Global Araç
Baby Name Generator
İsimler ABD Sosyal Güvenlik 2024 ilk 50 listelerinden alınmıştır. Cinsiyet nötr havuz, modern kullanımda cinsiyetler arasında yaklaşık eşit kullanılan isimlere göre derlenmiştir.
Generate random baby name suggestions from curated lists. Three categories: girls’ names (drawn from US 2024 top-50), boys’ names (US 2024 top-50), and unisex names (a curated pool of names used roughly equally across genders in modern American usage — Avery, Riley, Quinn, Sage, etc.). Optionally filter by starting letter (handy if you want to honor a family member named Margaret with a different M name). Each click generates 5 candidate names.
The data source: the US Social Security Administration’s baby names database, which has tracked every legally-registered name since 1880. The 2024 top-50 lists reflect what new American parents actually picked, aggregated by birth-certificate gender. The unisex pool is curated separately by tracking which names appear frequently in both gender top-300 lists; modern usage increasingly defaults to neutrality (Avery, Riley, Quinn) rather than historically gendered names.
Useful for brainstorming when you have a vague aesthetic but no specific candidates; discovering names outside your usual frame of reference (everyone’s mental top-10 is surprisingly narrow); exploring family-name alternatives with a specific letter constraint; fictional character naming for novels, screenplays, games, or D&D campaigns. Note: this tool is name-suggestion only — for popularity trends over time, regional differences, or full meaning / etymology, see SSA’s database directly or Behindthename.com.
Nasıl Kullanılır
- Pick a category: girls, boys, or unisex.
- Optionally restrict to a starting letter — useful if you want to honor a family member with the same initial.
- Click Generate. Five random names appear from the chosen category.
- If none resonate, click Generate again for a fresh batch. There are 50+ names per category, so you'll see most of them after a few clicks.
- Save your favorites — write down the ones that catch your ear and let them sit for a few days before deciding. Names that feel exciting on click 1 sometimes feel forced on day 5; ones that feel mundane sometimes grow into clear winners.
Ne Zaman Kullanılır
- Early-pregnancy brainstorming when you want exposure to options outside your friend-group's defaults.
- Filling in 'we want a family-letter match' but don't have a specific name yet.
- Novel / screenplay / game character naming — you want plausible names, not invented ones.
- Exploring unisex options — the tool's curated unisex pool is a good starting point for parents who specifically want gender-neutral.
Ne Zaman Kullanılmaz
- When you want name meaning, etymology, or origin — use Behindthename.com or Nameberry. This tool is suggestion-only.
- When you want regional variation (Spanish, Indian, Chinese, Korean names) — the data is US-centric. Look up regional name databases for those.
- When you want historical names (1700s, Victorian-era) — current top-50 reflects 2024 popularity, not historical patterns.
- When you want the legally-binding name decision — the parents' decision, not a random generator. Use this for ideation, decide thoughtfully.
Yaygın Kullanım Senaryoları
- Educational use — demonstrating the underlying concept
- Onboarding a colleague who needs the same calculation/conversion
- Verifying a number or output before passing it on
- Quick generation during a typical workday
Sık Sorulan Sorular
Where do the names come from?
US Social Security Administration's 2024 top-50 most-popular lists for boys and girls (publicly available at ssa.gov/oact/babynames). The unisex pool is curated separately by tracking names that appear frequently in both gender top-300 lists — Avery, Riley, Quinn, Sage, Rowan, etc.
Why only 50 names per gender?
To keep generation high-signal. The full SSA top-1000 list includes a long tail of less-common names; top-50 captures what real parents actually picked in 2024. For broader exploration use SSA's direct lookup. We may add a 'top-200' option in a future release.
Are these names trendy / dated already?
Top-50 reflects 2024 — names rise and fall. Names that peaked in 2014 (Aiden, Noah for boys; Sophia, Emma for girls) are still common but may feel less fresh by 2030. Names just entering the top-50 in 2024 (Atlas, Theodore, Elowen, Wren) feel current. If you want a name that won't feel dated in 20 years, look at multi-decade-stable names (Henry, Catherine, James, Margaret) rather than 2024 trends.
What about names from other cultures?
This generator is US-centric. For Spanish names, French names, Indian names, Chinese names, Korean names — use culture-specific databases (Behindthename.com has good multi-language coverage; for South Asian and East Asian names, check region-specific resources).
Should I worry about my child being one of three Madisons in their class?
Common-name fatigue is real but exaggerated. SSA data shows: even the #1 most-popular name (Liam, Olivia in 2024) accounts for only ~1% of births. So a class of 25 has at most one. The 'three Jacobs in my class' phenomenon happens with mid-popular names where 5-8 share a slot — but most schools have less than that. Don't overweight popularity; pick what feels right.
Can I add a family or surname constraint?
Not in this version. The generator does first-name only; pairing with a surname for flow is the parents' job. Some considerations: avoid same-syllable-count first + last (Bob Cobb, Sue Hsu); test the full name spoken aloud; check initials (don't accidentally spell ASS).