The South American country of Uruguay doesn’t publish an annual list of top baby names per se, but Uruguay’s Dirección Nacional de Identificación Civil (DNIC) does release a list of all the names used among people who obtained their Uruguayan identity card for the first time within a given year.
As we saw in 2021 and 2020, the DNIC rankings combine all names (male and female) together on a single list, but don’t combine different forms of the same name (e.g., Maria and María) into single entries on that list. Most notably, the rankings account for not just first-name usage, but also second-name usage (as Uruguayans are allowed to include a maximum of two given names on their identity cards).
So now that we have all that out of the way… the DNIC data reveals that the most-registered names in the country in 2022 were María and Juan.
Here are Uruguay’s top 100+ registered names of 2022:
- María, 1,170 babies
 - Juan, 1,138
 - Maria, 1,108
 - Isabella, 885
 - Benjamín, 780
 - Emma, 766
 - Mateo, 728
 - Valentina, 660
 - Catalina, 659
 - Luis, 648
 - Alejandro, 647
 - Martina, 640
 - Felipe, 637
 - Carlos, 589
 - Valentín, 568
 - Ezequiel, 562
 - Emilia, 559
 - Manuel, 556
 - Daniel, 555
 - Lorenzo, 550
 - Julieta, 546
 - José, 535
 - Gabriel, 518
 - Jose, 517
 - Nicolás, 491
 - Sofía, 486
 - Ignacio, 455
 - Alberto, 452
 - Santiago, 450
 - Francisco, 442
 - David, 438
 - Agustín, 435
 - Olivia, 429
 - Josefina, 422
 - Valentino, 416
 - Antonio, 410 (tie)
 - Lucas, 410 (tie)
 - Bautista, 405
 - Delfina, 396
 - Lautaro, 389
 - Benjamin, 384
 - Eduardo, 383
 - Belén, 378
 - Thiago, 372
 - Gael, 371
 - Santino, 370
 - Victoria, 367
 - Javier, 365
 - Agustina, 363
 - Jorge, 362
 - Emiliano, 358
 - Dante, 357
 - Alexander, 351
 - Tomás, 342
 - Paulina, 335
 - Miguel, 334
 - Rafael, 329
 - Ana, 324
 - Joaquín, 320
 - Samuel, 315
 - Pablo, 313
 - Sofia, 309
 - Pilar, 308
 - Diego, 307
 - Zoe, 306
 - Alfonsina, 300
 - Renata, 297
 - Clara, 278 (3-way tie)
 - Liam, 278 (3-way tie)
 - Sebastián, 278 (3-way tie)
 - Milagros, 276
 - Francesca, 271
 - Fernando, 268
 - Emily, 265
 - Enrique, 262
 - Facundo, 261
 - Federico, 260 (tie)
 - Pedro, 260 (tie)
 - Angel, 258
 - Bastian, 253
 - Bruno, 252 (tie)
 - Martín, 252 (tie)
 - Alejandra, 251
 - Carolina, 249 (tie)
 - Noah, 249 (tie)
 - Guadalupe, 246
 - Nicolas, 243
 - Vicente, 240
 - Enzo, 235
 - Salvador, 228
 - Sebastian, 227
 - Juana, 225
 - Valentin, 222
 - Guillermo, 220
 - Alma, 218 (tie)
 - Emanuel, 218 (tie)
 - Nahuel, 215
 - Camila, 211 (tie)
 - Elena, 211 (tie)
 - Andres, 210
 - Andrés, 209 (3-way tie)
 - Benicio, 209 (3-way tie)
 - Paz, 209 (3-way tie)
 - Gabriela, 208
 - Beatriz, 207
 - Ciro, 206 (tie)
 - Martin, 206 (tie)
 - Maite, 203
 - Andrea, 202
 - Elizabeth, 200 (tie)
 - Laura, 200 (tie)
 - Isabel, 199 (tie)
 - Mia, 199 (tie)
 - Luciano, 198
 - Ismael, 197
 - Jazmín, 195
 - Camilo, 194
 - Marcelo, 192
 - Franco, 190
 - Agustin, 189
 - Alfonso, 187
 - Aitana, 186 (tie)
 - Bianca, 186 (tie)
 - Ramiro, 185
 - Gustavo, 184
 - Cataleya, 183
 - Roberto, 178
 - Ariel, 176
 - Lucía, 174
 - Micaela, 173 (tie)
 - Ricardo, 173 (tie)
 
(I went down this far to ensure that at least fifty girl names were included.)
Here are a few names from lower down on the list:
- 80 babies were named Celeste, which is the nickname of Uruguay’s national soccer team.
- Only 35 babies were named Celeste in 2020.
 
 - 73 babies were named Aylen, and roughly two hundred more were given a different spelling of the name (e.g., Ayelen, Aylén, Ayelén, Aylín, Aylin). This is a Mapuche name with several possible meanings, including “ember” and “clear.”
 - 38 babies were named Coromoto, which comes from a Marian title.
 - 15 babies were named Inti, which is the Quechua word for “sun.”
 - 9 babies were named Amaru, which is the Quechua word for “snake.”
- This was Tupac Shakur‘s middle name.
 
 - 8 babies were named Borja, which comes from the name of Spanish saint Francisco de Borja.
 - 7 babies were named Irupé, which is the Guaraní word for the large South American water-lily Victoria cruziana.
 - 5 babies were named Yamandú, which was the name of a historical Guarani chief.
 - 4 babies were named Chiquinquira, which comes from a Marian title. 
- Two others were named Aurora de la Chiquinquira and Leomarys de la Chiquinquira.
 
 - 4 babies were named Itanú, which is a Charrúa name said to mean “heartbeat of stone.”
 - 3 babies were named Guidaí, which is the Charrúa word for “moon.”
 - 3 babies were named Tacuabé, which was the name of a historical Charrúa man.
- Following the Massacre of Salsipuedes in 1831, Tacuabé and several other Charrúa prisoners were taken to France to be put on exhibition.
 
 - 2 babies were named Amancay, which is a Quechua word that refers to a lily-like South American flower.
 - 2 babies were named Amapola, which means “poppy” in Spanish.
 - 2 babies were named Atahualpa, which was the name of the last emperor of the Inca.
 - 2 babies were named Everton, which may refer to Everton F.C.
 - 2 babies were named Leunam, which is Manuel spelled backwards.
 - 2 babies were named Pérola, which means “pearl” in Portuguese.
 - 2 babies were named Uruguay.
 
And, because Uruguay releases all of its baby name data, we can also check out the unique names at the bottom of the list. Here’s a selection Uruguay’s single-use baby names of 2022:
Aluminé, Balquidia, Cubillas, Danubio, Elquin, Francival, Gigiola, Haaland, Ivonilton, Juysver, Kaique, Liviesti, Magaiver, Namastée, Oscarina, Patria, Quetzal, Riccieri, Silvilex, Tarantino, Urania, Valuzia, Winifer, Xaviera, Yitnelly, Zapicán
Some possible explanations/associations:
- Aluminé – a town in Argentina
 - Cubillas – Peruvian soccer player Teófilo Cubillas
 - Dabubio – Uruguayan football club Danubio
 - Haaland – Norwegian soccer player Erling Haaland
- This one debuted in the U.S. data in 2021.
 
 - Magaiver – TV character MacGyver
 - Riccieri – a denim brand based in Brazil
 - Tarantino – American film director Quentin Tarantino
 - Zapicán – a village in Uruguay
 
Sources:
- “En Uruguay se registró un Tsunami y llegó el Messias: mirá cuántas veces se inscribió tu nombre en 2022.” El Observador 17 Jan. 2023.
 - Behind the Name
 - Wiktionary
 
Image: Adapted from Flag of Uruguay (public domain)






