The popular names of 2026 are a fascinating mix: classic names reclaiming their spots at the top, nature-inspired picks surging across every region, and a handful of genuinely fresh choices that feel both new and inevitable. If you want to know where American naming culture is heading right now, this list is your best starting point.
What makes a name trend? Sometimes it’s a cultural moment, a beloved character, or a celebrity baby announcement. Sometimes a name just quietly accumulates momentum until it tips into the mainstream. The picks below reflect all of those forces, organized by the style families that are dominating in 2026.
Classic Names Holding Strong
These are the names that have been top-tier for decades and show absolutely no sign of fading. They’re classics for a reason: they age beautifully, travel well, and feel at home in any era.
Charlotte
A French feminine form of Charles meaning “free woman,” Charlotte has been a consistent powerhouse for over a decade. It threads the needle between regal and approachable in a way very few names manage, which is exactly why parents keep choosing it.
Oliver
Oliver has been the dominant boys’ name in the English-speaking world for several years running, and 2026 is no different. Its Latin-via-Old-French roots connect it to the olive tree, a symbol of peace, and its sound is smooth without feeling soft.
Eleanor
Eleanor was a medieval queenly name that nearly vanished in the mid-twentieth century and has since made one of the most dramatic comebacks in baby name history. It’s serious, strong, and loaded with nickname potential: Ellie, Nell, Nora, Lea.
James
James is one of the most enduring names in the English language, an Anglicization of the Latin Jacobus, itself from the Hebrew Ya’akov. It has crossed into genuinely gender-neutral territory in recent years while remaining a rock-solid choice for boys.
Margaret
Margaret, from the Greek Margarites meaning “pearl,” is the grande dame of the classic revival. Parents who want something with genuine gravitas and a range of nickname options (Maggie, Meg, Maisie, Rita, Peggy) are rediscovering it enthusiastically.
Henry
Henry, from the Old High German Heimirich meaning “ruler of the home,” has the friendly-but-serious energy that defines the current top of the boys’ charts. It pairs with almost any surname and wears every life stage well.
Elizabeth
Elizabeth, from the Hebrew Elisheba meaning “my God is an oath” or “my God is abundance,” is essentially the Swiss Army knife of baby names: it has more nickname forms than any other name in English and has been in continuous use for centuries. It never fully drops out of fashion because it never fully belongs to one generation.
William
A perennial top-five boys’ name, William comes from the Old German Willahelm meaning “resolute protector.” It is formal without being stiff, and the nickname Will carries an easy, modern energy all on its own.
Soft and Romantic Names for Girls
This group has been building for several years and hit full momentum heading into 2026. Think flowing syllables, vintage warmth, and a certain old-world grace.
Violet
Violet sits at the intersection of nature naming and vintage revival, and it has been rising steeply for years. The name comes from the Latin viola, the purple flower, and it carries a quiet confidence that feels genuinely stylish right now.
Aurora
Aurora, the Roman goddess of the dawn, has quietly become a powerhouse. Its Latin meaning is literally “dawn,” and its four syllables give it an almost musical quality. The Disney association adds familiarity without feeling dated.
Josephine
Josephine is the French feminine form of Joseph, from the Hebrew Yosef meaning “God will add.” It has the big, sweeping sound of a nineteenth-century novel heroine and the nicknames (Josie, Jo, Posy) to back it up.
Clara
Clara, from the Latin clarus meaning “bright” or “clear,” is clean, strong, and completely uncluttered. It’s been climbing steadily as parents seek something shorter and crisper than the longer romantic names while keeping the same vintage warmth.
Cecilia
Cecilia derives from the old Roman family name Caecilius, associated with the Latin caecus meaning “blind,” though it is best known through Saint Cecilia, the patron of musicians. The name has a lyrical, almost melodic quality that suits the current taste for names that feel like they belong in a poem.
Genevieve
Genevieve is French, likely from a Gaulish name meaning something close to “tribe woman,” and it is having a significant moment. It’s long, layered, and full of character, with Genny and Viv as natural shortcuts.
Iris
Iris is the Greek goddess of the rainbow, and the name carries both the floral and the mythological in one compact, two-syllable package. It’s crisp enough to feel modern and old enough to feel grounded.
Adelaide
Adelaide comes from the Old High German Adalheidis meaning “noble kind” or “of noble birth.” It has the layered nickname options of Eleanor (Ada, Addie, Della, Heidi) and the same kind of stately-but-friendly energy that defines the current girls’ top tier.
Strong and Grounded Boys’ Names
The counterpart to the romantic girls’ names: boys’ names that feel solid and real, with deep roots and no-fuss wearability. These are names that have been tested by time.
Theodore
Theodore, from the Greek Theodoros meaning “gift of God,” is one of the clearest success stories of the 2020s. It’s formal enough to feel substantial and comes with the irresistible nickname Theo, which is doing serious heavy lifting on its own.
Sebastian
Sebastian, from the Greek Sebastianos meaning “from Sebastia” (a city in modern Turkey), has a musical, almost theatrical sound that has made it enormously popular without ever feeling overexposed. It is a top-ten fixture in several countries simultaneously.
Ezra
Ezra is Hebrew, meaning “help” or “helper,” and it has moved from a largely religious context into the broad mainstream with impressive speed. It’s short, distinctive, and has a spare, literary quality that resonates with modern parents.
Elijah
From the Hebrew Eliyahu meaning “my God is Yahweh,” Elijah is a name with deep biblical roots and a warm, open sound. It’s been in the top ten for years and shows no sign of softening.
Atticus
Atticus is a Latin name meaning “from Attica,” the region of ancient Greece containing Athens. Its literary association with Harper Lee’s Atticus Finch turned it into a cultural touchstone for a certain kind of thoughtful, bookish parent, and it has been climbing ever since.
Julian
Julian, from the Latin Iulianus connected to Julius, has a smooth, international sound that travels beautifully across cultures and languages. It’s been a steady riser and has reached genuine top-tier status in 2026.
Beckett
Beckett is an English surname meaning “bee cottage” or “small stream,” and its rise as a first name reflects the strong appetite for surname-style names with a literary edge. Samuel Beckett lends it an intellectual cachet that parents seem drawn to.
Silas
Silas is likely a short form of Silvanus, the Latin name connected to “forest” or “wood,” though its exact origin is debated. It has a quiet, rugged sincerity that fits the current taste for names that feel both old and fresh.
Nature Names on the Rise
Nature naming is not a trend so much as a permanent shift in how American parents think about names. The category keeps expanding, and these are the picks generating the most momentum right now.
Rowan
Rowan comes from the Gaelic name for the rowan tree, a mountain ash associated in Celtic tradition with protection and enchantment. It’s genuinely gender-neutral in practice, used confidently for both boys and girls, and its two crisp syllables make it easy to love.
Sage
Sage works on two levels: as a reference to the fragrant herb and as the English word for wisdom. It’s unisex, short, and carries a calm, grounded quality that connects directly to the wellness-minded naming culture of the mid-2020s.
River
River is one of the nature names that crossed fully into the mainstream and stayed. It has a fluid, easy sound and a genuinely gender-neutral track record. Actor River Phoenix gave it cultural history; a wave of celebrity babies in the 2010s gave it momentum.
Wren
Wren, from the small songbird of the same name, is a miniature name with a big presence. It’s been one of the fastest-rising girls’ names for several years and is starting to appear on boys as well, fitting the pattern of small, sharp nature names that feel effortlessly modern.
Hazel
Hazel refers to the hazel tree and its nuts, and it has been one of the great nature-name success stories of the past decade. Warm, slightly witchy, and full of autumnal character, it sits comfortably in the top tier and keeps pulling new parents in.
Forrest
Forrest, the given-name spelling of Forest, has a specific American quality rooted in the Southern tradition of using surnames as first names. It’s earthy and grounded, with just enough pop culture familiarity (Forrest Gump) to feel approachable.
Ivy
Ivy is the climbing plant name that has gone from charming to genuinely popular in a relatively short window. It’s crisp, botanical, and has benefited from high-profile use by celebrity parents. Short nature names with a strong vowel ending are having a major moment, and Ivy is at the center of it.
Jasper
Jasper is both a gemstone name and, traditionally, the name of one of the Three Magi (though the Magi are unnamed in scripture, Jasper is the traditional Western assignment). It has a warm, burnished quality and a distinctly creative, artistic reputation that makes it compelling.
Short and Punchy Names Gaining Ground
After years of multi-syllable names dominating, there’s a real countermovement toward short, clean names with strong sounds. These are the names that land in one or two syllables and leave a mark.
Milo
Milo has Latin and Germanic roots, possibly connected to the Latin miles meaning “soldier” or to the Germanic name element meaning “merciful.” Whatever its origin, it is undeniably charming: boyish without being babyish, and easy to say in any language.
Finn
Finn is an Irish name, derived from the legendary hero Fionn mac Cumhaill, with the root meaning “fair” or “white.” It’s punchy, outdoorsy, and feels genuinely Irish without being inaccessible. It’s also one of the names that benefits most from its pop culture presence (Star Wars, Glee, Adventure Time).
Nora
Nora can be a standalone name or a short form of Eleanor, Honora, or Leonora. It has a clean, uncluttered sound and a literary heritage (Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House) that gives it substance. It’s been one of the most steadily popular girls’ names of the 2020s.
Levi
Levi is a Hebrew name, from the tribe of Levi, with a meaning connected to “joined” or “attached.” It has a friendly, unpretentious energy and the kind of easy wearability that makes it work for any personality. Its rise has been consistent and shows no plateau in sight.
Cleo
Cleo, a short form of Cleopatra or Cleodora rooted in the Greek kleos meaning “glory,” is one of the freshest-feeling short names gaining traction right now. It’s vintage, a little glamorous, and a little unexpected, which is exactly the combination parents are hunting for in 2026.
Jude
Jude, from the Hebrew Judah meaning “praised,” has the rare quality of feeling both ancient and completely contemporary. The Beatles gave it pop culture weight; recent years have given it an across-the-board appeal that makes it a serious contender at every style level.
Ada
Ada is a name with multiple independent origins: a Germanic root meaning “noble,” and use as a short form of Adelaide or Adaeze. It is short, strong, and carries the legacy of Ada Lovelace, the nineteenth-century mathematician widely considered the first computer programmer, which gives it a quietly progressive resonance.
Gender-Neutral Names Trending in 2026
The gender-neutral category isn’t a niche anymore. These names are genuinely mainstream, used by real families across every demographic, and they’re among the most searched and discussed names heading into 2026.
Quinn
Quinn is an Irish surname derived from Conn, meaning “chief” or “intelligence.” It has become one of the most successfully gender-neutral names in American usage, moving freely between birth certificates without feeling forced in either direction.
Emery
Emery comes from the Old High German Emmerich, meaning “work power” or “home ruler.” It has a smooth, modern sound that reads as neither distinctly masculine nor feminine, and it’s been climbing steadily on both sides of the gender line.
Phoenix
Phoenix, from the mythological bird of renewal and rebirth, has the boldness that defines a certain strand of 2026 naming. It’s been used for boys and girls and carries a striking, almost epic quality that suits parents who want a name with genuine power.
Remy
Remy is a French name derived from the Latin Remigius, meaning “oarsman.” It has a breezy, cosmopolitan quality and has been crossing gender lines in the US for several years, driven partly by French-name enthusiasm and partly by its easy sound.
Marlowe
Marlowe is an English surname meaning “remnants of a lake” or “drained lake,” and its rise as a first name tracks directly with the broader appetite for literary, surname-style names. It has a cool, slightly bookish quality and sits naturally on any child.
Finley
Finley is a Scottish and Irish surname meaning “fair-haired hero” or “fair warrior,” derived from the Gaelic Fionnlagh. It has been one of the most notable gender-crossover names of the past decade, now used almost equally for boys and girls in American naming data.
International Names Finding a US Audience
American parents are increasingly drawn to names from other languages and traditions, especially those that are easy to pronounce in English while carrying real cultural roots. These are the international picks gaining serious traction right now.
Mateo
Mateo is the Spanish form of Matthew, from the Hebrew Mattityahu meaning “gift of God.” It has been one of the fastest-rising names in the US for years, reflecting both growing Latin American cultural influence and a broader appetite for names with warmth and international character.
Luna
Luna is the Latin word for “moon” and the name of the Roman moon goddess. It has become a genuine top-ten fixture in the US, beloved for its soft sound, its celestial meaning, and its easy cross-cultural wearability. Its rise has been one of the most dramatic in recent naming history.
Isla
Isla is a Scottish name derived from Islay, a Scottish island, and it has crossed from a specifically Scottish identity into broad English-language use. Its pronunciation (EYE-la) sometimes trips people up, but that hasn’t slowed its ascent at all.
Luca
Luca is the Italian and Romanian form of Luke, from the Latin Lux meaning “light.” It has a warm, Mediterranean sound and has been one of the most successful international imports into American naming in the 2020s, used almost exclusively for boys in the US despite being more gender-flexible in some European countries.
Freya
Freya is the Old Norse goddess of love, beauty, and fertility, and her name has crossed from Scandinavia into the mainstream English-speaking world with remarkable ease. It’s short, strong, and carries real mythological weight without feeling heavy.
Santiago
Santiago is the Spanish form of Saint James, combining the words “santo” and “Yago” (a Spanish form of James). It’s a major name in the Spanish-speaking world and has been steadily establishing itself as a genuine option for English-speaking families who want something with cultural depth and a strong sound.
Soren
Soren is a Scandinavian name derived from the Latin Severinus, meaning “stern” or “severe,” though it has none of that harshness in practice. It’s calm, intellectual, and carries the association with philosopher Soren Kierkegaard for parents who appreciate that kind of depth.
Names Inspired by Mythology and Legend
Mythological names have been trending for years, but the 2026 cohort has moved beyond the obvious picks into some genuinely compelling territory. These names have real stories behind them.
Athena
Athena is the Greek goddess of wisdom, war strategy, and the arts, and her name has been climbing steadily as parents seek strong, meaningful names for girls. It’s bold without being aggressive and carries an intellectual authority that feels genuinely current.
Orion
Orion, the great hunter of Greek mythology whose name is also carried by one of the most recognizable constellations, has a sweeping, epic quality that appeals to parents who want something celestial and grounded at the same time. Its sound is distinctive without being difficult.
Cassian
Cassian is a Roman family name derived from Cassius, with roots in the Latin cassus meaning “empty” or “vain,” though its current popularity owes far more to the Star Wars character Cassian Andor than to Roman etymology. It has a strong, slightly exotic sound that feels fresh on the current landscape.
Thea
Thea is a Greek name meaning “goddess” or “divine,” and it has also been used as a short form of Theodora and Dorothea. It is spare, strong, and quietly mythological, and it has been one of the most consistently rising girls’ names of the early 2020s.
Callum
Callum is a Scottish form of the Latin Columba meaning “dove,” used in honor of Saint Columba, the Irish missionary who brought Christianity to Scotland. It has a strong, friendly sound and has been a top name in Scotland and increasingly popular in the broader English-speaking world.
Penelope
Penelope is the name of Odysseus’s faithful wife in Homer’s Odyssey, and while its exact etymology is debated, it has a warm, melodic sound that has made it enormously popular. The nickname Penny adds a vintage-sweet layer that many parents find irresistible.
How to Choose the Right Name in 2026
The most useful thing you can do with a list like this is treat it as a starting point, not a prescription. A name that’s trending nationally might already be everywhere in your specific city or social circle, which matters to some parents enormously and not at all to others. Know which camp you’re in before you start narrowing down.
Think about the full name as a unit. A short, punchy surname pairs differently with a two-syllable name than it does with a four-syllable one, and the rhythm of first-middle-last is something you’ll say out loud for years. Test it: call the name across a room, sign it at the bottom of a letter, imagine it on a resume. A name that survives all three of those tests is a strong candidate.
Consider the nickname landscape carefully. A name like Theodore gives you Theo, Teddy, and Ted, which are three different personalities. A name like Nora gives you essentially one version. Neither approach is better, but they suit different parents. If you love a name’s formal version but not its natural nickname, think about how much control you’ll realistically have over what people call your child once they’re in school.
Finally, don’t discount your gut. Naming research, trend data, and family opinions all matter to some degree, but the names that endure in families are almost always the ones where at least one parent felt an unmistakable pull. The popular names of 2026 give you an excellent field to work from. The right one is the one that feels like yours.
Whatever direction you go, the naming landscape in 2026 is genuinely exciting: more international, more nature-connected, more willing to cross gender lines, and more open to the full sweep of history than any previous generation. That’s a lot of good material to work with.
