No other naming tradition on earth reflects the same collision of influences. The English Puritan names that came over on the Mayflower. The French names of Louisiana and Quebec. The Spanish names of California, Texas, and the Southwest. The German names of Pennsylvania and the Midwest. The West African names that survived the Middle Passage and transformed into something new on American soil. The Native American place names that became personal names. The invented names that parents created from scratch because America had always believed that you could make something entirely new if you wanted to badly enough.
American names are also uniquely shaped by celebrity, by geography, and by the particular American belief in reinvention. No other country names its children after states and cities quite the way America does. Brooklyn, Dakota, Austin, Savannah, Georgia, and Sierra are all places that became names because American parents looked at the landscape around them and saw something worth giving to a child. No other country has quite the same tradition of invented names, of parents taking sounds they love and combining them in ways that no language had ever produced before.
At the same time, American naming has always had a current of the deeply traditional running beneath its innovation. The most popular American baby names in any given year are almost always names with long histories in the English, Latin, or Biblical tradition. Emma, Olivia, Liam, and Noah sit at the top of the American charts not because they are new but because they are genuinely beautiful and have been genuinely beautiful for a very long time.
We have gathered 250 American baby name ideas across every dimension of this endlessly varied naming landscape. Classic American names, modern American favourites, Southern names with their particular warmth, patriotic names drawn from the country’s history, Native American inspired names, and short American names that carry the country’s characteristic directness. Let’s find the one that is right for your baby.
Classic American Baby Girl Names
These are the names that defined American girlhood across several decades of the twentieth century. They feel deeply American in a way that is hard to articulate but impossible to miss. Warm, confident, and carrying the particular optimism of a country that genuinely believed the future would be better than the past.
Classic American Baby Girl Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 25)
- Madison
- Savannah
- Brooklyn
- Dakota
- Cheyenne
- Sierra
- Amber
- Brittany
- Tiffany
- Courtney
- Ashley
- Whitney
- Shelby
- Lindsey
- Kelsey
- Kayla
- Kaylee
- Hailey
- Haley
- Bailey
- Rylee
- Riley
- Kylie
- Miley
- Braelyn
Classic American Baby Girl Names (Good Picks: 26 to 50)
- Addison
- Alexis
- Alyssa
- Amanda
- Amber
- Bethany
- Brandi
- Brenda
- Caitlin
- Carrie
- Casey
- Chelsea
- Christy
- Cindy
- Courtney
- Dana
- Darcy
- Deanna
- Donna
- Doris
- Elaine
- Ellen
- Erica
- Gail
- Gayle
Classic American Baby Boy Names
These names belong to a generation of American men who grew up believing in hard work, open spaces, and the particular freedom that comes from having a country big enough to disappear into if you needed to. They feel straightforward and honest in the most American possible way.
Classic American Baby Boy Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 25)
- Tyler
- Cody
- Austin
- Hunter
- Chase
- Blake
- Brent
- Brett
- Brock
- Brody
- Brooks
- Bryan
- Bryce
- Caleb
- Cameron
- Carson
- Carter
- Clayton
- Cody
- Cole
- Colin
- Connor
- Cooper
- Cord
- Cory
Classic American Baby Boy Names (Good Picks: 26 to 50)
- Dallas
- Dalton
- Damon
- Dana
- Dane
- Darius
- Darren
- Darryl
- Daryl
- Dave
- David
- Davis
- Dawson
- Dax
- Dean
- Decker
- Derek
- Dillon
- Drake
- Drew
- Dryden
- Duane
- Duke
- Duncan
- Dustin
Modern American Baby Girl Names
The modern American naming landscape for girls reflects a country that has embraced both its deep roots and its endless appetite for the new. These are the names sitting at the top of the American charts right now, a fascinating blend of names that have been beautiful for centuries and names that feel completely of this moment.
Modern American Baby Girl Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 25)
- Olivia
- Emma
- Ava
- Charlotte
- Sophia
- Amelia
- Isabella
- Mia
- Evelyn
- Harper
- Luna
- Camila
- Gianna
- Elizabeth
- Eleanor
- Ella
- Abigail
- Sofia
- Avery
- Scarlett
- Emily
- Aria
- Penelope
- Chloe
- Layla
Modern American Baby Girl Names (Good Picks: 26 to 50)
- Mila
- Nora
- Hazel
- Madison
- Ellie
- Lily
- Nova
- Isla
- Grace
- Violet
- Aurora
- Riley
- Zoey
- Stella
- Natalie
- Emilia
- Zoe
- Leah
- Hazel
- Willow
- Lillian
- Addison
- Lucy
- Aubrey
- Eliana
Modern American Baby Boy Names
The modern American boy’s name reflects the same tension between tradition and innovation that runs through the whole of American culture. Biblical names sit alongside invented names. Old English names sit alongside Spanish influenced names. The American melting pot produces a naming landscape unlike anything else in the English speaking world.
Modern American Baby Boy Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 25)
- Liam
- Noah
- Oliver
- Elijah
- James
- Aiden
- Lucas
- Mateo
- Sebastian
- Ezra
- Jackson
- Wyatt
- Benjamin
- Henry
- Asher
- Leo
- Julian
- Theodore
- Jack
- Levi
- Owen
- Oscar
- Caleb
- Mason
- Miles
Modern American Baby Boy Names (Good Picks: 26 to 50)
- Hudson
- Grayson
- Lincoln
- Ethan
- Logan
- Luke
- Dylan
- Landon
- Carter
- Nathan
- Gabriel
- Ryan
- Jaxon
- Isaiah
- Eli
- Connor
- Aaron
- Charles
- Jeremiah
- Cameron
- Josiah
- Adrian
- Colton
- Austin
- Jace
Southern American Baby Names
The American South has its own distinct naming tradition that carries the particular warmth, storytelling instinct, and sense of family history that defines Southern culture at its best. Southern names tend to be a little longer, a little more ornate, and a little more attached to the past than names from the rest of the country. They feel like names that come with a porch and a glass of sweet tea and a story about your grandmother.
Southern American Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 25)
- Scarlett
- Savannah
- Georgia
- Magnolia
- Dixie
- Pearl
- Ruby
- Loretta
- Dolly
- June
- Patsy
- Tammy
- Reba
- Jolene
- Clementine
- Maybelle
- Luella
- Daisy
- Bonnie
- Rosalie
- Annabelle
- Josephine
- Tallulah
- Coralee
- Jessamine
Southern American Baby Names (Good Picks: 26 to 50)
- Beaumont
- Beauregard
- Beau
- Braxton
- Braxley
- Briggs
- Burl
- Calhoun
- Cash
- Clyde
- Coburn
- Colt
- Colton
- Cord
- Coy
- Crawford
- Crockett
- Cullen
- Dallas
- Davis
- Dawson
- Decatur
- Delbert
- Dell
- Denton
Patriotic American Baby Names
America has a stronger tradition than almost any other country of naming children after its own history, its presidents, its ideals, and its landscape. These names carry the particular pride of a nation that takes its own mythology seriously. Whether you are drawn to the dignity of Lincoln and Jefferson or the boldness of Liberty and Freedom, these names make no secret of where their loyalty lies.
Patriotic American Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 25)
- Liberty
- Freedom
- Justice
- Lincoln
- Washington
- Jefferson
- Madison
- Monroe
- Jackson
- Harrison
- Taylor
- Tyler
- Polk
- Pierce
- Buchanan
- Grant
- Hayes
- Garfield
- Cleveland
- McKinley
- Roosevelt
- Taft
- Wilson
- Harding
- Coolidge
Patriotic American Baby Names (Good Picks: 26 to 50)
- Hoover
- Truman
- Eisenhower
- Kennedy
- Johnson
- Nixon
- Ford
- Carter
- Reagan
- Bush
- Clinton
- Obama
- America
- Columbia
- Patriot
- Eagle
- Banner
- Glory
- Honor
- Valor
- Justice
- Liberty
- Freedom
- Union
- Republic
Native American Inspired Baby Names
Long before the United States existed, the land that became America was home to hundreds of distinct nations with their own languages, their own naming traditions, and their own deep relationships to the places they had inhabited for thousands of years. Many of the most distinctly American names in use today come from these traditions, either directly or through the place names that European settlers borrowed and that later became personal names.
Native American Inspired Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 25)
- Dakota
- Cheyenne
- Cherokee
- Navajo
- Apache
- Sioux
- Comanche
- Shoshone
- Blackfoot
- Arapaho
- Kiowa
- Osage
- Lakota
- Ojibwe
- Mohawk
- Oneida
- Onondaga
- Cayuga
- Seneca
- Tuscarora
- Lenape
- Shawnee
- Delaware
- Potawatomi
- Menominee
Native American Inspired Baby Names (Good Picks: 26 to 50)
- Aiyana
- Aponi
- Chenoa
- Cochise
- Dyami
- Elan
- Hania
- Hiawatha
- Honovi
- Huritt
- Kachina
- Kai
- Kaya
- Keanu
- Kele
- Kimi
- Kiona
- Kohana
- Kuruk
- Len
- Leotie
- Lomasi
- Luyu
- Maikoh
- Makwa
Short American Baby Names
America has always had a fondness for the short, direct, no-nonsense name. From the frontier tradition of names like Bud, Hank, and Earl to the modern tendency to shorten everything to its smallest possible form, American naming has always understood that sometimes one syllable is exactly enough. These short American names carry the country’s characteristic directness in the smallest possible package.
Short American Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 30)
- Ava
- Mia
- Zoe
- Lea
- Mae
- Kay
- Joy
- Ray
- Jay
- Lee
- Rex
- Ace
- Bud
- Cal
- Colt
- Dan
- Don
- Duke
- Earl
- Ed
- Gene
- Glen
- Guy
- Hal
- Hank
- Jack
- Jake
- Joe
- Jon
- Ken
American Baby Names by Region
America is too large and too diverse for its naming culture to be uniform across the whole country. Different regions have developed their own distinct naming traditions that reflect the history, the culture, and the particular personality of the people who settled them. Here are the most distinctive names from the regions that have contributed most to the American naming landscape.
New England Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 10)
New England carries the longest naming tradition in America, rooted in the Puritan settlers who arrived in the seventeenth century with a strong preference for Biblical names and a deep suspicion of anything that looked like frivolity. The New England naming tradition values restraint, dignity, and the particular kind of quiet confidence that comes from knowing exactly who your people were.
- Abigail
- Prudence
- Mercy
- Patience
- Constance
- Josiah
- Ezra
- Elijah
- Caleb
- Nathaniel
Western and Frontier Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 10)
The American West produced a naming culture rooted in landscape, in the particular freedom of vast open spaces, and in the frontier spirit of people who had chosen to go further than anyone had gone before. These names carry all of that expansive energy.
- Sierra
- Dakota
- Cheyenne
- Austin
- Carson
- Hunter
- Clint
- Wyatt
- Jesse
- Ryder
Southern Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 10)
The American South produces names that carry its particular culture of hospitality, storytelling, and deep attachment to family and place. These are names with a drawl in them, names that feel warm and unhurried and full of history.
- Scarlett
- Savannah
- Magnolia
- Beau
- Beauregard
- Clyde
- Cash
- Loretta
- June
- Dixie
Tips for Choosing an American Baby Name
American naming is one of the most open and least rule-bound traditions in the world. That freedom is wonderful but it also means that parents face a wider range of choices than almost any other naming culture provides. Here is what is genuinely worth thinking about before you decide.
- Think about what kind of American name you actually want. The American naming landscape contains multitudes and the differences between them matter. A classic American name like Tyler or Ashley carries a very different set of associations from a modern American name like Liam or Olivia, which carries different associations from a Southern name like Scarlett or Beau, which is entirely different from a patriotic name like Lincoln or Liberty. Knowing which corner of the American naming tradition speaks to you helps you find the right name much faster.
- Consider the decade your name comes from. American names are unusually sensitive to generational dating. A name like Tiffany or Brittany is immediately associated with the 1980s. A name like Ashley or Tyler is associated with the 1990s. A name like Jayden or Kayla is associated with the 2000s. If you want a name that does not immediately announce the decade your child was born, look to names that have been in continuous use for multiple generations or to names that feel genuinely timeless rather than specifically of a moment.
- Think carefully about invented and creatively spelled names. America has a stronger tradition of invented names and creative spelling than any other English speaking country. Names like Kayleigh, Rylee, Jaycen, and Brylee are American inventions that feel fresh to the parents who choose them. The experience of carrying one of these names, however, is a lifetime of having your name misspelled by every teacher, every doctor, and every official you encounter. Think about whether that experience is one you want to give your child before you choose a name with an unconventional spelling.
- Be aware of the popularity cycle. American naming trends move faster and harder than those in most other English speaking countries. A name that is number one on the American charts will be carried by a significant percentage of children born that year and your child may share their name with several classmates. If distinctiveness matters to you, check the current Social Security Administration name rankings before you commit to a name that feels fresh but may already be everywhere.
- Consider the place name tradition carefully. Brooklyn, Madison, Savannah, and Austin are all place names that became personal names and are now completely established. But not every American place name translates as naturally into a personal name. Think about whether the place name you love carries associations beyond the place itself that will serve your child well in all contexts of their life.
- Think about how the name travels outside America. American names are consumed globally through film, television, and music and many of them translate very well into other cultural contexts. But some specifically American names carry associations outside the United States that their American bearers may not anticipate. If your child is likely to spend time in other countries or if your family has connections to cultures outside America, it is worth checking how your chosen name lands in those contexts.
- Trust the name that feels genuinely American to you personally. The American naming tradition is ultimately defined by the belief that every person and every family has the right to make their own choices. There is no naming authority in America telling you what is and is not acceptable. The most American thing you can do is choose the name that feels absolutely right for your child and your family and own that choice completely.
Frequently Asked Questions
American baby names raise questions that are specific to the country’s uniquely open and eclectic naming culture. Parents want to know what makes a name specifically American, how to navigate the tension between tradition and innovation, and how the American naming landscape has changed over the generations. Here are the most honest and useful answers we can give.
What makes a baby name specifically American?
This is a genuinely interesting question because America does not have an ethnic or linguistic naming tradition in the way that Serbia or Japan or ancient Rome does. What makes a name specifically American is usually one of several things. It might be a place name drawn from the American landscape, like Brooklyn, Dakota, or Savannah. It might be a name invented or popularised in America that spread globally through American cultural exports, like Tiffany, Madison, or Tyler. It might be a name that blends multiple cultural traditions in the particular way that only a country of immigrants can, like Aaliyah, Jayden, or Kayla. Or it might simply be a name that sits at the top of the American charts year after year, like Emma, Liam, or Olivia, even though those names have long histories outside America. American naming is defined less by where its names come from than by the freedom with which it combines and reinvents them.
What are the most popular American baby girl names right now?
These are the names sitting at the very top of the American naming charts at the moment, based on the most recent Social Security Administration data.
- Olivia
- Emma
- Charlotte
- Amelia
- Sophia
- Mia
- Isabella
- Ava
- Evelyn
- Luna
What are the most popular American baby boy names right now?
These are the boy names leading the American charts right now, a mix of Biblical names, classic English names, and names with the particular fresh energy of modern American naming.
- Liam
- Noah
- Oliver
- James
- Elijah
- Mateo
- Theodore
- Henry
- Lucas
- William
Why does America name so many children after places?
The American place name tradition is one of the most distinctive features of American naming culture and it has a specific history. When European settlers named the landscape of the continent they were occupying, they drew on indigenous place names, on the names of the countries and regions they came from, and on their own personal names. Those place names then became part of the American cultural landscape in a way that felt distinctly American rather than belonging to any single European tradition. When parents later began naming children after those places, they were drawing on names that felt genuinely American in origin, names like Dakota, Savannah, and Austin that belonged to the new world rather than the old one. The place name tradition is America naming itself after itself.
Are invented American names a good idea?
America has a stronger tradition of invented names than any other English speaking country and many of those invented names have become completely established over time. Madison was an invented name in the 1980s. It is now one of the most recognisable names in the English speaking world. Kayla, Jayden, and Aaliyah were all invented or significantly reshaped by American naming culture and all three are now used globally. The question is not whether invented names are legitimate but whether the specific invented name you are considering has the qualities that allow a name to survive and feel comfortable across a lifetime. The invented names that work best are the ones that follow the phonological patterns of English naturally, that are easy to spell and pronounce, and that have a sound that feels genuinely beautiful rather than simply novel.
How do I find a name that feels American without feeling dated?
The key is to look for names that have been in continuous use in America for multiple generations rather than names that peaked sharply in a specific decade. Names like James, Eleanor, Henry, and Grace have been used in America since the colonial era and feel completely current today. Names like Emma, Charlotte, and Theodore have long histories outside America and have been in the American top ten multiple times across different eras. These names feel American because they have been part of the American naming landscape for so long while also feeling timeless because they were never exclusively of a single moment. Avoiding names that peaked sharply in a single decade and choosing instead from the names that have shown genuine staying power is the most reliable way to find a name that feels authentically American without feeling like a time capsule.
What is the difference between a Southern American name and a general American name?
Southern American names tend to have a few specific qualities that distinguish them from names used across the whole country. They are often slightly longer and more elaborate, with a fondness for double names and names ending in the A sound. They tend to have a stronger connection to family tradition and to the practice of passing names down through generations. They often carry specifically Southern cultural references, whether to the landscape of the South, to its history, or to its particular traditions of music and storytelling. Names like Scarlett, Magnolia, Beau, Tallulah, and Savannah carry an immediately Southern character that names like Tyler, Madison, or Olivia do not, even though all of them are genuinely American names used across the whole country.