Cowboy names carry that same quality. They feel like they belong to people who live close to the ground and far from cities. People who know the names of the stars because they have slept under them. People who carry their own weight without asking anyone else to carry it for them. People who are direct and honest and occasionally dangerous and always, always deeply connected to the land beneath their feet.
The cowboy naming tradition draws from several wells simultaneously. The hard short Anglo-Saxon names that the Texas ranchers brought with them from the South. The Spanish names that were already in the Southwest when the first Anglo settlers arrived. The place names of the landscape itself, names like Cheyenne and Laramie and Sierra that became personal names because the land was so big and so beautiful that parents wanted to give their children a piece of it. The names of legendary figures from Western history. The names of country music, which is the cowboy tradition’s living artistic expression.
For parents who want a name that carries the particular quality of open space and self-reliance and a certain weather-beaten beauty, cowboy names offer something that no other naming tradition quite replicates. These are names for children who will not be small in any room they walk into. We have gathered 300 of the best across every corner of the Western naming tradition. Let’s find the one that is right for your little wrangler.
Cowboy Baby Boy Names
These are the names that built the West. Short, clear, and carrying the particular directness of men who did not have time or patience for anything complicated. Every one of them sounds like it belongs to someone who knows how to saddle a horse and means exactly what he says.
Cowboy Baby Boy Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 25)
- Wyatt
- Colt
- Cash
- Hank
- Buck
- Clint
- Wrangler
- Stetson
- Dusty
- Rowdy
- Roper
- Ranger
- Maverick
- Blaze
- Cody
- Boone
- Bowie
- Cassidy
- Chisholm
- Clay
- Clayton
- Clyde
- Cole
- Colton
- Cord
Cowboy Baby Boy Names (Good Picks: 26 to 50)
- Coy
- Crawford
- Crockett
- Dallas
- Dalton
- Dawson
- Dex
- Dixon
- Duke
- Dustin
- Early
- Earp
- Earl
- Eli
- Emmett
- Ezra
- Flint
- Ford
- Foster
- Gage
- Garth
- Gideon
- Gil
- Grady
- Grant
Cowboy Baby Boy Names (Best Picks: 51 to 75)
- Gus
- Hank
- Hardy
- Harlan
- Harley
- Hayes
- Holt
- Homer
- Hood
- Houston
- Hudson
- Hunt
- Hunter
- Jack
- Jackson
- Jed
- Jesse
- Jett
- Jim
- Jimmy
- Joe
- John
- Josiah
- Kane
- Laramie
Cowgirl Baby Girl Names
The women of the American West were every bit as tough and distinctive as the men and their names reflect that completely. Cowgirl names carry warmth alongside their strength. They feel grounded and real and full of the particular kind of beauty that comes from a life lived outdoors and close to something true.
Cowgirl Baby Girl Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 25)
- Calamity
- Annie
- Jessie
- Cassidy
- Clementine
- Dakota
- Dusty
- Scarlett
- Sierra
- Savannah
- Dixie
- Loretta
- Dolly
- June
- Pearl
- Ruby
- Rosalie
- Daisy
- Bonnie
- Emmylou
- Jolene
- Patsy
- Tammy
- Waylon
- Reba
Cowgirl Baby Girl Names (Good Picks: 26 to 50)
- Willa
- Winona
- Luella
- Lula
- Lottie
- Lola
- Lena
- Legend
- Layla
- Laramie
- Lark
- Lacey
- Kitty
- Kit
- Josie
- Joelle
- Jo
- Jenna
- Jean
- Jaylene
- Jasper
- Janie
- Jamie
- Jacinda
- Ivory
Cowgirl Baby Girl Names (Best Picks: 51 to 75)
- Iris
- Indie
- India
- Ingrid
- Inez
- Imogene
- Ida
- Hunter
- Hattie
- Harriet
- Harper
- Harlow
- Harley
- Hallie
- Hadley
- Greta
- Greer
- Grace
- Goldie
- Georgia
- Geneva
- Gemma
- Garnet
- Gala
- Faye
Legendary Western Figure Baby Names
The real history of the American West produced figures whose names have become part of American mythology. Jesse James, Wyatt Earp, Billy the Kid, Calamity Jane, Bass Reeves. These were real men and women whose lives were so extraordinary that their names have carried the weight of legend ever since. Naming a child after one of them is naming them after someone who really lived and really mattered.
Legendary Western Figure Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 25)
- Jesse
- Billy
- Doc
- Butch
- Sundance
- Earp
- Hickok
- Custer
- Geronimo
- Cochise
- Quanah
- Sitting
- Crazy
- Lone
- Buffalo
- Wild
- Calamity
- Belle
- Starr
- Ringo
- Dalton
- Bass
- Reeves
- Parker
- Younger
Legendary Western Figure Baby Names (Good Picks: 26 to 50)
- Quantrill
- Anderson
- Dolan
- McCarty
- Bonney
- Garrett
- Masterson
- Holliday
- Clanton
- McLaury
- Brocius
- Ringo
- Curly
- Sundance
- Cassidy
- Longbaugh
- Logan
- Harvey
- Kilpatrick
- Hanks
- Place
- Lay
- Carver
- Murray
- Curry
Western Landscape Baby Names
The American West is one of the most dramatically beautiful landscapes on earth and American parents have been naming their children after it for well over a century. Canyon, Mesa, Sierra, Montana, Dakota, Cheyenne. These names carry the particular vastness and grandeur of a landscape that makes you feel small in the best possible way.
Western Landscape Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 25)
- Canyon
- Mesa
- Rio
- Prairie
- Sage
- Flint
- Blaze
- Dusty
- Trail
- Ridge
- Summit
- Crest
- Plains
- Sierra
- Nevada
- Montana
- Dakota
- Cheyenne
- Laramie
- Abilene
- Amarillo
- Tucson
- Tombstone
- Dodge
- Wichita
Western Landscape Baby Names (Good Picks: 26 to 50)
- Austin
- Houston
- Dallas
- Odessa
- Midland
- Lubbock
- Abilene
- San
- Angelo
- Del
- Rio
- Eagle
- Pass
- Laredo
- El
- Paso
- Pecos
- Alpine
- Marfa
- Fort
- Stockton
- Junction
- Kerrville
- Boerne
- Bandera
Country Music Baby Names
Country music is the cowboy tradition’s living voice. The names of country music’s greatest artists carry all of the Western spirit in the most immediate and accessible form. Cash, Waylon, Hank, Dolly, Loretta, Emmylou. These are names that come with a melody attached and a whole philosophy of life behind them.
Country Music Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 25)
- Cash
- Waylon
- Hank
- Merle
- Willie
- Conway
- Garth
- Brooks
- Travis
- Strait
- George
- Reba
- Dolly
- Tammy
- Loretta
- Patsy
- June
- Emmylou
- Wynonna
- Naomi
- Trisha
- Faith
- Shania
- Martina
- Sara
Country Music Baby Names (Good Picks: 26 to 50)
- Dierks
- Bentley
- Jason
- Aldean
- Luke
- Bryan
- Blake
- Shelton
- Zac
- Brown
- Kenny
- Chesney
- Tim
- McGraw
- Brad
- Paisley
- Toby
- Keith
- Carrie
- Underwood
- Miranda
- Lambert
- Chris
- Stapleton
- Kacey
Classic Western Film Baby Names
The Western film gave the cowboy tradition its global reach and the names from the great Westerns carry the particular larger-than-life quality that only cinema can create. Shane, Clint, Rooster, Mattie, Josey. These names belong to the screen cowboys who showed the whole world what the Western spirit looked like when it was distilled into something pure.
Classic Western Film Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 25)
- Shane
- Clint
- John
- Wayne
- Gary
- Cooper
- Jimmy
- Stewart
- Burt
- Lancaster
- Kirk
- Douglas
- Henry
- Fonda
- Gregory
- Peck
- Charlton
- Heston
- James
- Arness
- Amanda
- Blake
- Milburn
- Stone
- Ken
Classic Western Film Baby Names (Good Picks: 26 to 50)
- Curtis
- Rooster
- Cogburn
- Mattie
- Ross
- Ned
- Pepper
- LaBoeuf
- Josey
- Wales
- Outlaw
- Preacher
- Pale
- Rider
- Blondie
- Tuco
- Angel
- Eyes
- Harmonica
- Cheyenne
- Frank
- McBain
- Tombstone
- Virgil
- Morgan
Short Cowboy Baby Names
The cowboy tradition has always understood that a short name is a strong name. On the frontier there was no time for unnecessary syllables. The greatest cowboy names are almost all one or two syllables. Colt. Buck. Hank. Cash. Tex. These names hit like a boot heel on a wooden floor. They carry everything they need and nothing they do not. These short cowboy names are among the most powerful in the entire Western naming tradition.
Short Cowboy Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 36)
- Colt
- Buck
- Hank
- Cash
- Clint
- Gus
- Jed
- Jim
- Joe
- Kit
- Lee
- Mac
- Ned
- Rex
- Roy
- Sam
- Tex
- Zeb
- Ace
- Bud
- Cal
- Del
- Dex
- Duke
- Earl
- Flint
- Ford
- Gil
- Gus
- Hal
- Ike
- Jake
- Jay
- Jo
- Lark
Cowboy Baby Names by Western State
The American West is not a single place. Texas cowboys have a completely different character from Montana cowboys, who are different again from Arizona cowboys. Here are cowboy inspired names drawn from the spirit and the naming traditions of the most iconic Western states.
Texas Cowboy Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 10)
Texas is the heartland of American cowboy culture and its names carry the particular boldness of a state that was once its own country and has never quite forgotten it. Big, direct, and carrying the specific warmth of a culture built on hospitality and hard work.
- Houston
- Austin
- Dallas
- Travis
- Bowie
- Crockett
- Houston
- Lone
- Star
- Longhorn
Montana and Wyoming Cowboy Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 10)
The Northern Plains carry a different kind of cowboy spirit. Wilder, colder, and carrying the particular quality of a landscape where the sky is so big it changes the way you think about everything. Names from this tradition carry that same expansive quality.
- Montana
- Cheyenne
- Laramie
- Billings
- Bozeman
- Missoula
- Wyatt
- Ridge
- Summit
- Plains
Arizona and New Mexico Cowboy Baby Names (The Top Picks: 1 to 10)
The Southwest carries a cowboy tradition shaped by both Anglo and Spanish influences. The names from this territory carry the heat of the desert and the particular beauty of a landscape where red rock meets sky in a way that feels almost impossible.
- Tucson
- Mesa
- Tombstone
- Cochise
- Rio
- Canyon
- Adobe
- Saguaro
- Sedona
- Navajo
Tips for Choosing a Cowboy Baby Name
Cowboy names come with their own specific set of considerations. The Western naming tradition has a very particular aesthetic and not every name that sounds cowboy-ish in the abstract will work as well in practice for a real child growing up in the real world. Here is what is genuinely worth thinking about before you commit.
- Think about whether the name works in every context your child will inhabit. A name like Wyatt or Colt or Cash carries its Western energy beautifully in a rural or Southern context. It carries that same energy in a city context too but it carries it more loudly there, which may be exactly what you want or may occasionally feel like a costume. Think about the specific world your child will grow up in and whether the name fits it comfortably or whether it will always be making a statement.
- Consider the nickname landscape carefully. Many cowboy names are already so short and direct that they need no nickname. Hank, Colt, Buck, and Cash are not names that get shortened. Others like Maverick and Cassidy and Clementine come with natural shortened versions, Mav, Cass, and Clem, that carry their own distinct cowboy character. Know whether you are choosing a name that will stay exactly as it is or one that will likely become something smaller in everyday use.
- Be thoughtful about names taken directly from historical figures. Jesse James and Billy the Kid and Wyatt Earp are names that carry specific and well known historical associations. A child named Jesse will spend their life having Jesse James jokes made at them. A child named Wyatt carries a more positive association with Wyatt Earp. Know the full historical story of any real Western figure whose name you are considering and decide whether those associations are ones you are happy for your child to carry.
- Think about the Spanish and Mexican influence on Western naming. The American cowboy tradition is deeply rooted in the Mexican vaquero tradition that preceded it. Many of the most authentically Western names are Spanish names, Rio, Sierra, Mesa, Laramie, Amarillo. If you are drawn to the full cowboy tradition rather than just its Anglo-American expression, the Spanish influenced names carry a deeper authenticity than many people realise.
- Consider the country music connection. Country music and cowboy culture are so deeply intertwined that naming a child after a country music legend is genuinely within the cowboy naming tradition. Cash, Waylon, Hank, Dolly, Loretta, and Emmylou are all cowboy names by virtue of the tradition they belong to, not just the sound they make. If you love country music as well as the Western tradition, the names of its greatest artists are completely fair game.
- Think about how the name ages from child to adult. The cowboy tradition produces names that are among the most age-proof in all of American naming. Hank, Wyatt, Colt, and Cash work just as well on a sixty year old rancher as they do on a baby. Cowboy names do not have a childhood phase and an adult phase. They simply are what they are at every stage of life, which is one of the most appealing things about them.
- Trust the name that feels like open country. The best cowboy names create a very specific feeling when you say them out loud. Something between freedom and groundedness. Something that smells faintly of leather and woodsmoke and open air. When you read through the list and a name creates that feeling, it is worth stopping for. Cowboy names announce themselves clearly when they find the right person to carry them.
Frequently Asked Questions
Cowboy baby names attract questions that are specific to the Western tradition, to what makes a name genuinely cowboy versus simply Western sounding, and to how these names wear in the modern world. Here are the most honest and useful answers for parents drawn to the frontier spirit.
What makes a baby name a cowboy name?
A cowboy name typically has a few specific qualities that set it apart from other names even when they share the same sounds. It tends to be short, direct, and built from hard consonants and clear vowels that carry well across open space. It tends to feel grounded rather than elegant, connected to landscape and labour rather than to refinement and society. It often carries a specific American frontier quality that distinguishes it from English names of similar sounds. Hank is a cowboy name while Henry is not, even though Hank is a diminutive of Henry. Cash is a cowboy name while Charles is not. The difference is in the particular directness and earthiness that the cowboy tradition brought to naming, stripping away the formal and keeping only what was real.
What are the most popular cowboy baby boy names right now?
These are the cowboy inspired boy names being chosen most frequently by parents who want something that carries the Western spirit for their son.
- Wyatt
- Colt
- Cash
- Maverick
- Hank
- Buck
- Blaze
- Cody
- Boone
- Ranger
What are the most popular cowgirl baby girl names right now?
These cowgirl inspired girl names are being chosen most frequently by parents who want the Western spirit for their daughter, names that carry strength and warmth and a genuine connection to the outdoor American tradition.
- Clementine
- Scarlett
- Cassidy
- Dixie
- Savannah
- Sierra
- Daisy
- Bonnie
- June
- Pearl
Is Maverick a good cowboy name for a baby?
Maverick is one of the most genuinely interesting names in the Western tradition. It comes directly from the American West, originating from Samuel Maverick, a nineteenth century Texas rancher who famously did not brand his cattle, leaving them unidentified and free ranging. His name became the common English word for an independent, unbranded individual who refuses to follow the herd. When you name a child Maverick you are naming them after this tradition of independence and non-conformity, which is one of the most distinctly American qualities a name can carry. It is also a name that has proven itself in recent years as one of the fastest rising cowboy names in the American charts, which means your child will not be the only Maverick in their generation but will be in very good Western company.
Are cowboy names only for boys?
Absolutely not and the history of the American West makes this very clear. Calamity Jane, Belle Starr, and Pearl Hart were real women of the frontier whose names carry as much Western spirit as any male outlaw’s. The cowgirl tradition is a genuine and rich naming tradition in its own right, producing names like Clementine, Cassidy, Dusty, Sierra, and Dakota that carry all the Western energy of their male counterparts. Country music, which is the living voice of the cowboy tradition, has produced as many iconic female names as male ones. Dolly, Loretta, Emmylou, Patsy, and Reba are all cowgirl names in the fullest sense of the word.
What is the difference between a cowboy name and a Southern name?
Cowboy names and Southern names overlap significantly, particularly in Texas, which sits at the intersection of both traditions. The key difference is in what each tradition emphasises. Southern names tend to carry more warmth, more family tradition, more attachment to gentility and social grace even when they are rooted in the rural world. Names like Beauregard, Claiborne, and Magnolia are Southern names. Cowboy names tend to be more stripped back, more direct, and more specifically connected to the outdoor working life of the frontier. Names like Hank, Colt, and Dusty are cowboy names. In Texas specifically, where the two traditions live side by side, you get names that carry both qualities simultaneously, which is why Texas naming is so distinctive and so rich.
Can a cowboy name work in a city?
Yes, and increasingly well. The cowboy aesthetic has moved so deeply into mainstream American and global culture through music, film, fashion, and food that cowboy names carry their frontier spirit without being out of place in any urban environment. A boy named Wyatt or Cash or Colt in New York or London or Sydney carries his name with a distinctiveness that works in his favour. The Western tradition that produced these names is romantic and aspirational in a way that urban culture has always responded to enthusiastically. The cowboy name in a city is not a fish out of water. It is a name that carries something the city does not have and that people find genuinely appealing for exactly that reason.