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Fastest Rising Baby Boy Names in Canada (Last 5 Years)

Last updated: 3/5/2026

Choosing a baby name is exciting — and sometimes overwhelming. Many parents look for names that feel fresh, modern, and current, without immediately becoming overused.

This report compares 2019 and 2024 to identify the baby boy names that gained the strongest momentum. One standout is Luca, which grew from 477 births in 2019 to 815 in 2024 (+338, 71.0%).

Canadian naming trends often mirror both U.S. and British influences, creating a hybrid pattern of acceleration.

Quick highlights

  • Top breakout by total growth: Luca — from 477 births in 2019 to 815 in 2024 (+338, 71.0%).
  • Fastest percentage acceleration: Nirvair, Gurniwaz, Agastya.
  • Established names gaining strength: Theodore.

Naming trend dynamics

This ranking covers 50 names with a combined growth of 6,246 additional births. Compared to typical year-over-year fluctuations, this period shows unusually strong acceleration. The average growth per name is 125 births, indicating broader structural shifts rather than isolated spikes. The overall growth rate is 254.6%.

Growth rates vary widely across names — some show sharp spikes while others remain flat, suggesting a dynamic period with competing trends.

The top 3 account for only 14% of growth — momentum is distributed across many names.

A large share show explosive percentage growth; many are emerging from a low base rather than established names.

The average (254.6%) is well above the median (72.0%), so a handful of high-percentage gainers pull the average up.

Distribution of growth across the ranking

While the leading names attract attention, growth is not concentrated at the very top of the ranking.

Across the full list of 50 names, the increase is spread across multiple tiers — from breakout names with dramatic acceleration to established favorites gaining steady traction.

This distribution suggests that naming trends are currently diversified rather than dominated by a single viral phenomenon.

In practical terms, this means parents are exploring a wide range of styles simultaneously — vintage revivals, soft phonetic endings, nature-inspired names, and internationally influenced choices.

Momentum vs. saturation

High growth does not automatically mean a name is becoming overused.

Some names on this list started from relatively modest birth counts and are now entering the mainstream. Others were already widely used and continue to grow steadily.

For example, names with significant birth volume in 2024 combine popularity with continued momentum — a sign of strong, sustained appeal.

Meanwhile, names with explosive percentage growth may represent early-stage trends. These can either stabilize into long-term favorites or fade after a short spike.

Understanding this difference helps parents balance uniqueness with long-term familiarity.

What could happen next?

If current patterns continue, several of these names may enter higher popularity tiers over the next few years.

Sustained multi-year growth typically signals structural trend shifts rather than short-term cultural influence.

However, baby naming cycles can be unpredictable. Media exposure, celebrity usage, and broader cultural shifts often accelerate or slow down momentum.

Monitoring whether growth continues beyond the initial breakout phase will reveal which names become lasting favorites and which remain short-lived trends.

Visual overview

Longer bars indicate stronger momentum.

Growth comparison

Luca
+338 births
Zorawar
+303 births
Theodore
+259 births
Arjan
+241 births
Muhammad
+224 births
Theo
+186 births
August
+181 births
Levi
+174 births
Miles
+174 births
Beau
+157 births
Additional births (2019 → 2024)

How the ranking works

The ranking is ordered by the absolute increase in births between 2019 and 2024: names with the largest numerical gain appear first. For each name, the table shows birth counts in both years and the change (additional births). A name that gains 500 births ranks higher than one that gains 200, regardless of their starting size. Absolute change reflects real impact on popularity — it tells you how many more families chose that name, not just how much it grew relative to a small base.

Full ranking

The table below includes the complete ranking of the fastest rising baby boy names in Canada, based on official Statistics Canada birth data. It shows birth counts in both years and the absolute change (additional births) for each name.

#NameBirths in 2019Births in 2024Change
1Luca477815+338
2Zorawar64367+303
3Theodore1,1701,429+259
4Arjan51292+241
5Muhammad492716+224
6Theo710896+186
7August104285+181
8Levi735909+174
9Miles373547+174
10Beau318475+157
11Gurbaaz28179+151
12Brooks233382+149
13Nirvair6150+144
14Jules219358+139
15Ivaan31164+133
16Zayn206331+125
17Waris19142+123
18Arlo202322+120
19Atlas146265+119
20Colter24141+117
21Casey89204+115
22Myles324437+113
23Tate38149+111
24Elio56166+110
25Wesley427534+107
26Walker113219+106
27Leon261366+105
28Maverick524626+102
29Romeo107206+99
30Arthur785883+98
31Hayes88182+94
32Cooper268360+92
33Robin107198+91
34Ezra400489+89
35Kai380468+88
36Ibrahim256342+86
37Eloi158243+85
38Gurniwaz590+85
39Nirvaan19101+82
40Yusuf141222+81
41Waylon110190+80
42Avyaan1694+78
43Callum180258+78
44Bennett452528+76
45Rowan345421+76
46Musa102177+75
47Mehtab36110+74
48Agastya879+71
49Aveer2394+71
50Banks879+71

Want to see long-term trends? Click any name above to explore its historical ranking, meaning, origin, and full popularity timeline.

What this means for parents

Rising names can feel exciting — they suggest a name that's gaining traction without yet being overused. At the same time, today's hot trend may cool quickly; names that spike fast sometimes fade faster.

The sweet spot is often a name with steady growth rather than a dramatic spike. It suggests genuine, sustained interest rather than a fleeting moment. Balance uniqueness with familiarity: a name that feels fresh but not so unusual that it feels risky. Looking at both growth and total birth volume together provides a more balanced view than focusing on either metric alone.

About this analysis

This analysis is based on official Statistics Canada birth statistics.

  • Percentage growth can appear dramatic when the starting number of births is small.
  • National data does not reflect regional or local naming differences.
  • Year-over-year changes may be influenced by cultural trends, media exposure, or demographic shifts.

We periodically refresh the report as new official data becomes available.

Explore related baby name trends

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