MyBabyNameGuide.com
Find meaning. Find inspiration. Find the name.

New Baby Girl Names in the Top 100 in England & Wales (2024 Latest Analysis)

7 baby girl names cracked the top 100 in 2024 in England & Wales — names that weren't there in 2023. Several jumped many positions in twelve months. That kind of movement used to be rare; now it's part of the norm.

What's behind it? Parents are chasing modern baby names that feel fresh without feeling risky. TikTok, streaming, and celebrity culture amplify what gets chosen. This report tracks names that just became popular: new names in top 100 based on official Office for National Statistics (ONS) data — and how they differ from classic names that have held the line for decades.

Summary

Numbers: 7 new entrants in 2024 (vs. 2023).

Patterns:

  • Length: Most are 1–2 syllables. Short names spread faster and stick better.
  • Endings: Soft vowels (-a, -ie, -y) dominate over hard consonants.
  • Style: Modern over classic; international over strictly Anglo.
  • Gender: Many work for any gender — a marked shift from twenty years ago.
  • Cultural lift: Pop culture and social media can push a name into the mainstream in months.

Insight: Roughly half of new top-100 names fade within a decade. The rest become staples. The survivors usually share: easy pronunciation, no single "moment" tying them to one era, and broad appeal across accents.

New Baby Names in Top 100

Top 7 new baby girl names in the top 100 for 2024. Each entry includes prior rank and a brief take on why it's rising and whether it's likely to stick.

  • Eloise — #85 in 2024 (was #109 in 2023). Moved up from #109 in 2023. Gradual rise suggests organic appeal rather than a spike — international sound and easy spelling support longer-term stability.

  • Nora — #86 in 2024 (was #103 in 2023). Climbed from #103 in 2023. Moderate growth typically indicates parents are discovering it without a single viral push; lower volatility than fast risers.

  • Myla — #89 in 2024 (was #101 in 2023). Entered from #101 in 2023. The incremental path often means broader, steady adoption — appealing to parents who want something distinctive without the risk of a flash trend.

  • Rosa — #94 in 2024 (was #105 in 2023). Moved up from #105 in 2023. Gradual rise suggests organic appeal rather than a spike — international sound and easy spelling support longer-term stability.

  • Athena — #96 in 2024 (was #104 in 2023). Climbed from #104 in 2023. Moderate growth typically indicates parents are discovering it without a single viral push; lower volatility than fast risers.

  • Sara — #97 in 2024 (was #107 in 2023). Entered from #107 in 2023. The incremental path often means broader, steady adoption — appealing to parents who want something distinctive without the risk of a flash trend.

  • Zoe — #99 in 2024 (was #102 in 2023). Moved up from #102 in 2023. Gradual rise suggests organic appeal rather than a spike — international sound and easy spelling support longer-term stability.

Why These Names Are Rising

Cultural exposure: One TV character or influencer baby can move thousands of parents. TikTok and streaming accelerate the cycle — a name can go from obscure to mainstream in a year.

Uniqueness without weirdness: Parents want something that stands out but won't raise eyebrows. Short, modern names hit that note.

Gender-neutral shift: Many new entrants work for any gender. Twenty years ago that was rare; now it's common.

Pronunciation matters: Names that work across accents and languages spread faster. Hard-to-say names rarely break through.

Patterns

New names in top 100 tend to share:

  • Length: 1–2 syllables. Long names rarely break through.
  • Endings: Soft (-a, -ie, -y) over hard. Easier to say and remember.
  • Sound: Modern, international. Less "grandma" than classic picks.
  • Balance: Distinct enough to feel special; familiar enough not to shock.

Names that hit several of these marks often have better odds of lasting. For momentum beyond the top 100, see fastest rising baby girl names.

Stability & Risk

Will they stick? Historical data: about half of new top-100 names fade within 5–10 years. The rest become fixtures. Survivors usually share: no single cultural anchor (a TV-show name can feel dated in a decade), easy pronunciation across accents, and balanced familiarity — not too weird, not too generic.

Lower risk: Classic baby girl names — decades of steady popularity.

Higher upside, higher risk: Fastest rising — names gaining fast, some still outside the top 100.

Comparison: New vs. Stable vs. Rising

New vs. classic: Classics rarely leave the top 100. New names are riskier — some will join them; others will drop out within a few years.

New vs. fastest rising: Fastest rising includes names still climbing, many outside the top 100. New-in-top-100 names have crossed the line — they're mainstream now.

Stability vs. novelty: Trending names offer freshness; the tradeoff is possible datedness if the cultural moment passes. Most popular = what's dominant today. Classics = what endures.

What This Means for Parents

When a new name fits: You want something modern and trending — not yet overused, but already validated by thousands of parents. New names in top 100 hit that spot.

Upside: Fresh, distinctive, often short. Names that just became popular.

Downside: A name tied to one show or moment can feel dated in a decade.

Cross-check: Fastest rising for momentum; most popular for current dominance; classic for stability.

Full Ranking

Full list of new names in top 100 for 2024 in England & Wales. Ranked by current position. Previous rank = 2023; "Not in top 100" = outside the top 100 or unrecorded. Data: Office for National Statistics (ONS).

#NameRank in 2023Positions gainedBirths in 2024Speed
85Eloise#10924556moderate
86Nora#10317549moderate
89Myla#10112522moderate
94Rosa#10511486moderate
96Athena#1048480moderate
97Sara#10710476moderate
99Zoe#1023471moderate

Click any name for history, meaning, origin, and full timeline — plus comparison to fastest rising and most popular names.

Conclusion

Takeaway: New baby names in the top 100 are a real-time signal of what's moving — cultural shifts, social media, and parents chasing modern baby names that feel fresh. Part of this list will fade; part will become tomorrow's classics. The survivors typically share: easy to say, broadly appealing, no single moment that dates them.

Practical use: Want something trending? You have the list. Want lower risk? Classic names. Want maximum momentum? Fastest rising. Want today's hierarchy? Most popular.

Rank Change Overview

Positions gained (previous year → current)

Eloise
24 positions
Nora
17 positions
Myla
12 positions
Rosa
11 positions
Athena
8 positions
Sara
10 positions
Zoe
3 positions
How far each name climbed into the top 100

Related Reports

Fastest rising baby girl names · Most popular 2024 · Classic baby girl names · New baby boy names in top 100

Share this report
Share on Facebook
Share on X
Share on Reddit
Share on Telegram
Copy link