WASHINGTON ā Dutton and Wrenlee are on the rise but theyāre no match for champs Liam and Olivia as the top baby names in the U.S. last year.
The Social Security Administration released the annual list Friday. The agency tracks baby names in each state based on applications for Social Security cards, with names dating to 1880.
Itās Liamās sixth straight year as No. 1. Olivia has reigned since the name unseated Emma four years ago. Emma is No. 2.
The toes of a baby are seen July 29, 2020, in McAllen, Texas. Wondering what the top baby names of 2022 were? TheĀ Social Security Administration has released the most popular names of the past year.
Coming in third for girlsā names is Charlotte, followed by Amelia, Sophia, Isabella, Ava, Mia, Evelyn and Luna. For boysā names, Liam is followed by Noah, Oliver, James, Elijah, William, Henry, Lucas, Benjamin and Theodore.
Luna is the only newcomer in the Top 10, booting Harper.
The agency has been compiling the list since 1997, often revealing the impact pop culture has on baby naming trends. The smash hit āYellowstoneā has clearly influenced new parents. The neo-Western starring Kevin Costner debuted in 2018, with characters surfacing among baby names ever since.
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Dutton moved up the Social Security list to 835, a change of 986 spots from 2021. Itās the last name of the fictional family featured on the series, and it counts Costnerās John Dutton in its ranks. Dutton is the fastest rising name in the Social Security rankings.
Another Dutton name follows actual Dutton as a star with a bullet among baby names. Kayce, as in Kayce John Dutton on the show, moved to the 587th most popular name, up from 1,077 the year before. Luke Grimes plays Kayce.
Rip, also from āYellowstone,ā has grabbed some naming attention, but it didnāt crack Social Securityās top 1,000. Cole Hauserās Rip Wheeler is Dutton adjacent as the son-in-law of John.
Other names rising fast for boys: Chosen, Khaza, Eithan. For girls, Wrenlee is followed by Neriah, Arlet, Georgina and Amiri.
The Social Security Administrationās latest data shows 3.64 million babies in the U.S. were issued Social Security cards last year, up slightly from 2021.

