Baby names
DueDateLab baby-name pages report popularity and trend data sourced directly from the U.S. Social Security Administration. Each page shows where a name sits in the most recent SSA national ranking, how often it has been recorded over time, and a small set of related names. Pages do not include meanings, origins, pronunciation, or cultural usage notes. See the names methodology for how we source the data, how we handle missing counts, and how SSA tabulates names.
Names available now
These name pages are sourced from the SSA 2025 release. Each page shows the name’s latest SSA rank, recorded birth count, trend pattern, and related names where the data supports them.
- Olivia, ranked #1 in the female SSA series in 2025 with 13,544 births.
- Liam, ranked #1 in the male SSA series in 2025 with 20,818 births.
- Charlotte, ranked #2 in the female SSA series in 2025 with 13,400 births.
- Mateo, ranked #8 in the male SSA series in 2025 with 11,045 births.
- Avery, ranked #37 in the female SSA series and #291 in the male SSA series in 2025.
How we handle the data
Every page is tied to a specific SSA release year. When a name has fewer than five recorded births in a year, SSA does not publish the count, and the page reports it as “not reported in SSA public data” rather than as zero. Sex-series labels reflect the sex recorded on the Social Security card application, which is not a statement about gender identity. Hyphens and spaces are removed before names are counted in the SSA tabulation. Full details are in the names methodology.
What these pages do not cover
DueDateLab name pages do not report meanings, etymological origins, pronunciation guides, religious or ethnic classification, lists of famous people, or AI-generated personality descriptions. Those topics require reliable licensed sources and separate editorial review before they belong on the site.
Last updated May 15, 2026.