Home / Pregnancy / Baby Names These baby names have exploded in popularity since 1990 Palina Liashkovich/Stocksy Is yours on the list? By Alexandra Frost November 1, 2023 Palina Liashkovich/Stocksy Rectangle Inside this article The skyrocketing popularity of Amelia The most unique states The most popular baby names across generations The once-popular baby names declining across generations Newsflash: Your baby’s sweet new name is probably not that new. Recently, WordFinder dug through Social Security Administration data to analyze names by year, generation, and region to determine the most popular baby names over recent decades. Here’s what they found. The skyrocketing popularity of Amelia This name started gaining traction in 1990, and has increased by 142,925% since then. If you are old enough to remember Amelia Bedelia, you get why. That big number just means there might be a whole gaggle of Amelias in your kid’s class. Similarly vibed names, Taylor and Katherine, have fallen in popularity by 99%, they report. Related: Everything you need to know about popular baby names—and if it’s the right choice for you The most unique states If you are in Hawaii, Wyoming or Vermont, you are more likely to use an “uncommon name,” the report showed. Similarly, Mississippi had the most fiction-inspired names. The most popular baby names across generations Sure, we can check out Nameberry’s predictions for this year, and they’ve done an excellent job tracking recent years. But, if you go way back, this study points to additional girls’ names beyond Amelia as consistently and exponentially growing in popularity across three decades, including: Naomi Sadie Leilani Audrey Ariana Eliza Madison Grace Aubrey For boys, the following names have been rising for those three decades: Noah Beau Mason Jack Jeremiah Isaiah Arthur Weston Landon Parker Related: 100+ unique baby names as special as your new little one The once-popular baby names declining across generations Some names aren’t standing the test of time. Though naming a child is a deeply personal decision, some people choose to monitor trends to see which names will remain popular in future years. For those keeping an eye on declining names, the following data might be of interest. Here are the names that are seeing a multi-decade decrease in popularity: Laura Amy Alexandra Ashley Brooke Kylie Rachel Kiara And for boys: Blake Patrick Tyler Manuel Peter Louis Zachary Nathaniel Javier Nicholas Related: 1,000 baby boy names from A to Z Generations name differently As anticipated, Gen Zers aren’t following Boomers’ or Millennials’ naming patterns. Boomers’ top names (for themselves, not for their kids) were Mary and Linda, James and Michael; Millennials’ top names were Jessica and Ashley, Michael and Christopher; Gen Z’s top names were Emily and Emma, Jacob and Michael. Michael is the only name across all the generations’ choices hanging out in the top two names across time.To learn more about naming trends through the generations, check out your own region here. Inside this article The skyrocketing popularity of Amelia The most unique states The most popular baby names across generations The once-popular baby names declining across generations The latest Baby Names 25 magical December baby names Pregnancy A groundbreaking preeclampsia study could transform care for moms and babies Pregnancy This is how pregnancy transforms the brain, according to a new study Pregnancy PSA: Exercising while pregnant may cut your child’s asthma risk by half