Yes, your LLC can operate under two DBAs—and actually way more than that. Most states don't cap how many "Doing Business As" names you can attach to a single limited liability company. I've seen clients manage five, ten, even twenty different trade names under one corporate umbrella.
This setup lets you run what looks like completely separate businesses to your customers while keeping everything under one legal roof. Think of it like one actor playing multiple characters—same person backstage, different personas on stage.
The real question isn't whether you can do this (you almost certainly can), but whether you should. That answer depends on what you're selling, where you're located, how much liability risk you're comfortable with, and what your exit strategy looks like five years down the road.
Here's how this works in practice. You form "Martinez Holdings LLC" with your secretary of state. That's your legal name—what appears on tax returns, lawsuits, and official state records. Then you file DBA paperwork to operate "Riverside Coffee Co." and "Downtown Catering Solutions." To customers, these look like two completely different businesses. They've got different logos, websites, maybe even different phone numbers.
But legally? Everything traces back to Martinez Holdings LLC. That's who owns the equipment, signs the leases, and shows up on your 1099s.
Your trade name is basically a stage name for your company. It lets you brand differe...