddy $23.99 - 07
'Snug' signals the core value proposition — furniture that actually fits — in a friendly, renter-appropriate two-syllable word.
best: netim $13vercel $14.99godaddy $23.99 - 08
Same strong snugness metaphor as the .app version but on .ai, which reads slightly beta-ish for a trust-heavy furniture purchase.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 09
'Roost' implies a personal, apartment-scale home base — friendly and evocative of renter life without sounding grandiose.
best: namecheap $29.99vercel $37.99netim $40godaddy $59.99 - 10
The 'get' prefix adds a clear call-to-action framing, reinforcing that renters are claiming their perfectly fitted living space.
best: namecheap $29.99vercel $37.99netim $40godaddy $59.99 - 11
'Nest' connotes cozy, compact apartment living and pairing it with 'fit' nails the core guarantee, though .io hurts trust slightly.
best: namecheap $29.99vercel $37.99netim $40godaddy $59.99 - 12
Directly pairs the scanning action with the snugness outcome, making the app's core promise immediately legible to renters.
best: namecheap $9.99godaddy $10.69vercel $11.25netim $19 - 13
'Dwela' is a coined word rooted in 'dwell,' giving a fresh, apartment-friendly feel with the credibility of a .com TLD.
best: namecheap $9.99godaddy $10.69vercel $11.25netim $19 - 14
A smooth invented word blending 'home' and motion, though the .io TLD and slightly abstract meaning reduce purchase trust.
best: namecheap $29.99vercel $37.99netim $40godaddy $59.99 - 15
Smartly connects spatial depth measurement with the fit guarantee, though 'depth' edges slightly toward tech-speak territory.
best: netim $13vercel $14.99godaddy $23.99 - 16
'Pad' is perfectly renter-coded slang and pairing it with fit is on-brief, though the .ai TLD undermines trust for furniture buying.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 17
Technically accurate — mesh models are core to photogrammetry — but reads more developer tool than consumer furniture app.
best: namecheap $29.99vercel $37.99netim $40godaddy $59.99 - 18
Descriptive and clear but at 10 characters it's too long for thumb-typing, and 'spatial' skews toward enterprise AR jargon.
best: netim $13vercel $14.99godaddy $23.99 - 19
The 'use' prefix adds unnecessary friction and 'dimensa' is hard to parse aloud, making it difficult to recommend for a consumer app.
best: namecheap $9.99godaddy $10.69vercel $11.25netim $19 - 20
The '-ly' suffix and 'HQ' appendage both feel dated and generic, doing nothing to differentiate this from thousands of other apps.
best: namecheap $9.99godaddy $10.69vercel $11.25netim $19
Frequently asked.
Every day, ChatDomain generates hundreds of candidate names for each new idea, checks availability across dozens of TLDs, and ranks the top 20 on brandability, pronunciation, and pricing. The text on this page is AI-assisted research, reviewed before publication.