How popular is the baby name David in the United States right now? How popular was it historically? Use the popularity graph and data table below to find out! Plus, see all the blog posts that mention the name David.

The graph will take a few moments to load. (Don't worry, it shouldn't take 9 months!) If it's taking too long, try reloading the page.


Popularity of the baby name David


Posts that mention the name David

First name data from the 2020 U.S. Census

U.S. Census 2020
U.S. Census 2020

The U.S. Census Bureau recently released data on the most common first names reported in the 2020 Census.

The full set of data, which contains 5.2 million first names, covers 302 million people (91.1% of the enumerated population). The portion of the data released to the public features more than 53,000 names — every name that belonged to at least 100 people.

Impressively, the top 25 names each belonged to more than 1 million (!) people:

  1. Michael (3.5 million)
  2. John (3.1)
  3. James (3.0)
  4. David (2.8)
  5. Robert (2.8)
  6. William (2.2)
  7. Mary (1.8)
  8. Maria (1.7)
  9. Daniel (1.6)
  10. Joseph (1.6)
  11. Richard (1.6)
  12. Thomas (1.5)
  13. Christopher (1.5)
  14. Jennifer (1.3)
  15. Matthew (1.3)
  16. Jose (1.2)
  17. Charles (1.2)
  18. Elizabeth (1.2)
  19. Patricia (1.2)
  20. Linda (1.2)
  21. Mark (1.1)
  22. Andrew (1.1)
  23. Anthony (1.1)
  24. Kevin (1.0)
  25. Brian (1.0)

Within the top 1,000, the most “predominantly male” and “predominantly female” names were Kurt and Kathleen, respectively. The name that came closest to a 50-50 split (between male and female) was Harley. And the names that had the “highest shares of identification with” particular racial/ethnic groups were…

White
(non-Hispanic)
1. Beth, 95.0% white
2. Jill, 93.7%
3. Scott, 93.2%
4. Doug, 92.8%
5. Kathleen, 92.7%
Black or African American
(non-Hispanic)
1. Tyrone, 81.7% Black
2. Willie, 79.9%
3. Reginald, 77.9%
4. Maurice, 60.0%
5. Terrance, 56.0%
Asian, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander
(non-Hispanic)
1. Mohammad, 56.9% Asian/Islander
2. Mohammed, 47.9%
3. Son, 24.7%
4. Andy, 21.0%
5. Jenny, 20.7%
American Indian and Alaska Native
(non-Hispanic)
1. Cheyenne, 3.2% Native American
2. Dakota, 2.5%
3. Vernon, 2.0%
4. Harley, 1.9%
5. Donovan, 1.8%
Two or more races
(non-Hispanic)
1. Kai, 19.5% multi-racial
2. Aaliyah, 12.3%
3. Nevaeh, 12.0%
4. Mya, 11.3%
5. Maya, 11.2%
Hispanic or Latino1. Guadalupe, 98.5% Hispanic
2. Blanca, 98.4%
3. Mayra, 97.8%
4. Yesenia, 97.8%
5. Juana, 97.3%

And what about the rest of the names?

I haven’t looked at every single one (yet!), but I did scan thousands of the rarest. I spotted…

  • Arabic names like Boutros and Taoufik,
  • Armenian names like Vartouhi and Mesrop,
  • Bosnian names like Avdo and Hatidza,
  • Brazilian names like Elenilson and Moacir,
  • Dutch names like Geert and Leendert,
  • Cambodian names like Sokhoeun and Sreymom,
  • Ethiopian names like Fikre and Tesfai,
  • Filipino names like Liwanag and Rizalito,
  • Greek names like Afroditi and Kyriacos,
  • German names like Edeltraut and Albrecht,
  • Hungarian names like Zsuzsa and Gyongyi,
  • Indian names like Nagaraja and Tarannum,
  • Italian names like Guglielmo and Pierluigi,
  • Finnish names like Pirkko and Heikki,
  • Japanese names like Hidenori and Kazuaki,
  • Korean names like Sooji and Hyeong,
  • Lithuanian names like Algimantas and Gintaras,
  • Laotian names like Khamphay and Bounpheng,
  • Persian names like Morvarid and Rouzbeh,
  • Russian names like Pyotr and Genrikh,
  • Spanish names like Salustiano and Reveriano,
  • Serbian names like Ljubisa and Djuro,
  • Thai names like Chatchai and Waraporn,
  • Tibetan names like Tseten and Phuntsok,
  • Turkish names like Songul and Nevzat, and
  • Vietnamese names like Ngoi and Ngot.

(None of the above have ever popped up in the SSA data.)

I also noticed Utahna, Quisqueya, Littlejohn, and Garibaldi.

One that I did not see, however, was Abcde — a real name has been given to hundreds of U.S. babies since the 1990s. I looked this one up specifically because the Census Bureau stated in its methodology section that it had deleted “many obvious nonnames such as ABCDEFG, ADULT FEMALE, DONT KNOW, and NO NOMBRE.” I wonder if Abcde wasn’t mistakenly omitted…?

Sources:

Image: Adapted from US Census 2020 tools of the trade by Daniel Case under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Babies named for the Wilmot Proviso

Politician David Wilmot (1814-1868)
David Wilmot

In August of 1846, U.S. Representative David Wilmot of Pennsylvania proposed — via an amendment to a military appropriations bill — that the U.S. prohibit slavery in any territory gained from Mexico following the Mexican-American War.

The appropriations bill, with the Wilmot Proviso attached, passed in the House but not in the Senate.

The Proviso was also included in subsequent House bills, but never became law. It did, however, keep the issue of slavery “at the forefront of congressional debate” — thereby intensifying the North-South sectionalism that would later boil over into civil war.

So far, I’ve found a handful of people named in honor of the Wilmot Proviso. Three were born in the late 1840s:

The others included Wilmot Proviso Coburn (b. 1857), who was distantly related to David Wilmot, and Wilmot Proviso Ragsdale (b. 1878), who happened to have an older brother named after Elmer Ellsworth.

The surname Wilmot was originally a diminutive (and also a feminine form) of the name William.

Sources: Wilmot Proviso – Wikipedia, David Wilmot – U.S. National Park Service, Wilmot Proviso – U.S. Capitol – Visitor Center, FamilySearch.org, Wilmot – Behind the Name

Image: Adapted from David Wilmot (public domain)

Popular baby names in Brazil, 2025

Flag of Brazil
Flag of Brazil

Brazil, the largest and most populous country in South America, welcomes well over 2,000,000 babies every year.

What were the most popular names among last year’s babies specifically? Helena and Ravi, according to data released in mid-December by Arpen-Brasil.

Here are Brazil’s projected top 10 girl names and top 10 boy names of 2025:

Girl names

  1. Helena, 28,271 baby girls
  2. Maitê, 20,677
  3. Cecilia, 20,378
  4. Maria Cecília, 16,889
  5. Aurora, 16,506
  6. Alice, 14,777
  7. Laura, 14,487
  8. Antonella, 10,436
  9. Isis, 10,378
  10. Heloísa, 9,703

Boy names

  1. Ravi, 21,982 baby boys
  2. Miguel, 21,654
  3. Heitor, 17,751
  4. Arthur, 17,514
  5. Theo, 16,766
  6. Gael, 16,201
  7. Bernardo, 15,395
  8. David, 14,425
  9. Noah, 14,182
  10. Samuel, 14,021

Ravi — which replaced Miguel as the country’s No. 1 boy name — has been used by several high-profile Brazilian content creators recently. Influencers Vitória di Felice Moraes (a.k.a., Viih Tube) and Eliezer do Carmo welcomed a son named Ravi in November of 2024, for instance.

I haven’t posted about Brazil’s top baby names in the last few years, but here are the rankings for 2021. (Ravi wasn’t even in the top ten yet at that point!)

Sources:

Image: Adapted from Flag of Brazil (public domain)

How did the “The Mod Squad” influence baby names?

The character Lincoln "Linc" Hayes from the TV series "The Mod Squad" (1968-1973)
Lincoln “Linc” Hayes from “The Mod Squad

The Mod Squad, a police drama that premiered on television in September of 1968, was one of the first prime-time shows to “acknowledge the existence of the hippie counterculture.”

Its protagonists were a diverse trio of streetwise youths — Peter “Pete” Cochran (Michael Cole), Julie Barnes (Peggy Lipton), and Lincoln “Linc” Hayes (Clarence Williams III) — who, after getting into trouble with the law, were given the chance to work as undercover detectives for the L.A.P.D. in lieu of going to jail. Their mentor was Capt. Adam Greer (Tige Andrews).

Notably, Linc — who had been arrested for participating the Watts riots prior to being recruited by Greer — was one of the few prominent African-American characters on television in the 1960s.*

The year after the series started airing, the baby names Linc and Lincoln saw increased usage, and Tige appeared for the very first time in the U.S. baby name data:

Boys named LincolnBoys named LincBoys named Tige
1971181 (rank: 618th)1638
1970146 (rank: 687th)2138
1969105 (rank: 766th)1428*
196871 (rank: 863rd)6.
196798 (rank: 747th)..
*Debut
Actor Tige Andrews in the TV series "The Mod Squad" (1968-1973)
Tige Andrews in “The Mod Squad

Tige, the highest-debuting boy name of 1969, is pronounced like the first part of tiger — which makes sense, given that actor Tige Andrews was born Tiger David Androus in New York City in 1920. His parents, immigrants from Syria, had named him “after a strong animal to ensure good health, following a Syrian custom.”

*Two of the others were Lt. Uhura of Star Trek and Jemal David of The Outcasts.

Sources:

Images: Screenshots of The Mod Squad