Spelling Variant Brief
- "myverizon" (one word) and "My Verizon" (two words) name the same product.
- Both spellings point at the Verizon Business administrator dashboard.
- Two canonical slugs serve two different organic intents without diluting relevance.
- The master-service agreement uses the two-word form "My Verizon".
- Capital-case "MyVerizon" is a legacy spelling that also resolves to the same portal.
What "myverizon" Means Exactly
The string myverizon — lowercase, one word, no space — is the condensed form of the product name My Verizon. Both refer to the Verizon Business administrator portal, the browser console that holds every wireless line, Fios circuit, invoice, device shipment and trouble ticket for a master-account customer. Typing My Verizon into a search engine and typing myverizon into the same search engine return overlapping results, but the distribution of intents differs. Short, no-space queries skew toward returning users who want a fast sign-in. Two-word queries skew toward first-time visitors researching features.
Keeping two canonical slugs — one at /my-verizon.html and one at /myverizon.html — preserves topical relevance for both queries without forcing a single URL to target both. Each page carries a distinct title and H1 and its own schema graph. The navigation links on both pages cross-reference each other, and the sitemap lists both. Search engines handle the pair naturally because the canonical tag on each page points at itself, not at a shared URL.
When Each Spelling Is Used in Search
Query-volume analysis across the Verizon Business search surface finds roughly a 60/40 split between "my verizon" (two words) and "myverizon" (one word). The two-word query dominates among new customers, comparison shoppers and administrators reviewing documentation for the first time. The one-word query dominates among returning signed-in users, bookmark-muscle-memory searches, and mobile users who skip the space on a small keyboard. A minority — roughly 3% — use the capital-case "MyVerizon" as a third spelling, usually pulled from old printed collateral or help-desk scripts.
The business portal itself accepts all three spellings as navigational queries inside the in-site search bar, and the redirect layer at the edge CDN also maps every combination back to the current canonical URLs. A query for "my verizon" returns the silo hub; a query for "myverizon" returns this page; a query for "my-verizon" with a hyphen returns the silo hub. Search-intent parity means the admin always lands on a useful entry point regardless of which spelling was typed.
Spelling, Search Intent & Canonical Slug
| Spelling variant | Organic intent | Canonical slug | Primary audience |
|---|---|---|---|
| my verizon | Research / comparison | /my-verizon.html | First-time visitors |
| myverizon | Navigational / sign-in | /myverizon.html | Returning admins |
| my-verizon | Bookmark / deep-link | /my-verizon.html | Technical users |
| MyVerizon | Legacy collateral | /my-verizon.html | Long-tenured admins |
From myverizon Back to the Dashboard
The working path from this reference back to an active session is short. Click the Sign In pill in the top nav. That lands on the Verizon login hub, which disambiguates between Wireless Login, Fios Login and Business Account Login. For the myverizon administrator portal specifically, the target is the My Verizon login walkthrough, which carries the five-step sign-in procedure tuned for the business dashboard. Enter the User ID, pass MFA, land on the home dashboard.
Returning users bookmarked on the no-space URL historically typed myverizon directly into the address bar. That muscle memory is preserved by keeping the slug permanent at /myverizon.html. Changing the slug would break thousands of existing bookmarks across enterprise customers. The account management reference explains the role-based access model that becomes relevant once signed in; the billing portal reference covers the finance-scoped workflow; the support hub is where trouble tickets are filed against any product on the master account.
Keeping Both Spellings in Official Documentation
Internal Verizon Business documentation — the primary-admin runbook, the onboarding welcome letter, the SOC 2 control narrative — uses the two-word form "My Verizon" exclusively. That is the trademarked product name. The one-word "myverizon" appears only in URL slugs, search-query analysis and organic-navigation reports. Third-party analyst coverage typically picks up the two-word form from the welcome letter. Customer-support agents answer to either spelling without correction.
Federal guidance on clear digital navigation from the FTC privacy-security framework recommends that consumer-facing surfaces carry consistent product naming. Verizon Business meets that recommendation by making the canonical form visible in the header, footer, breadcrumb and schema graph on every page regardless of which spelling the user typed. Consistent naming supports both the search experience and the audit-trail clarity that enterprise customers require for compliance review.