Ailany#1 girls baby name is Maryland in 2025

Anonymous
I see that Ailany has been the fastest rising girls name the last two years in the United States, but I wonder why/how it shot up to #1 in Maryland. The rest of the top 5 are more typical. Ailany is not in the top 5 for any other state: https://namerology.com/2026/05/15/the-favorite-baby-names-of-every-state-2025/

#1: Ailany
#2: Charlotte
#3: Olivia
#4: Mia
#5: Sophia

"Ailany has done it again. Against all odds, the name is America’s fastest-rising name of the year for the second year in a row.

In today’s novelty-seeking name culture, just staying popular is impressive. Rising faster than any other baby name, then starting from that elevated position and beating the field again, is astonishing. Two years ago Ailany ranked #857 among all girl’s names, just ahead of Zhuri and Cielo. Today it’s all the way up at #14, ahead of favorites like Harper, Elizabeth and Lily.

Ailany’s two-year trajectory is so dizzying that the NameGrapher can barely contain it."

https://namerology.com/2026/05/10/the-fastest-rising-name-of-the-year-accomplished-something-amazing/
Anonymous
How does one pronounce this name? Why did it shoot up in popularity?

I live under a rock.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:How does one pronounce this name? Why did it shoot up in popularity?

I live under a rock.


I think the I is in there to produce a hard A sound: A-lay-nee

Versus Uh-lay-nee

But what do I know
Anonymous
Dumb name, goodness. Is it popular on TikTok or something?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How does one pronounce this name? Why did it shoot up in popularity?

I live under a rock.


I think the I is in there to produce a hard A sound: A-lay-nee

Versus Uh-lay-nee

But what do I know


Hm. I would have guessed Aye-lah-nee
Anonymous
This can't be right. It's not even a real name!!!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How does one pronounce this name? Why did it shoot up in popularity?

I live under a rock.


I think the I is in there to produce a hard A sound: A-lay-nee

Versus Uh-lay-nee

But what do I know


Hm. I would have guessed Aye-lah-nee


This, like aisle. Aye-lah-nee with the emphasis on the 2nd syllable.
Anonymous
I saw this headline a few weeks ago and it is shocking to me. I have literally never heard this name before.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How does one pronounce this name? Why did it shoot up in popularity?

I live under a rock.


I think the I is in there to produce a hard A sound: A-lay-nee

Versus Uh-lay-nee

But what do I know


Hm. I would have guessed Aye-lah-nee


This, like aisle. Aye-lah-nee with the emphasis on the 2nd syllable.


My guess as well
Anonymous
I’ve met a couple of Ailanys in CA, Hispanic families.
Anonymous
Without even reading the posts i guarantee this is being used by Latinos. Everytime this forum is bemused by a popular name, that’s the case. They aren’t on your radar.
Anonymous
This name is very funny to me because it embodies two sort of self-contradicting naming trends for girls of the last few years.

The first is "unusual names". People really like this idea of giving a kid a name no one has ever heard of. This is obviously funny with Ailany because you know many people who used it thought "oh no one will have this name!" and now it's #14 in the US. And they can never play off that it's a "family name" because it's obviously not. There might be some tiny number of people using this name who have Hawaiian heritage and can say it's a variation on the Hawaiian name Ailani (which has also skyrocketed in popularity in the last 10 years, though not as suddenly or fast as Ailany). Like it's quite obvious they went looking for a name no one they knew would know and found this one.

The other trend is in the sounds in the name. I suspect this is precisely why the name took off like it did -- there are certain sounds and patterns in girls names that have been extremely popular over the last few years and Ailany really embraces them. It starts with an A or an E, is vowel heavy, it's multisyllabic, and has only soft consonants, no harsh sounds. The -ee sound at the end deviates from the predominant trend in recent years which is towards -ah endings in girls names, but otherwise this name is right in keeping with a bunch of other trendy girls names like Eliana, Lilliana, Eloise, and Evelyn. There are also a bunch of two-syllable names with this trend -- Lila, Layla, Isla, Ava, etc.

If you spend a lot of time around kids under 10, you are very familiar with this trend because it produces marble mouth in many teachers and coaches. I've encountered classrooms and teams where it just sounds like all the girls have a variation on the same name (Eva, Ava, Avery, Vera, Rhea, Aria) or where a repeating letter like "L" becomes almost comical (I once knew of a grade level with two Lilys, a Lillia, and a Lilliana, plus an Emilia and a Isla).

My recommendation to parents naming girls today: look for names that don't sound like other names. Embrace a hard consonant. Don't assume that a name needs to be vowel heavy and soft to be feminine or pretty.
Anonymous
I’ve literally never heard this name. It’s so bad.
Anonymous
Never heard it before but I think it’s pretty.
Anonymous
I think they are naming their kids after the energy drink Alani but can't spell it.
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