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Swedish Names

Svenska namn

Swedish names combine Old Norse heritage with Lutheran Christian tradition, a distinctively Swedish stratum of nature-inspired surname compounds, and a contemporary internationalism visible in Statistics Sweden’s (Statistiska centralbyrån, SCB) annual rankings. A Swedish name follows the Western given-name-first convention: given name(s) followed by a hereditary surname. Sweden’s comprehensive name frequency data extends back to 1980 for given names, while surname data is maintained across all registered residents of Sweden’s 10.5 million people. Swedish surnames are dominated by the -sson suffix (Johansson, Andersson, Karlsson, Eriksson, Larsson, Nilsson), the most frequent type in the country. These originated as living patronymics—Johan’s son, Anders’s son, Karl’s son—and were fixed as hereditary surnames under the Names Act of 1901, which required all Swedish citizens to adopt a permanent family name. The resulting surname concentration is extreme: the five most common Swedish surnames (Johansson, Andersson, Karlsson, Nilsson, Eriksson) are shared by more than 1.6 million Swedes. The second major stratum of Swedish surnames consists of the allotment names (allotment system, älfälla) created for soldiers enrolled in the Carolina allotment system (indelningsverket) from the late 17th century. Soldiers required a unique surname for military registers, and since patronymics were too similar within a regiment, they adopted new surnames formed from two Swedish nature words: Lindberg (linden tree + mountain), Strömberg (stream + mountain), Ekström (oak + stream), Bergqvist (mountain + twig), Lindqvist (linden + twig), Holmgren (island + branch), Sjögren (sea + branch). These compound surnames—aesthetically distinctive and immediately identifiable as Swedish—spread beyond the military context when the 1901 Act prompted civilians to choose new surnames, and many non-military families adopted the same type of compound. Swedish given names span Old Norse heroic names (Sigrid, Astrid, Bjorn, Gunnar, Ingrid), Christian names (Johan, Anders, Maria, Kristina, Magnus), and a contemporary layer of Nordic, European, and global names. According to SCB data, the most popular given names of the 2020s include Elsa, Maja, Alice, Astrid, and Vera for girls; Noah, Liam, Oliver, Hugo, and Axel for boys. Elsa’s surge after Disney’s Frozen (2013) is documented in SCB statistics, demonstrating the global cultural forces now shaping Swedish naming.

Name Trends

Popularity data available from 1998 to 2022 (25 years).

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Popular Given Names

शीर्ष उपनाम

# उपनाम मूल लिपि जनसंख्या
1 Andersson Andersson 240000
2 Johansson Johansson 238000
3 Karlsson Karlsson 220000
4 Nilsson Nilsson 175000
5 Eriksson Eriksson 155000
6 Larsson Larsson 145000
7 Olsson Olsson 140000
8 Persson Persson 138000
9 Svensson Svensson 130000
10 Gustafsson Gustafsson 125000
11 Pettersson Pettersson 120000
12 Jonsson Jonsson 95000
13 Jansson Jansson 88000
14 Hansson Hansson 82000
15 Bengtsson Bengtsson 78000
16 Jonsson Jonsson 75000
17 Lindberg Lindberg 68000
18 Jakobsson Jakobsson 60000
19 Magnusson Magnusson 58000
20 Olofsson Olofsson 55000
21 Lindstrom Lindstrom 52000
22 Lindqvist Lindqvist 50000
23 Lindgren Lindgren 48000
24 Axelsson Axelsson 45000
25 Berg Berg 42000
26 Bergstrom Bergstrom 40000
27 Lundberg Lundberg 38000
28 Lind Lind 36000
29 Lundgren Lundgren 34000
30 Berglund Berglund 32000

Compare Swedish Names With Other Cultures

See how Swedish Names naming traditions compare to other cultures worldwide.