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Place Boy Names

Geographic names used as first names — cities, regions, and landmarks that have crossed over into common use. Brooklyn, Hudson, Boston, Kingston all read as standalone now.

Cultural roots and tradition

Place names — city, region, or geographic feature names used as first names — were rare a century ago and are now mainstream. Some reference cities the parents loved or where the child was conceived; others (Sydney, Dakota, Brooklyn) have moved so far from their origins that they read as standalone names. Geographic names cluster heavily around US locations, biblical places, and short, recognizable European cities.

What this meaning carries

This list groups names by their place association rather than by linguistic origin. That means names with very different etymologies sit next to each other — what unites them is the imagery or association they share. If you came here looking for names from a specific tradition (Irish, Italian, Hebrew), our origin-based lists are linked below.

Popularity trends (US SSA data)

Place names for boys have been on a clear upswing in US data since around 2018. The Social Security Administration tracks dozens of place names that have moved up multiple hundreds of positions in the rankings over the past decade. The trend pairs with broader shifts: parents drifting away from the top 10 mainstream picks, toward names that feel either personal or culturally rich.

Pronunciation notes for American audiences

Most place names on this list read phonetically in American English. A few have alternate spellings or stress patterns depending on tradition — say each candidate out loud with your surname before committing. The names that flow easily are the ones people will pronounce confidently for 80+ years.

The list

Brooklyn
broken land
Hudson
son of Hudd
Kingston
king's town
Boston
from the town of St. Botolph
Camden
winding valley
Carson
son of the marsh-dweller
Cassidy
curly-haired
Cleveland
land of cliffs
Dallas
valley meadow
Dayton
ditch settlement
Denver
green valley
Memphis
place of good abode
Phoenix
rising from ashes, city in AZ
Reno
renowned
Sydney
wide meadow
Trenton
Trent's town
Tucson
spring at the foot of black mountain
Vegas
the meadows
Cairo
victorious city
Dublin
black pool
Israel
to wrestle with God
Jordan
to descend
Kenya
mountain of whiteness
Milan
of central plain
Nile
great river
Orion
hunter constellation
Paris
city of light
Rio
river
Romeo
from Rome
Zion
highest point

Middle name and sibling pairing

Place names pair well with classic, simple middle names that don't compete for attention. If the first name is strongly themed (e.g., River, Willow, Theodore), a more neutral middle (James, Anne, Marie, Edward) keeps the full name balanced. For sibling sets, you can either keep the theme consistent (a nature family: River, Willow, Forrest) or mix it with classics.

What to consider before committing

Before committing to a place name, do three things: say it aloud with the surname; check what initials the full name produces (you don't want unintended acronyms); and look up the current SSA popularity ranking so you know whether you're picking a top-10 name or something rarer. Personal taste matters more than trend data — the name your child carries for life should feel right to you, not optimized for SEO.

Still looking? Try our Baby Name Finder tool.

Filter by origin, meaning, popularity, and gender to narrow your shortlist. Save your favorites and download as a PDF.

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How to pick a name

A great name balances three things: it sounds right with your last name, it carries meaning you can share with your child later, and it works at every stage of life — daycare nametag, school yearbook, job interview, dinner party introduction. Say each shortlist name out loud with your last name. Imagine yourself shouting it across a park. The right one usually emerges.

If you're choosing across two cultures, consider names that travel well — short, phonetic spellings; broadly pronounceable across languages. Names with deep cultural roots feel grounded even if the rest of life is global.