Italian names are famously melodic, ending in open vowels that give them a sing-song romance. This tool draws from a curated set of Italian names — nationally popular choices alongside distinctive regional favourites from Venice, Naples, and Sicily — each shown with its gender and meaning so you can explore options with genuine cultural roots.
How it works
Every name is stored with a gender tag, a literal meaning, and a regional label. When you pick a gender and generate, the tool filters the list, shuffles the matches with an unbiased Fisher–Yates pass, and shows your requested count. Many Italian names form gendered pairs that differ by a final vowel — for example Alessandro and Alessandra — and the list keeps the most common form of each.
Tips and notes
- Regional names carry strong identity: Gennaro and Ciro are deeply Neapolitan, while Rosalia and Salvatore are unmistakably Sicilian.
- Say the full name aloud with your surname — Italian rhythm rewards names whose stressed syllables flow into the family name.
- Remember that Andrea is a boy’s name in Italy; choose a clearly feminine alternative like Andreina if you want it for a girl.