Unisex Surnames

Unisex   Masculine   Feminine
usage
gender
Golub Croatian
Means "pigeon" in Croatian.
Gomes Portuguese
From the medieval given name Gomes.
Gómez Spanish
Spanish form of Gomes.
Gomez Spanish
Unaccented variant of Gómez.
Gomółka Polish
Derived from Polish gomółka, a type of round cheese, ultimately from an old Polish word meaning "round".
Gonçalves Portuguese
Means "son of Gonçalo" in Portuguese.
González Spanish
Means "son of Gonzalo" in Spanish. This is among the most common surnames in Spain.
Gonzalez Spanish
Unaccented variant of González.
Gonzalo Spanish
From the given name Gonzalo.
Good English
From a nickname meaning "good", referring to a kindly person.
Goode English
Variant of Good.
Goodman English
Variant of Good.
Goodwin English
Derived from the given name Godwine.
Goossens Flemish
From the Germanic given name Gozzo.
Göransson Swedish
Means "son of Göran".
Gorbold English
From the given name Gerbold.
Gordon Scottish
From the name of a place in Berwickshire, Scotland, derived from Brythonic words meaning "spacious fort".
Gore English
From the Old English word gara meaning "triangular plot of land".
Goretti Italian
Derived from the given name Gregorio.
Gori Italian
Derived from the given name Gregorio.
Górka Polish
Variant of Gorecki.
Gorman 1 German
From the Old German given name Germund.
Gorman 2 Irish
From the Irish Ó Gormáin meaning "descendant of Gormán". The given name Gormán means "little blue one".
Görög Hungarian
Means "Greek" in Hungarian.
Gosse French
Derived from the Norman given name Gosse.
Gosselin French
Derived from a diminutive of the French given name Gosse.
Gott German
Derived from the Old German given name Goda 1.
Gotti German
Variant of Gott.
Gottlieb German
Derived from the given name Gottlieb.
Gottschalk German
Derived from the given name Gottschalk.
Gough 1 Welsh
Nickname for a red-haired person, from Welsh coch "red".
Gough 2 Irish
Anglicized form of Irish Gaelic Mag Eochadha meaning "son of Eochaidh".
Gouveia Portuguese
From the name of the city of Gouveia in Portugal, of unknown meaning.
Grady Irish
From Irish Ó Gráda or Ó Grádaigh meaning "descendant of Gráda". The byname Gráda means "noble, illustrious".
Graf German
From the German noble title Graf meaning "count", ultimately from Greek γραφεύς (grapheus) meaning "scribe".
Graham Scottish, English
Derived from the English place name Grantham, which probably meant "gravelly homestead" in Old English. The surname was first taken to Scotland in the 12th century by William de Graham.
Grahn Swedish
From Swedish gran meaning "spruce".
Graner German
Originally denoted a person from Gran, the German name for Esztergom, a city in northern Hungary.
Granger English, French
Means "farm bailiff" from Old French grangier, ultimately from Latin granum meaning "grain". It is borne in the Harry Potter novels by Harry's friend Hermione Granger.
Grant English, Scottish
Derived from Norman French meaning "grand, tall, large, great". A famous bearer was the American general and president Ulysses S. Grant (1822-1885).
Granville English
Derived from a Norman place name Grainville.
Grassi Italian
Variant of Grasso.
Grasso Italian
Means "fat" in Italian, originally a nickname for a stout person. It is derived from Latin crassus.
Graves English
Occupational name for a steward, derived from Middle English greyve, related to the German title Graf.
Gray English
From a nickname for a person who had grey hair or grey clothes.
Grayson English
Means "son of the steward", derived from Middle English greyve "steward".
Grbić Serbian, Croatian, Slovene
Means "hunchback", derived from Serbian, Croatian and Slovene grba "hump".
Grec Catalan
Catalan cognate of Greco.
Greco Italian
Means "from Greece" in Italian.
Green English
Descriptive name for someone who often wore the colour green or someone who lived near the village green.
Greenberg German, Jewish
Anglicized form of Grünberg.
Greene English
Variant of Green.
Greenspan Jewish
Anglicized form of German Grünspan meaning "verdigris". Verdigris is the green-blue substance that forms on copper.
Greenwood English
Topographic name for someone who lived in or near a lush forest, from Old English grene "green" and wudu "wood".
Greer Scottish
Derived from the given name Gregor.
Gregory English
From the given name Gregory.
Grey English
Variant of Gray.
Grgić Croatian
Means "son of Grgur".
Grier Scottish
Derived from the given name Gregor.
Grieve Scottish
Occupational name meaning "steward, farm manager" in Middle English, related to the German title Graf.
Griffin 1 Welsh
Derived from the given name Gruffudd.
Griffin 2 English
Nickname from the mythological beast with body of a lion with head and wings of an eagle. It is ultimately from Greek γρύψ (gryps).
Griffith Welsh, English
Derived from the Welsh given name Gruffudd.
Grigorescu Romanian
Means "son of Grigore" in Romanian.
Grigoryan Armenian
Means "son of Grigor" in Armenian.
Grillo Italian
From an Italian nickname meaning "cricket", perhaps given originally to a cheerful person (the cricket is associated with cheerfulness).
Grimaldi Italian
From the given name Grimaldo. It is the surname of the royal family of Monaco, which came from Genoa.
Grimm German
From a nickname for a stern person, derived from Old High German grim "stern, severe, angry". Famous bearers include Jacob (1785-1863) and Wilhelm Grimm (1786-1859), known for compiling German folktales.
Groen Dutch
Dutch cognate of Green.
Gronchi Italian
From the Tuscan word gronchio meaning "numb, bent". This is an Italian regional surname typical of Tuscany. A famous bearer was the Italian president Giovanni Gronchi (1887-1978).
Groos German
Variant of Groß.
Groot Dutch
Variant of De Groot.
Gros French
Means "thick, fat, big" in French, from Late Latin grossus, possibly of Germanic origin.
Gross German
Variant of Groß.
Groß German
From Old High German groz meaning "tall, big".
Große German
Variant of Groß.
Grosse German
Variant of Groß.
Größel German
Variant of Groß, used in southern Germany.
Großel German
Variant of Groß, used in southern Germany.
Großer German
Variant of Groß.
Grosser German
Variant of Groß.
Grossi Italian
Italian cognate of Gros.
Grosso Italian
Italian cognate of Gros.
Grósz Hungarian
Hungarian form of Groß.
Grover English
From Old English graf meaning "grove of trees". A famous bearer was the American president Grover Cleveland (1837-1908).
Groves English
From Old English graf meaning "grove". This originally indicated a person who lived near a grove (a group of trees).
Gruber Upper German
From German Grube meaning "pit", indicating a person who lived or worked in a pit or depression. This is the most common surname in Austria.
Grünberg German, Jewish
From German grün meaning "green" and Berg meaning "mountain". This name indicated a person who lived on or near a forest-covered mountain.
Grünewald German
Means "green forest" from German grün "green" and Wald "forest".
Grünspan Jewish
Original form of Greenspan.
Grześkiewicz Polish
Derived from the given name Grzegorz.
Guadarrama Spanish
Derived from the name of the town of Guadarrama near Madrid.
Guan Chinese
From Chinese (guān) meaning "frontier pass".
Guarneri Italian
From the given name Guanero, an Italian cognate of Werner.
Guérin French
From the Old German given name Warin.
Guerra Italian, Spanish, Portuguese
From a nickname meaning "war", given to a belligerent person or one engaged in warfare.
Guerrero Spanish
Means "warrior" in Spanish, an occupational name for a soldier. It is derived from Late Latin werra "war", of Germanic origin.
Guerriero Italian
Italian form of Guerrero.
Guevara Spanish
Hispanicized form of Gebara. A notable bearer was Argentine revolutionary Che Guevara (1928-1967).
Guidi Italian
From the given name Guido.
Guillaume French
From the given name Guillaume.
Guillory French
Derived from the Old German given name Williric.
Guillot French
From a diminutive of the given name Guillaume.
Guinness Irish
Variant of McGuinness. The name is well known because of the Guinness brand of ale, established in 1759 by Arthur Guinness.
Gujić Bosnian
Means "son of a snake" from the Bosnian word guja meaning "snake".
Gulbrandsen Norwegian
Means "son of Gulbrand" in Norwegian.
Guldbrandsen Norwegian, Danish
Means "son of Gulbrand" in Norwegian and Danish.
Gully English
Nickname for a big person, from Middle English golias meaning "giant" (ultimately from Goliath, the Philistine warrior who was slain by David in the Old Testament).
Gulyás Hungarian
Means "herdsman, tender of cows" in Hungarian.
Gump German (Rare), Popular Culture
Possibly from a nickname derived from Middle High German gumpen meaning "to hop, to jump". This surname was used by author Winston Groom for the hero of his novel Forrest Gump (1986), better known from the 1994 movie adaptation.
Gundersen Norwegian
Means "son of Gunder".
Günther German
Derived from the given name Günther.
Gunther German
Derived from the given name Günther.
Guo Chinese
From Chinese (guō) meaning "outer city".
Gupta Hindi, Marathi, Bengali, Gujarati, Punjabi, Telugu
Means "protected" in Sanskrit.
Gustafsson Swedish
Means "son of Gustaf". The actress Greta Garbo (1905-1990) was originally named Greta Gustafsson.
Gustavsson Swedish
Means "son of Gustav".
Gutermuth German
Derived from Middle High German guot meaning "good" and muot meaning "mind, spirit". It was a nickname for an optimistic person.
Gutiérrez Spanish
Means "son of Gutierre".
Guttuso Italian
From a Sicilian nickname meaning "sad". It was name of the famous Italian painter Renato Guttuso (born 1912).
Guzmán Spanish
From the name of the town of Guzmán in Burgos, Spain. The town's name itself may be derived from an old Visigothic given name, from the Germanic elements *gautaz "a Geat" and *mannô "person, man".
Gwerder German (Swiss)
From Swiss German gwerig meaning "agile, alert".
Gwózdek Polish
Derived from either archaic Polish gwozd meaning "forest" or gwóźdź meaning "nail".
Gynt Literature
Meaning unknown. This name was used by the Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen for the central character in his play Peer Gynt (1867). Ibsen based the story on an earlier Norwegian folktale Per Gynt.
Haak Dutch
Occupational name meaning "peddler" in Dutch.
Haakonsson Norwegian
Means "son of Håkon".
Haan Dutch
Variant of De Haan.
Haanraads Dutch
Originally indicated a person from Haanrade, a small village in the south of the province of Limburg in the Netherlands.
Haas Dutch, German
Variant of Hase.
Haase German
Variant of Hase.
Haber German, Jewish
Occupational name for one who grew or sold oats, derived from Old High German habaro "oat". As a Jewish surname it is ornamental.
Haberkorn German
Occupational name for a dealer in oats, derived from Old High German habaro "oat" and korn "kernel, grain".
Habich German
German cognate of Hawk.
Habicht German
German cognate of Hawk.
Hackett English
From a diminutive of the medieval byname Hake, which was of Old Norse origin and meant "hook".
Haden English
From a place name derived from Old English hæþ "heath" and dun "hill".
Hadžić Bosnian
From Bosnian hadž meaning "hajj, pilgrimage", ultimately derived from Arabic حَجّ (ḥajj). It originally denoted a person who had completed the hajj.
Hafner German
Occupational name for a potter, derived from Old High German hafan "pot, vessel".
Hagen Norwegian, Dutch
From Old Norse hagi or Old Dutch hago meaning "enclosure, pasture".
Haggard English
From a nickname meaning "wild, untamed, worn", from Old French, ultimately from a Germanic root.
Hagihara Japanese
From Japanese (hagi) meaning "bush clover" and (hara) meaning "field, plain".
Hagopian Armenian
Alternate transcription of Armenian Հակոբյան (see Hakobyan).
Hahn German
From a nickname for a proud or pugnacious person, from Old High German hano meaning "rooster, cock".
Haig English, Scottish
From Old English haga or Old Norse hagi meaning "enclosure, pasture".
Haight English
Topographic name for someone who lived at the top of a hill, derived from Old English heahþu "height, summit".
Hail English
From a nickname derived from Middle English hail meaning "healthy" (of Old Norse origin).
Hailey English
Variant of Haley.
Haines English
Variant of Haynes.
Hajós Hungarian
Means "boatman, sailor" in Hungarian.
Håkansson Swedish
Means "son of Håkan".
Hakim Arabic
Derived from the given name Hakim.
Hakobyan Armenian
Means "son of Hakob" in Armenian.
Halász Hungarian
Means "fisherman" in Hungarian.
Hale English
Derived from Old English halh meaning "nook, recess, hollow".
Haley English
From the name of an English town meaning "hay clearing", from Old English heg "hay" and leah "woodland, clearing".
Hall English, German, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish
Means simply "hall", given to one who either lived in or worked in a hall (the house of a medieval noble).
Halle German
German variant of Hall.
Hallman Swedish
From Swedish hall (Old Norse hallr) meaning "rock, boulder, slab" and man (Old Norse maðr) meaning "person, man".
Halloran Irish
From Irish Ó hAllmhuráin meaning "descendant of Allmhurán". The given name Allmhurán means "stranger from across the sea".
Halmi Hungarian
Derived from Hungarian halom meaning "mound, small hill". Originally the name was given to someone who lived near or on a hill.
Halvorsen Norwegian
Means "son of Halvor".
Hamaguchi Japanese
From Japanese (hama) meaning "beach, seashore" and (kuchi) meaning "mouth, entrance".
Hämäläinen Finnish
Derived from the region in southern Finland known as Häme, also called Tavastia.
Hamasaki Japanese
From Japanese (hama) meaning "beach, seashore" and (saki) meaning "cape, peninsula".
Hambleton English
From various English place names, derived from Old English hamel "crooked, mutilated" and tun "enclosure, yard, town".
Hamilton English, Scottish
From an English place name, derived from Old English hamel "crooked, mutilated" and dun "hill". This was the name of a town in Leicestershire, England (which no longer exists).
Hamm English
Means "river meadow" in Old English.
Hammond English
From the Norman given name Hamo or the Old Norse given name Hámundr.
Hampson English
Means "son of Hamo".
Hampton English
From the name of multiple towns in England, derived from Old English ham "home" or ham "water meadow, enclosure" and tun "enclosure, yard, town".
Han Chinese, Korean
From Chinese (hán) referring to the ancient state of Han, which existed from the 5th to 3rd centuries BC in what is now Shanxi and Henan provinces.
Hancock English
From a diminutive of the medieval name Hann.
Hanley English
From various English place names meaning "high meadow" in Old English.
Hansen Norwegian, Danish
Means "son of Hans". This is the most common surname in Norway, and the third most common in Denmark.
Hanson English
Means "son of Hann".
Hanssen Norwegian
Means "son of Hans".
Hansson Swedish
Means "son of Hans".
Haraguchi Japanese
From Japanese (hara) meaning "field, plain" and (kuchi) meaning "mouth, entrance".
Haraldsen Norwegian
Means "son of Harald".
Haraldsson Swedish
Means "son of Harald".
Harden English
From a place name meaning "hare valley" in Old English.
Hardie Scottish
Scots variant of Hardy.
Harding English
Derived from the given name Heard. A famous bearer was American president Warren G. Harding (1865-1923).
Hardwick English
From Old English heord "herd" and wic "village, town".
Hardy English, French
From Old French and Middle English hardi meaning "bold, daring, hardy", from the Germanic root *harduz.
Harel Jewish
Ornamental name adopted from a biblical place name meaning "altar, mountain of God" in Hebrew.
Harford English
Habitational name from places called Harford in Gloucestershire and Devon, meaning "hart ford" or "army ford".
Hargrave English
Derived from Old English har meaning "grey" and graf "grove".
Harland English
From various place names meaning "hare land" in Old English.
Harley English
Derived from a place name meaning "hare clearing", from Old English hara "hare" or hær "rock, heap of stones" and leah "woodland, clearing".
Harlow English
Habitational name derived from a number of locations named Harlow, from Old English hær "rock, heap of stones" or here "army", combined with hlaw "hill".
Harmaajärvi Finnish
Means "grey lake" in Finnish.
Harman English
From the given name Herman.
Harmon English
From the given name Herman.
Harper English
Originally belonged to a person who played the harp or who made harps.
Harrell English
From the given name Harold.
Harrelson English
Means "son of Harold". A famous bearer of this surname is the American actor Woody Harrelson (1961-).
Harrington English
From the name of towns in England, meaning either "Hæfer's town" or "stony town" in Old English.
Harris English
Means "son of Harry".
Harrison English
Means "son of Harry".
Hart English
Means "male deer". It was originally acquired by a person who lived in a place frequented by harts, or bore some resemblance to a hart.
Hartell English
From various place names derived from Old English heorot "hart, male deer" and hyll "hill".
Hartley English
Habitational name for someone originally from any of the various locations in England named Hartley, from Old English heorot "hart, male deer" and leah "woodland, clearing".
Hartman Dutch, German
Dutch and Americanized form of Hartmann.
Hartmann German
From the German given name Hartmann.
Harutyunyan Armenian
Means "son of Harutyun" in Armenian.
Harvey English
From the Breton given name Haerviu (see Harvey).
Hase German
From Middle High German and Middle Low German hase meaning "hare, rabbit". This was a nickname for a person who was quick or timid.
Hasegawa Japanese
From the Japanese place name 長谷 (Hase, not a standard reading) combined with (kawa) meaning "river, stream".
Hasenkamp German
From a northern German place name meaning "rabbit field", from Old Saxon haso "hare" and kamp "field" (from Latin campus).
Hashemi Persian
From the given name Hashem.
Hashiguchi Japanese
From Japanese (hashi) meaning "bridge" and (kuchi) meaning "mouth, entrance".
Hashimoto Japanese
From Japanese (hashi) meaning "bridge" and (moto) meaning "base, root, origin".
Hass German
From the given name Hasso.
Hassan Arabic, Persian, Urdu
From the given name Hassan.
Hathaway English
Habitational name for someone who lived near a path across a heath, from Old English hæþ "heath" and weg "way".
Hauer German
Derived from Middle High German houwen "to chop", referring to a butcher or woodchopper.
Haugen Norwegian
Means "hill" in Norwegian, referring to a person who lived on a hilltop.
Haumann German
Derived from Middle High German houwen "to chop" and man "man", referring to a butcher or woodchopper.
Haupt German
German cognate of Head.
Häusler German
Name for someone who lived in a house with no land, derived rom Old High German word hus meaning "house".
Havener German
Variant of Hafner.
Havrylyuk Ukrainian
From a diminutive of the given name Havryil.
Hawk English
Originally a nickname for a person who had a hawk-like appearance or who acted in a fierce manner, derived from Old English hafoc "hawk".
Hawking English
From a diminutive of Hawk. A famous bearer was the British physicist Stephen Hawking (1942-2018).
Hawkins English
From a diminutive of Hawk.
Hawthorne English
Denoted a person who lived near a hawthorn bush, a word derived from Old English hagaþorn, from haga meaning "enclosure, yard" and þorn meaning "thorn bush". A famous bearer was the American writer Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864), author of The Scarlet Letter.
Hayasaka Japanese
From Japanese (haya) meaning "already, now" and 坂 or 阪 (saka) meaning "slope".
Hayashi Japanese
From Japanese (hayashi) meaning "forest".
Hayden 1 English
From place names meaning either "hay valley" or "hay hill", derived from Old English heg "hay" and denu "valley" or dun "hill".
Hayden 2 Irish
Anglicized form of Ó hÉideáin or Ó hÉidín.
Hayes 1 English
From various English place names that were derived from Old English hæg meaning "enclosure, fence". A famous bearer was American President Rutherford B. Hayes (1822-1893).
Hayes 2 Irish
Anglicized form of Irish Ó hAodha meaning "descendant of Aodh".
Hayes 3 Jewish
Matronymic name derived from the given name Chaya.
Hayley English
Variant of Haley.
Haynes English
Patronymic derived from the Norman name Hagano.
Hayter English
Name for a person who lived on a hill, from Middle English heyt meaning "height".
Hayward English
Occupational name for a person who protected an enclosed forest, from Old English hæg "enclosure, fence" and weard "guard".
Haywood English
From various place names meaning "fenced wood" in Old English.
He Chinese
From Chinese (), representing a southern pronunciation of the name of the ancient state of Han (see Han). After Han was destroyed by the state of Qin, those who resettled further south changed their name to this character in order to match the local pronunciation.
Head English
From Middle English hed meaning "head", from Old English heafod. It may have referred to a person who had a peculiar head, who lived near the head of a river or valley, or who served as the village headman.
Headley English
From place names meaning "heather clearing" in Old English.
Hearn Irish
Anglicized form of Ó hEachthighearna.
Heath English
Originally belonged to a person who was a dweller on the heath or open land.
Hébert French
Derived from the given name Herbert.
Hedlund Swedish
From Swedish hed (Old Norse heiðr) meaning "heath, moor" and lund (Old Norse lundr) meaning "grove".
Heeren Dutch
From Dutch heer "lord, master", a nickname for a person who acted like a lord or who worked for a lord.
Heffernan Irish
From Irish Ó hIfearnáin meaning "descendant of Ifearnán". The byname Ifearnán means "little demon".
Hegedűs Hungarian
Means "fiddler" in Hungarian, from hegedű "violin".
Heidrich German
From the Old German given name Heidrich.
Heijman Dutch
Patronymic from a diminutive of the given name Hendrik.
Heikki Finnish
From the given name Heikki.
Heikkilä Finnish
From the given name Heikki with the suffix -lä indicating a place.
Heikkinen Finnish
From the given name Heikki.
Heiman Jewish
From the given name Chayyim.
Heimans Dutch
Variant of Heijman.
Heimisson Icelandic
Means "son of Heimir".
Heinonen Finnish
From the given name Heino.
Heinrich German
Derived from the given name Heinrich.
Heinrichs German
Derived from the given name Heinrich.
Heintze German
Derived from a diminutive of Heinrich.
Heinz German
Derived from a diminutive of Heinrich.
Hellström Swedish
From Swedish häll (Old Norse hallr), a type of flat rock, combined with ström (Old Norse straumr) meaning "stream".
Hendrickx Flemish
Derived from the given name Hendrik.
Hendriks Dutch
Derived from the given name Hendrik.
Hendrikx Dutch
Derived from the given name Hendrik.
Hendrix Dutch
Derived from the given name Hendrik. A famous bearer was the American rock musician Jimi Hendrix (1942-1970).
Hendry Scottish, English
Derived from the given name Henry.
Hennessy Irish
Anglicized form of Irish Ó hAonghuis meaning "descendant of Aonghus".
Hennig German
From a diminutive of the given name Heinrich.
Henningsen Danish
Means "son of Henning".