Latin last names carry some of the oldest naming history in the Western world. Whether they come straight from ancient Rome, passed through medieval Spain, or traveled into the modern Americas, these surnames connect living families to a civilization that shaped law, language, and culture for millennia. The Latin roots behind so many last names aren’t buried or obscure, they’re right there in the syllables, once you know what to look for.
This list covers Roman family names (the original nomina and cognomina), Spanish surnames that descend directly from Latin, and occupational or descriptive names whose Latin origins are still transparent. Each one is a real surname in active use, with a genuine etymology behind it.
Ancient Roman Family Names Still in Use
These are the direct descendants of the great Roman gentes, the clan names carried by senators, emperors, and generals. Many passed into Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese naming culture through the Roman Empire’s deep reach.
Julius
From the Roman gens Iuliaone of the most powerful clans in Roman history. The name is thought to derive from the Greek ioulosmeaning “downy-bearded” or “youthful.” Julius Caesar made it the most famous Roman name in the world.
Aurelius
From Latin aureusmeaning “golden.” This was the family name of Emperor Marcus Aurelius and carries an unmistakable imperial weight. It survives as a rare but genuine surname in Italian and Spanish-speaking families.
Claudius
From the patrician Roman gens Claudialikely derived from Latin claudusmeaning “lame”, a physical descriptor that became one of Rome’s most distinguished family names. Several emperors bore it.
Fabius
From Latin fabameaning “bean.” The gens Fabia was one of Rome’s oldest patrician clans, and the name survives as a surname in Italy and Latin America today.
Flavius
From Latin flavusmeaning “golden” or “yellow-haired.” A descriptor that became a dynastic name, the Flavian emperors Vespasian, Titus, and Domitian all carried it.
Junius
Associated with the month of June and the goddess Juno, from Latin Iunius. The gens Junia was an ancient plebeian family, and the name persists as a rare surname today.
Cassius
From the Roman gens Cassialikely from Latin cassusmeaning “hollow” or “empty.” Brutus’s co-conspirator Gaius Cassius Longinus made the name notorious; it now reads as striking and aristocratic.
Brutus
From Latin brutusmeaning “heavy” or “dull.” The gens Brutia was ancient, and the name carries the full weight of Roman republican history despite its literal meaning.
Marcellus
A diminutive form of Marcus, meaning “of Mars” or “little Mars.” It was both a given name and a cognomen in Rome, and it survives as a genuine surname in Italian and Spanish-speaking communities.
Valerius
From Latin valeremeaning “to be strong” or “to be healthy.” The gens Valeria was one of Rome’s oldest and most distinguished clans, producing consuls across centuries of the Republic.
Cornelius
From the gens Corneliaone of the great patrician families of Rome. The etymology is debated, possibly related to Latin cornumeaning “horn”, but the name is unambiguously Roman and widely used as a surname today.
Antonius
The great Roman family name behind Anthony. The gens Antonia was an ancient plebeian clan; Mark Antony is its most famous bearer. The surname Antonio remains enormously common in Spanish and Italian families.
Maximus
From Latin maximusthe superlative of magnusmeaning “greatest.” A cognomen that became a surname, found today across Latin America and southern Europe.
Primus
From Latin primusmeaning “first.” A straightforward Roman cognomen given to firstborn sons that became a genuine surname in Italy and Hispanic communities.
Tertius
From Latin tertiusmeaning “third.” Roman families used ordinal numbers as cognomens, and Tertius survived as a rare but real surname.
Spanish Latin Last Names Rooted in Roman Occupation
Spain was Roman Hispania for six centuries. The surnames that emerged from that era carry Latin bones dressed in Spanish spelling, some of the most common Latin last names in the modern world live in this category.
García
The most common Spanish surname in the world. Its deepest roots are debated between Latin and pre-Roman Basque, but it passed through Latin ecclesiastical culture and has been documented since medieval Iberia. It means roughly “young” or “bear,” depending on the etymological path.
López
From Latin lupusmeaning “wolf.” López is the Spanish patronymic form of Lope, meaning “son of Lope,” and Lope itself comes directly from the Latin wolf name. A top-five Spanish surname globally.
Martínez
Son of Martín, from Latin Martinusfrom Marsthe god of war. One of the most common Spanish surnames, and its Latin military heritage is right there in the root.
Sánchez
Son of Sancho, from Latin Sanctiusderived from sanctusmeaning “holy” or “sacred.” One of the four or five most common surnames in the Spanish-speaking world.
Romero
From Latin Romaeusmeaning “pilgrim to Rome” or simply “Roman.” It was originally a name given to those who had made the pilgrimage to Rome, and it became one of the most evocative Spanish surnames.
Cruz
From Latin cruxmeaning “cross.” One of the clearest Latin-to-Spanish surname survivals, Cruz was adopted by families near crossroads or those of deep Christian devotion.
Flores
From Latin flos / florismeaning “flower.” A beautiful, transparent Latin surname that became common across Spain and Latin America.
Santos
From Latin sanctusmeaning “holy” or “saint.” Santos was often given to children born on All Saints’ Day and became a widespread surname across the Iberian world.
Castro
From Latin castrummeaning “fortress” or “military camp.” Castrum was the Roman word for an army fort, and the many towns named Castro across Spain and Portugal gave this surname to families who lived near them.
Campos
From Latin campusmeaning “field” or “plain.” Families who lived on open farmland took this name, and it spread widely through Spain, Portugal, and Latin America.
Ríos
From Latin rivus or rivosmeaning “stream” or “river.” A topographic surname for families who lived near waterways, and one of the more elegant Latin last names in common use.
Ponce
From the medieval given name Pons, rooted in Latin ponsmeaning “bridge.” The surname was carried by families near bridges and became notable through explorer Juan Ponce de León.
Vega
From Latin vega (adopted into medieval Spanish from Latin veha), meaning “meadow” or “fertile lowland.” A geographical surname pointing to flat, fertile land that fed entire communities.
Mora
From Latin morusmeaning “mulberry tree.” Families who lived near mulberry groves took this name, and it spread across Spain and Latin America as a common, quietly beautiful surname.
Lara
From Latin Laresthe Roman household gods who protected the family and home. The Spanish noble house of Lara took its name from a town in Castile, which itself traces to this Latin root.
Aguilar
From Latin aquilameaning “eagle.” Aguilar (place of eagles) was a topographic surname for families near high, eagle-haunted terrain, and it spread as one of the more powerful-sounding Spanish surnames.
Luna
From Latin lunameaning “moon.” Directly inherited from Latin, Luna was both a Roman goddess name and a topographic or devotional surname in medieval Spain.
Prada
From Latin pratummeaning “meadow.” A topographic surname common in Galicia and northern Spain that became globally recognized through the fashion house.
Serrano
From Latin serrameaning “mountain range” or “saw.” Serrano described families from the highlands, and it remains one of the most geographic of all Spanish Latin last names.
Montoya
From Latin monsmeaning “mountain,” combined with the suffix -oya. A place-name-turned-surname pointing to families from mountainous terrain, and one of the most recognizable Hispanic surnames in the Americas.
Latin Occupational Surnames
Across medieval Europe, many surnames were given based on what a person did. Latin trade and craft vocabulary fed directly into these names, especially in Italy, Spain, and France.
Faber
From Latin fabermeaning “craftsman” or “smith.” A Roman occupational name for any skilled worker in metal or wood. It survives as a real surname in Italian, German, and Spanish-speaking families.
Pastor
From Latin pastormeaning “shepherd.” Carried by families whose ancestors tended flocks, and later adopted as a surname by clergy who saw themselves as shepherds of their congregations.
Pinto
From Latin pictusthrough medieval Portuguese and Spanish, meaning “painted” or “spotted.” An occupational or descriptive surname originally linked to painters or to people with distinctive markings.
Moreira
From Latin morusmeaning “mulberry tree,” with the Portuguese topographic suffix. Common in Portugal and Brazil, it pointed to families who lived near mulberry groves.
Ferreira
From Latin ferrariameaning “iron mine” or “ironworks,” from ferrum (iron). One of the most common Portuguese and Galician surnames, carried by families who worked iron or lived near iron-producing land.
Silveira
From Latin silvameaning “forest” or “woodland.” A topographic surname for forest dwellers, common in Portugal and Brazil.
Cantor
From Latin cantormeaning “singer” or “chanter.” An occupational surname for those who led liturgical singing in churches and synagogues, used across the Latin-influenced world.
Mercado
From Latin mercatusmeaning “market.” A surname for families who lived near or worked in a market, and one of the more common Spanish-language occupational surnames.
Medina
From Latin medicina via Arabic influence, often associated with healing or with specific towns in Spain named Medina. A widely used surname across the Spanish-speaking world.
Notario
From Latin notariusmeaning “scribe” or “notary.” An occupational surname for those who kept records and drafted legal documents, used in Italian and Spanish families.
Latin Descriptive and Physical Surnames
Rome loved a good cognomen, a nickname that described what someone looked like or how they behaved. Many of those descriptors became permanent family names that are still in use today.
Blanco
From Latin blancus (Germanic-influenced Latin), meaning “white.” A descriptive surname for pale-complexioned or fair-haired ancestors, and one of the most common Spanish surnames in the world.
Rubio
From Latin rubeusmeaning “red” or “reddish.” Originally given to redheaded or ruddy-complexioned people, Rubio is a common descriptive surname across Spain and Latin America.
Moreno
From Latin maurusmeaning “dark” or “Moorish.” A descriptive surname for dark-complexioned people, widely used in Spanish and Portuguese-speaking countries.
Delgado
From Latin delicatusmeaning “slender” or “delicate.” One of the most transparent descriptive Latin last names, Delgado pointed to a thin or slight ancestor and became very common in Spain and Latin America.
Bravo
From Latin barbarus through Vulgar Latin, meaning “fierce” or “bold.” A surname given to courageous or fierce individuals, now common across the Spanish-speaking world.
Calvus
From Latin calvusmeaning “bald.” A Roman cognomen for the hairless, it survives as a rare but genuine surname in Italian and Spanish form (Calvo).
Calvo
The Spanish form of calvusmeaning “bald.” A very common Spanish descriptive surname, worn by many notable bearers across Spain and Latin America.
Grande
From Latin grandismeaning “large” or “great.” A physical descriptor for a tall or large ancestor that became a surname across Italy, Spain, and Portugal.
Basso
From Latin bassusmeaning “short” or “low.” A Roman cognomen for a short-statured person that became a common Italian surname.
Felix
From Latin felixmeaning “happy” or “fortunate.” A Roman cognomen that became a given name and then a widespread surname across the Latin world.
Valentín
From Latin valentinusderived from valensmeaning “strong” or “healthy.” Used as both a given name and a surname in Spanish-speaking countries.
Nature and Place-Based Latin Surnames
Latin named the landscape, its rivers, mountains, forests, and fields. Spanish and Italian topographic surnames inherited that vocabulary almost unchanged.
Silva
From Latin silvameaning “forest.” One of the most common surnames in Portugal and Brazil, Silva is a pure Latin topographic name for forest dwellers.
Aquino
From the Latin place name Aquinum, derived from aquameaning “water.” The town of Aquino in central Italy gave its name to Saint Thomas Aquinas’s family.
Fontana
From Latin fontanameaning “spring” or “fountain.” A topographic surname for families who lived near a natural spring, common in Italy and Spain.
Montes
From Latin mons / montismeaning “mountain.” A pluralized topographic surname common across Spain and Latin America for families from mountain regions.
Valle
From Latin vallismeaning “valley.” A clean, transparent topographic surname used across Spain, Italy, and Latin America.
Prado
From Latin pratummeaning “meadow.” Families who lived on open grassland took this name, and it remains common across the Spanish-speaking world.
Fuente
From Latin fons / fontismeaning “spring” or “fountain.” The Spanish topographic surname for a family near a water source, closely related to Fontana.
Ribeiro
From Latin ripariusmeaning “riverbank.” A Portuguese and Galician topographic surname for families who lived along rivers, and one of the most common surnames in Portugal.
Costa
From Latin costameaning “rib,” “side,” or “coast.” Used topographically for families living on a hillside or coastline, Costa is one of the most common surnames in Portugal, Brazil, and Catalonia.
Pereira
From Latin pirariusmeaning “pear tree.” A Portuguese topographic surname for families who lived near pear orchards, and one of the top surnames in Portugal and Brazil.
Oliveira
From Latin olivariusmeaning “olive tree.” The Portuguese form of Oliver, Oliveira is the most common surname in Portugal and points to olive-growing land.
Pinheiro
From Latin pinusmeaning “pine tree.” A Portuguese topographic surname for families who lived near pine forests, common in Portugal and Brazil.
Carvalho
From Latin quercus through Vulgar Latin carvaliummeaning “oak tree.” One of the most common Portuguese surnames, it points to families from oak-forested land.
Matos
From Latin mattus or related to mactusmeaning “thicket” or “scrubland.” A Portuguese and Spanish topographic surname for families from dense, shrubby terrain.
Monteiro
From Latin monsmeaning “mountain,” with the Portuguese suffix. A hunter or mountain-dweller surname, very common in Portugal and Brazil.
Latin Surnames from Saints and the Church
The Catholic Church in medieval Iberia and Italy used Latin as its living language. Many surnames were born from saints’ feast days, church dedications, and Latin ecclesiastical vocabulary.
Benedetti
From Latin benedictusmeaning “blessed.” The Italian plural form of Benedict, used as a family name across northern Italy. Pope Benedict’s family name root is exactly this.
Innocenti
From Latin innocensmeaning “innocent” or “harmless.” An Italian surname tied to the Feast of the Holy Innocents and used by families with a strong devotional connection to that observance.
Natali
From Latin natalismeaning “of birth” or “birthday,” specifically the birth of Christ (Christmas). An Italian surname given to children born on or near Christmas Day.
Pasquale
From Latin paschalisfrom Hebrew via Latin, meaning “of Passover” or “of Easter.” A devotional Italian and Spanish surname (Pascual in Spanish) given to Easter-born children.
Clemente
From Latin clemensmeaning “merciful” or “gentle.” A papal and saintly name that became a common Italian and Spanish surname carried by families across both the Old and New Worlds.
Innocencio
The Spanish form of innocensmeaning “innocent.” Used as a surname in Spanish-speaking families with deep Catholic heritage.
Angelo
From Latin angelusfrom Greek, meaning “messenger.” Widely used as both given name and surname across Italy, Angelo is one of the most recognizable devotional Latin last names.
Serafini
From Latin seraphinusmeaning “fiery” or “burning” (referring to the seraphim). An Italian devotional surname for families who named sons Serafino, which then became a family name.
Agnelli
From Latin agnellusmeaning “little lamb.” A devotional reference to the Lamb of God, this became a genuine Italian surname, most famously associated with the Fiat dynasty.
Salvatori
From Latin salvatormeaning “savior.” An Italian devotional surname pointing directly to Christ as Savior, and in common use across Italy and among Italian diaspora families.
Latin Patronymic Surnames
Patronymics, surnames meaning “son of” some ancestor, are one of the most productive sources of Latin last names. Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian each developed their own patronymic suffixes from Latin roots.
Domínguez
Son of Domingo, from Latin Dominicusmeaning “of the Lord.” One of the most common Spanish patronymic surnames and a clear Latin ecclesiastical inheritance.
Fernández
Son of Fernando, from a Germanic name filtered through Latin. One of the top three most common Spanish surnames in the world, with a heritage that runs through medieval Castile.
González
Son of Gonzalo, a name of Germanic origin filtered into Latin as Gundisalvus. González is one of the most common Spanish surnames globally and a staple of Latin last names lists for good reason.
Rodríguez
Son of Rodrigo, from Germanic Roderic, Latinized as Rodericus. One of the most common surnames in the Spanish-speaking world, its Latin patronymic suffix is unmistakable.
Ramírez
Son of Ramiro, from Germanic RaginmirusLatinized through medieval Spanish records. A top-ten Spanish surname with centuries of documented use.
Hernández
Son of Hernando (a form of Fernando), from the Latinized Germanic name. One of the most common surnames in Mexico and the Spanish-speaking world, and a definitive Latin last name of patronymic origin.
Álvarez
Son of Álvaro, from Gothic AlwareisLatinized in medieval documents. A top Spanish surname carried by millions across Spain and Latin America.
Pérez
Son of Pedro, from Latin Petrusfrom Greek petrameaning “rock.” One of the most common surnames in Spain and Latin America, and a direct Latin patronymic.
Suárez
Son of Suero, from Latin Suerius. A classic Iberian patronymic surname, common in Spain, Portugal, and Latin America, and carried by figures from Francisco Suárez the theologian to current political leaders.
Muñoz
Son of Munio, a medieval given name of uncertain origin but Latinized in early Iberian records as Munnius. A common Spanish surname with deep medieval roots.
Italian Latin Surnames of Roman Descent
Italian surnames sit closest to the Latin source, and many carry their Roman heritage in almost unaltered form. These are some of the most transparently Latin last names still in everyday use.
Ferrari
From Latin ferrariusmeaning “blacksmith” or “iron-worker,” from ferrum (iron). The most common surname in Italy, Ferrari is a pure Latin occupational name.
Russo
From Latin russusmeaning “red” or “russet.” A descriptive surname for red-haired ancestors, Russo is one of the most common surnames in southern Italy.
Marino
From Latin marinusmeaning “of the sea.” A coastal topographic or devotional surname common throughout Italy, especially in the south and along the Adriatic coast.
Leone
From Latin leo / leonismeaning “lion.” A strong, clear Latin surname used across Italy, sometimes as a devotional name honoring Saint Leo.
Piccolo
From Latin picculus (Vulgar Latin), meaning “small.” A descriptive surname for short or small-statured ancestors, common in Italy and in Italian-American communities.
Mancini
From Latin mancusmeaning “maimed” or “left-handed.” A descriptive cognomen that became one of the more common Italian surnames, particularly in central Italy.
Vitale
From Latin vitalismeaning “of life” or “vital.” A surname rooted in the Latin word for life itself, Vitale is used across Italy and in Italian diaspora communities worldwide.
Carbone
From Latin carbo / carbonismeaning “charcoal” or “coal.” An occupational surname for charcoal-burners or coal merchants, common in southern Italy.
Amato
From Latin amatusmeaning “beloved.” A beautiful descriptive surname used across Italy, particularly in the south, and among Italian-American families.
Palma
From Latin palmameaning “palm tree.” A topographic or devotional surname, palm being a symbol of victory and martyrdom in Christian tradition, common in southern Italy and Spain.
How to Choose the Right Latin Last Name to Research or Honor
If you’re tracing family history, the first step is understanding which branch of Latin naming your surname belongs to. Roman clan names (Julius, Valerius, Cornelius) signal direct descent from the ancient Italian nobility or its later imitators. Spanish patronymics (Rodríguez, Fernández, Pérez) point to medieval Iberia and the centuries when Latin was still the language of law and the Church. Knowing which category your name falls into helps you know where to look and what records to seek.
For writers or parents looking to honor Latin heritage through a character name or a child’s surname-as-middle-name, the occupational and descriptive categories are the most evocative. A name like Faber (craftsman), Silva (forest), or Vitale (life) carries a meaning you can actually feel, not just recite. That living connection to Latin’s vocabulary is what makes these names feel both ancient and alive.
If you’re choosing a Latin last name for a fictional character, match the register to the world you’re building. Roman cognomina (Maximus, Brutus, Flavius) read as imperial and cinematic. Spanish topographic surnames (Vega, Campos, Serrano) read as grounded and regional. Italian devotional names (Amato, Vitale, Serafini) read as warm and Catholic in the best sense. The Latin language is big enough to give every character exactly the resonance you want.
Above all, resist the temptation to use Latin words as surnames just because they sound good. The names on this list are surnames that real families bear today, with documented roots in Roman, Spanish, Portuguese, or Italian naming culture. That realness is what gives them weight. A name with centuries of human use behind it is always more interesting than a word you pulled from a Latin dictionary.
Latin last names are among the most durable artifacts of Western history. From the Roman Senate to a village in Castile to a family in São Paulo, these surnames have been carried across continents and millennia without losing the thread back to Rome. That’s a remarkable thing for a name to do.
