Brazilian surnames are one of the most culturally layered naming systems in the world. A single family name can carry the legacy of a Portuguese colonist, a West African ancestor brought to Brazil in chains, an Indigenous Tupi or Guarani community, an Italian or German immigrant wave, or some remarkable combination of all of the above. Understanding brazilian surnames means understanding the country itself.
This list covers 100 real, widely carried Brazilian family names, organized by their primary cultural root. Each entry explains where the name actually comes from and what it means, so you can trace the history behind the name rather than just the spelling. A few surnames appear across more than one heritage stream, and where that happens, it’s worth noting why.
Portuguese-Origin Surnames: Colonial Foundations
The majority of Brazilians carry at least one surname with Portuguese roots, a direct inheritance from five centuries of colonial presence. These names come from places, occupations, Christian saints, and physical descriptions, following the same naming logic as mainland Portugal.
Silva
From the Latin silva, meaning “forest” or “woodland.” Silva is the single most common surname in Brazil and Portugal alike, a legacy of the colonial naming period when nature-derived surnames were widely assigned. It is so prevalent that “um Silva” has become a casual cultural shorthand for an ordinary Brazilian.
Santos
Meaning “saints” in Portuguese, from the Latin sanctus. This was frequently given to children born on or near All Saints’ Day (Dia de Todos os Santos), and it became one of the most common names across the Portuguese-speaking world. It carries a strong religious resonance that is still felt today.
Oliveira
From the Portuguese word for “olive tree,” ultimately from Latin olivaria. Olive trees were symbols of prosperity and peace in the Iberian world, and place names built around oliveiras spread the surname widely. It ranks among the top five most common Brazilian surnames.
Souza
A habitational surname from the region of Sousa in northern Portugal, derived from the Latin saxa, meaning “rocks” or “stones.” Souza and its variant Sousa are both extremely common in Brazil, reflecting the large number of settlers from northern Portugal.
Pereira
Meaning “pear tree,” from the Portuguese pereira, itself from Latin piraria. Like Oliveira and Carvalho, this is a tree name that became a place name and then a family name throughout Portugal and its colonies. It is consistently in the top ten Brazilian surnames.
Ferreira
From the Portuguese ferreiro, meaning “blacksmith” or “ironworker,” rooted in Latin ferraria (“iron mine” or “forge”). This occupational surname traveled from Portugal to Brazil with the early colonists and remains extremely widespread, especially in the Northeast region.
Costa
From the Latin and Portuguese costa, meaning “coast” or “hillside.” Originally a habitational name for people who lived along a coastal area or a ridge. In Brazil it is one of the most recognizable surnames and has no strong regional concentration.
Carvalho
Meaning “oak tree,” from the Portuguese and Galician-Portuguese word for the native Iberian oak. Place names containing carvalho are extremely common in Portugal, which is how the name became a surname and then spread to Brazil. It has a strong, grounded feel.
Lima
A habitational surname from the Lima River region in northwestern Portugal. The river’s name likely comes from a pre-Roman Celtic root. Lima is one of the most carried surnames in Brazil and is also common in other Lusophone countries.
Gomes
The Portuguese form of the Germanic given name Guma or Gome, meaning “man.” It entered Portugal through Visigothic naming traditions and became a patrilineal surname meaning roughly “son of Gome.” It is a top-twenty Brazilian surname.
Martins
The Portuguese plural form of Martin, from the Latin Martinus, ultimately from Mars, the Roman god of war. Saint Martin of Tours was enormously popular in medieval Iberia, and the name spread as both a given name and a patronymic surname. The plural form is specifically Portuguese and Brazilian.
Rocha
From the Portuguese and Occitan rocha, meaning “rock” or “cliff.” A habitational surname for people who lived near a prominent rocky outcrop. Common throughout Brazil, particularly in the Northeast and South.
Alves
A patronymic from the medieval given name Álvaro, itself from the Visigothic Alfhar, meaning “elf army” or “army of elves.” The suffix -es indicates “son of.” Alves is a solid mid-ranking Brazilian surname with deep Iberian roots.
Rodrigues
Meaning “son of Rodrigo,” from the Visigothic name Hroderich, composed of elements meaning “fame” and “power.” Rodrigues is the Portuguese equivalent of the Spanish Rodríguez and is carried by millions of Brazilians, particularly in the Southeast and Northeast.
Fernandes
Meaning “son of Fernando,” from the Germanic Ferdinando, composed of elements meaning “journey” and “brave.” One of the classic patronymic surnames of the Iberian Peninsula, common across all of Brazil.
Melo
A habitational surname from several places in Portugal named Melo, possibly from a pre-Roman root meaning “honey.” It has been prominent in Brazil since the colonial era and is associated with several notable historical figures.
Barbosa
From the Portuguese barba (“beard”) combined with the suffix -osa, essentially meaning “thorny bush” or “place of briars,” since the word also referred to overgrown, bristly land. A habitational surname that became extremely widespread in Brazil.
Campos
From the Latin campus, meaning “field” or “open plain.” A habitational surname for people from flat, open land. It is common throughout Brazil and across the broader Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking world.
Cardoso
From the Portuguese cardo, meaning “thistle,” with the suffix -oso indicating abundance. A habitational name for a place where thistles grew thickly. Former Brazilian president Fernando Henrique Cardoso made this one of the country’s most internationally recognized surnames.
Dias
A patronymic from the given name Diogo or Diego, the Iberian form of James. The explorer Bartolomeu Dias, who rounded the Cape of Good Hope in 1488, carried this name. It remains common across all regions of Brazil.
Monteiro
From the Portuguese monteiro, meaning “mountain man” or “forest warden,” someone who managed royal hunting grounds. An occupational surname that became widespread through Portugal and Brazil.
Cunha
From the Portuguese cunha, meaning “wedge,” likely referring to a wedge-shaped piece of land. A habitational surname associated with specific places in Portugal. Widely carried in Brazil, particularly in Minas Gerais and the Northeast.
Pinto
From the Portuguese pinto, meaning “spotted” or “painted,” likely a nickname for someone with a distinctive complexion or birthmark that became an inherited surname. It is common throughout Brazil and Portugal.
Castro
From the Latin castrum, meaning “fort” or “fortified camp.” A habitational surname for people from a town or region with a fortress. Castro is shared across the Iberian world and is well established in Brazil.
Moreira
From the Portuguese moreira, meaning “mulberry tree” or “moorland.” A habitational surname from places in Portugal named for their moorish landscape or mulberry groves. Common in the South and Southeast of Brazil.
Teixeira
From the Portuguese teixeiro, meaning “yew tree grove,” from the Latin taxus. Another tree-based habitational surname from Portugal that crossed the Atlantic with colonists. Consistently in the top thirty Brazilian surnames.
Nunes
A patronymic meaning “son of Nuno,” from the Latin personal name Nonnus. Nuno was a popular medieval Portuguese given name, and its patronymic form became a widespread hereditary surname. It is especially common in the Northeast of Brazil.
Correia
From the Portuguese correia, meaning “leather strap” or “belt,” an occupational name for a leather worker or harness maker. One of the classic trade-based surnames of Portugal, well established across Brazil.
Lopes
A patronymic from the given name Lopo, the Portuguese form of the Latin Lupus, meaning “wolf.” Lopes means “son of Lopo” and is closely related to the Spanish López. It is a top-twenty Brazilian surname.
Faria
From a Portuguese place name, possibly derived from the Latin faria or a pre-Roman root. Faria is associated with a town in the Minho region of Portugal and has been carried in Brazil since the early colonial period.
Machado
From the Portuguese machado, meaning “axe,” likely an occupational name for an axe-maker or woodcutter. It is common throughout Brazil and is the surname of writer Machado de Assis, one of the most celebrated figures in Brazilian literature.
Tavares
From the Arabic-origin Portuguese word tavara, meaning “place of the storekeeper” or “inn,” reflecting the Moorish influence on Portuguese vocabulary. An occupational or habitational surname widespread in Brazil.
Vieira
From the Portuguese vieira, meaning “scallop shell,” a symbol of the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela and also a habitational name from the town of Vieira in Portugal. The Jesuit priest and orator António Vieira, who worked in Brazil, bore this name.
Figueiredo
From the Portuguese figueira, meaning “fig tree,” with the suffix -edo indicating a grove or abundance. A habitational surname for someone from a place with many fig trees. Common in Brazil, particularly in Minas Gerais.
Moura
From the Portuguese mouro, meaning “Moor,” referring to North African Muslims who inhabited the Iberian Peninsula. It may have been given to families of Moorish descent or to those who lived near a place associated with the Moors. A distinctive surname in Brazil.
Pires
A patronymic from the given name Pero, the archaic Portuguese form of Pedro (Peter). Pires means “son of Pero” and is one of the older patronymic surnames in the Portuguese tradition. It is common in Brazil and Portugal.
Amaral
From the Portuguese amaral, a place name derived from the word amaro or possibly from a Latin root meaning “bitter.” Several places in Portugal carry this name, and the surname spread to Brazil in the colonial period.
Freitas
From the Portuguese plural of frita, meaning “broken” or “crushed,” referring to rocky, broken terrain. A habitational surname from several places in Portugal with rough landscape. Very common in Brazil, particularly in Bahia and Minas Gerais.
Borges
From the Old Portuguese burgo, meaning “fortified town” or “market town,” ultimately from the Germanic burg. A habitational surname for someone from a town or borough. Common in Brazil and shared with the broader Iberian world.
Batista
From the Portuguese batista, meaning “Baptist,” referring to John the Baptist. A religious surname in the tradition of naming families for a patron saint. It is common throughout Brazil, particularly in Catholic communities with strong devotion to São João Batista.
Cavalcanti
From the Italian cavalcante, meaning “horse rider” or “cavalry man,” brought to Portugal and Brazil by Italian merchants and soldiers. It is especially concentrated in the Northeast of Brazil, where it has been associated with powerful landholding families since the colonial era.
African-Origin Surnames: The Yoruba, Fon, and Bantu Legacy
Brazil received more enslaved Africans than any other country in the Americas, and African surnames survive in several forms: names retained or reconstructed by freed people, surnames given by the Catholic church or enslavers that carried African phonetic patterns, and names that African Brazilians actively chose after abolition in 1888. The Candomblé religious tradition also preserved many African names.
Xango
From the Yoruba Sango, the name of the orisha of thunder and justice. In Brazil the name became Xangô and entered family naming through the Candomblé tradition. It is carried as both a given name and a surname in Bahia and other states with strong Afro-Brazilian communities.
Ogum
From the Yoruba Ogun, the orisha of iron, war, and labor. In the Afro-Brazilian religious context, Ogum is one of the most venerated orishas, and his name has been carried as a surname by families with deep Candomblé roots in Bahia.
Zumbi
From the Bantu nzumbi, meaning “spirit” or “ghost.” Zumbi dos Palmares, the famous 17th-century leader of the Quilombo dos Palmares, the largest free African community in colonial Brazil, bore this name. It has been carried as a surname in tribute to his legacy.
Palmares
A Portuguese-language place name meaning “palm grove,” but it carries direct African-Brazilian historical resonance as the name of the great quilombo. Descendants of that community and activists who honor the quilombo tradition have used Palmares as a family name.
Dandara
Of uncertain but likely Bantu or Yoruba origin, Dandara was the name of a warrior woman of Quilombo dos Palmares. It has been used as both a given name and a family name in Afro-Brazilian communities and has seen a revival in recent decades as a name of cultural pride.
Ketu
From the name of the Yoruba city of Ketu (in present-day Benin), which was a major source of enslaved people brought to Bahia. Families with roots in the Ketu Candomblé tradition have carried this as a surname. It is one of the clearest ethnic-origin surnames in Brazil.
Benguela
From the name of the Angolan port city of Benguela, a major point of embarkation for enslaved people destined for Brazil. Like many African place names, it was used to identify people by their region of origin and was eventually carried forward as a family name.
Congo
Used to identify people of Central African origin, specifically from the Kingdom of Kongo. In colonial Brazil, “Congo” was applied as a surname to enslaved people from that region, and some Afro-Brazilian families continue to carry it as a marker of ancestry.
Mina
From the name of the Gold Coast region (present-day Ghana) and the Portuguese fort of São Jorge da Mina. “Mina” was used in Brazil to identify enslaved people from West Africa broadly and became a family name in Afro-Brazilian communities, especially in Maranhão.
Angola
Like Congo and Benguela, Angola was used as a surname to identify people by their African region of origin. It has been retained as a family name by some Afro-Brazilian families and is also carried as a surname in the Capoeira Angola tradition.
Nascimento
Meaning “birth” or “nativity” in Portuguese, from the Latin nascimentum. While this is technically a Portuguese religious surname, it was frequently given to enslaved and freed African Brazilians by Catholic registrars, and it became strongly associated with Afro-Brazilian families. Pelé, born Edson Arantes do Nascimento, is its most famous bearer.
Conceição
From the Portuguese conceição, meaning “conception,” referring to the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary. Like Nascimento, this was a common surname assigned to freed or baptized African Brazilians in the colonial period and is now carried by millions of Afro-Brazilians.
Liberdade
Meaning “freedom” or “liberty” in Portuguese. Freed enslaved people sometimes chose Liberdade as a surname after abolition in 1888 to mark the moment of emancipation. It is one of the most symbolically powerful surnames in the Afro-Brazilian tradition.
Alforria
From the Portuguese alforria, meaning “manumission” or “letter of freedom” given to an enslaved person. Like Liberdade, this surname was occasionally chosen by freed people as a declaration of their new legal status. It is rare but genuine.
Indigenous Surnames: Tupi, Guarani, and Beyond
Brazil’s Indigenous peoples spoke hundreds of languages before European contact, and Tupi and Guarani were the two most widespread along the coast and in the interior. Indigenous surnames in Brazil appear in several ways: as names of rivers, cities, and plants that became family names, as names given to mixed-heritage families, and as names actively reclaimed by Indigenous communities today.
Tupinambá
The name of one of the largest and most prominent Tupi-speaking peoples of coastal Brazil, the Tupinambá were among the first Indigenous groups encountered by Portuguese explorers. The name is carried today by members of the Tupinambá community as a surname of ethnic identity, particularly in Bahia.
Guarani
The name of the Guarani people, who inhabited a vast territory spanning present-day Paraguay, southern Brazil, Bolivia, and Argentina. The Guarani language survives vigorously today. Guarani is used as a surname by members of the community and by families of documented Guarani descent.
Potiguara
From the Tupi potigwara, meaning “shrimp eaters,” the name of a Tupi-speaking people of the Northeast coast of Brazil. The Potiguara continue to maintain a recognized community in Paraíba, and community members carry the name as a surname of ethnic pride.
Xavante
The name of the Xavante people of the central Brazilian cerrado, a Jê-language-speaking group known for their fierce resistance to colonization into the 20th century. Xavante is used as a surname by members of the community and is one of the most recognized Indigenous names in Brazil.
Kayapó
The name of the Kayapó people of the Xingu River basin, from a Tupi word meaning “those who resemble monkeys,” a name given by outsiders that the community has reclaimed. Prominent environmental activists from the Kayapó people, such as the chief Raoni Metuktire, have brought international attention to this name.
Juruna
From a Tupi word meaning “black mouth,” the name of a Juruna people of the Xingu. Mario Juruna, who served as a member of the Brazilian Congress in the 1980s, was the first Indigenous person elected to the national legislature and made this name internationally known.
Pataxó
The name of the Pataxó people of Bahia and Minas Gerais, who were the subject of the 1951 Massacre of Pataxó. The community has maintained their identity and name, and Pataxó is carried as a family name by community members today.
Munduruku
The name of the Munduruku people of the Tapajós River basin in the Amazon. The Munduruku have been prominent in recent years in resistance to dam projects on the Tapajós. The name is carried as a surname by community members and has entered broader public awareness through activism.
Kamayurá
The name of the Kamayurá people of the Upper Xingu in Mato Grosso, a Tupi-speaking group known for their rich ceremonial culture. It is used as a surname within the community.
Xerente
The name of the Xerente people of Tocantins, a Jê-language group closely related to the Xavante. Community members carry Xerente as a surname, particularly in formal and legal contexts where a family name is required.
Guaraní
An alternate spelling of Guarani used more commonly in the context of Paraguay and the Río de la Plata region, but also carried by Brazilian families of Guarani descent in the southern states. Both spellings refer to the same people and language.
Tabajara
From the Tupi, meaning “lords of the village,” the name of a Tupi-speaking people of the Northeast coast. The Tabajara are referenced in Brazilian colonial history and literature, and the name is carried by descendants and community members in Ceará and Paraíba.
Fulniô
The name of the Fulniô people of Pernambuco, the only Indigenous group in the Northeast who have maintained their traditional language, Yaathe, in daily use. Fulniô is used as a surname by community members and is notable for its linguistic uniqueness.
Tremembé
The name of the Tremembé people of the coast of Ceará, whose name may come from a Tupi word related to the sea or tides. The Tremembé community has been active in land rights struggles, and the name is carried as a family identifier by community members.
Karajá
The name of the Karajá people of the Araguaia River, known for their distinctive ceramic art, particularly the ceramic dolls used in girls’ initiation rites. Karajá is used as a surname by community members in Goiás and Tocantins.
Terena
The name of the Terena people of Mato Grosso do Sul, one of the largest Indigenous groups in central-western Brazil. The Terena are known for their historical adaptability and have significant political representation. Terena functions as a surname within the community.
Bororo
The name of the Bororo people of Mato Grosso, whose elaborate mortuary rites were famously documented by the anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss in Tristes Tropiques. The name is carried as a surname by community members and is well known in Brazilian anthropological literature.
Yanomami
The name of the Yanomami people of the far north of Brazil and southern Venezuela, one of the largest relatively isolated Indigenous groups in the Amazon. The Yanomami have been the focus of major human rights campaigns, and the name is used as a surname by community members and leaders.
Kaingang
The name of the Kaingang people of southern Brazil, a Jê-language group who are one of the most numerous Indigenous peoples in the South region. Kaingang is carried as a surname by community members in Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, and Paraná.
Krenak
The name of the Krenak people of the Doce River valley in Minas Gerais, who suffered environmental devastation from the Mariana dam disaster in 2015. Indigenous leader and writer Ailton Krenak has made this surname internationally recognized through his environmental and philosophical writing.
Surnames from European Immigrant Communities
Between the mid-19th and mid-20th centuries, Brazil received large waves of Italian, German, Spanish, Polish, Ukrainian, and Japanese immigrants, particularly in the South and Southeast. Many of these families kept their original surnames, which are now firmly part of the Brazilian naming landscape.
Rossi
From the Italian rosso, meaning “red,” originally a nickname for someone with red hair or a ruddy complexion. Rossi is one of the most common Italian surnames and is widely carried in the Brazilian states of São Paulo, Rio Grande do Sul, and Santa Catarina, where Italian immigration was concentrated.
Bianchi
From the Italian bianco, meaning “white,” originally a nickname for someone fair-skinned or light-haired. A major Italian surname that became well established in São Paulo and the Italian-descended communities of the South.
Ferrari
From the Italian ferro, meaning “iron,” an occupational surname for a blacksmith, the Italian equivalent of Ferreira. It is well established in São Paulo’s Italian community and is one of the most recognized Italian surnames worldwide.
Colombo
From the Italian colombo, meaning “dove,” originally a name for a pigeon keeper or someone who lived near a dovecote. Widely carried by Italian-Brazilian families, particularly in Rio Grande do Sul, where the city of Colombo takes its name from the same root.
Fontana
From the Italian and Latin fontana, meaning “fountain” or “spring.” A habitational surname for someone who lived near a water source. Common in Italian-Brazilian communities in the South and Southeast.
Müller
From the German Müller, meaning “miller,” an occupational surname for someone who operated a grain mill. One of the most common German surnames, it is carried by many families in the German-settled regions of Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, and Paraná. In Brazil it often appears without the umlaut as Muller.
Schmidt
From the German Schmied, meaning “smith” or “metalworker.” The German equivalent of Ferreira or Ferrari, Schmidt is one of the most common German surnames in the world and is well established in Brazil’s southern German communities.
Hoffmann
From the German Hofmann, meaning “court man” or “estate manager,” someone who worked on or managed a noble’s estate. A widespread German surname in Brazil’s South, often spelled without the double-n as Hofmann or Hoffman.
Klein
From the German klein, meaning “small” or “little,” originally a nickname for a short person. A common German surname in Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina, where German immigration was heaviest in the 19th century.
Schwartz
From the German schwarz, meaning “black,” originally a nickname for someone with dark hair or a dark complexion. Carried by German-Brazilian families in the South, sometimes spelled Schwarz in Brazil as well.
Zimmermann
From the German Zimmermann, meaning “carpenter,” an occupational surname. Common in the German-settled areas of southern Brazil, sometimes shortened to Zimmer in everyday use.
Ribeiro
From the Portuguese ribeiro, meaning “small stream” or “brook,” from the Latin rivarius. A habitational surname for someone who lived near a brook. While clearly Portuguese in origin, Ribeiro is included here because it also entered Brazil heavily through Galician immigrants from northwestern Spain, who spoke a language nearly identical to Portuguese.
García
Of uncertain pre-Roman (possibly Basque) origin, García is the most common surname in Spain and was brought to Brazil by Spanish immigrants, particularly from Galicia and the Canary Islands. In Brazil it is often written as Garcia, without the accent.
González
Meaning “son of Gonzalo,” from the Visigothic name Gundisalvus, composed of elements meaning “battle” and “elf.” The most common Spanish-origin surname in Brazil after Garcia, carried by families of Spanish descent primarily in São Paulo and the South.
Kowalski
From the Polish kowal, meaning “blacksmith.” Kowalski is one of the most common Polish surnames and is carried by Brazilian families descended from Polish immigrants who settled in Paraná and Santa Catarina from the 1880s onward.
Wojtyla
A Polish surname derived from the diminutive of the Slavic name Wojciech, meaning “he who is joyful in war.” It is most famous internationally as the surname of Pope John Paul II, and it is carried by some Polish-Brazilian families in Paraná.
Nakamura
From the Japanese naka (“middle”) and mura (“village”), meaning “middle village.” Brazil has the largest Japanese diaspora community outside Japan, centered in São Paulo, and Nakamura is one of the most common Japanese-Brazilian surnames.
Yamamoto
From the Japanese yama (“mountain”) and moto (“base” or “origin”), meaning “base of the mountain.” One of the most common Japanese surnames, widely carried in São Paulo’s Nikkei (Japanese-Brazilian) community.
Suzuki
From the Japanese suzu (“bell”) and ki (“tree” or “wood”), referring to the Japanese pampas grass. One of the top five most common Japanese surnames, well established in the Japanese-Brazilian community of São Paulo state.
Tanaka
From the Japanese ta (“rice paddy”) and naka (“middle”), meaning “one who lives in the middle of the rice fields.” Another of the most common Japanese surnames in Brazil’s Nikkei community.
Mixed-Heritage and Distinctive Brazilian Surnames
Some surnames in Brazil don’t fit neatly into a single cultural category. They emerged from mixed colonial households, were adapted from African or Indigenous words by Portuguese-speaking communities, or reflect Brazil’s unique capacity to blend naming traditions into something entirely its own.
Andrade
From a Galician-Portuguese place name, possibly of Celtic or pre-Roman origin. Andrade has been in Brazil since the earliest colonial period and is one of the most carried surnames in the country, associated with families of mixed European and Indigenous heritage as well as with old colonial aristocracy.
Azevedo
From the Portuguese azevinho, meaning “holly tree,” with the suffix -edo indicating a grove. A habitational surname common in Portugal and Brazil, particularly associated with families of converso (converted Jewish) heritage in the colonial period, though it is now carried across all communities.
Nogueira
From the Portuguese nogueira, meaning “walnut tree.” A habitational surname from places in Portugal with walnut groves. Well established in Brazil, particularly in Minas Gerais and São Paulo.
Lacerda
From the Portuguese lacerda, possibly from a Latin root relating to lizards or from a place name. Associated with old colonial Brazilian aristocracy, Lacerda is a surname with a distinctive historical weight in Brazilian politics and culture.
Queiroz
From the Portuguese queiró, meaning “heather” or “heath plant,” referring to the low scrubland vegetation of Portugal. A habitational surname for someone from a heathery region. Widely carried in Brazil and associated with the novelist Eça de Queirós, whose family connection links Portugal and Brazil.
Mendonça
A habitational surname from the Basque-origin place name Mendoza, which entered Portuguese as Mendonça. The name came to Brazil through Portuguese settlers and is common in the Northeast and Minas Gerais.
Valença
From the city of Valença in Portugal, itself from the Latin Valentia, meaning “strength” or “valor.” In Brazil, Valença is also the name of cities in Bahia and Rio de Janeiro, and the surname is carried by families with connections to those regions.
Alencar
Of uncertain origin, possibly from the Basque or Celtic, referring to a rocky or oak-covered place. Alencar is most famously associated with José de Alencar, the 19th-century Brazilian novelist who celebrated Indigenous culture in works like O Guarani. It is a surname with a distinctly Brazilian literary resonance.
Coutinho
A diminutive form of the Portuguese place name couto, meaning “enclosed land” or “protected territory.” Coutinho was the name of several important colonial governors and is widely carried in Brazil, particularly in Bahia and Pernambuco.
Drummond
From the Scottish Gaelic druim, meaning “ridge” or “high ground.” Drummond entered Brazil through British merchants and travelers in the 19th century and is most famously associated with Carlos Drummond de Andrade, widely considered the greatest poet in the Portuguese language.
How to Research and Understand Your Brazilian Surname
If you carry a Brazilian surname and want to understand its roots, the first step is identifying its language of origin. Portuguese habitational and occupational surnames (Silva, Ferreira, Oliveira) follow clear Latin and Iberian patterns. If your name ends in -es or -ns, it is likely patronymic. If it ends in -eiro or -eira, it almost certainly refers to a tree, a plant, or a trade.
For African-origin surnames, the key resources are the records of the Candomblé terreiros (houses of worship), the archives of the Irmandades (Catholic brotherhoods for African Brazilians), and post-abolition civil registry records from 1888 onward. Many Afro-Brazilian families have surnames that were assigned by enslavers or registrars, and research into those records can reveal the African region of origin even when the surname itself is Portuguese.
For Indigenous surnames, Brazil’s FUNAI (Fundação Nacional dos Povos Indígenas) maintains records of recognized Indigenous communities, and many community organizations document their own naming histories. Indigenous surnames in Brazil are often the names of peoples and places, which means the surname itself is a direct statement of ethnic identity rather than a family lineage marker in the European sense.
If your family came through an immigrant wave, the state archives of Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, Paraná, and São Paulo hold detailed immigration records from the 19th and 20th centuries. Italian, German, Polish, and Japanese immigrant families can often trace their surnames to specific villages and regions in their countries of origin through these records.
Brazilian naming law allows for significant flexibility in how surnames are combined and passed down. Children can take either or both parents’ surnames, and the order can vary. This means a single person’s full name can carry Portuguese, African, and Indigenous roots simultaneously, which is not an anomaly but a feature of how Brazilian identity actually works.
Understanding your Brazilian surname is ultimately an act of understanding history at a personal scale. Whether the name points to a Portuguese village, a West African ethnic group, an Amazonian river, or an Italian town, it carries a story that is worth knowing.
