Recorded 1999–2023 Boys' name Peak 2022 86 births

Aitor — boys' name

86 babies named Aitor in U.S. Social Security records since 1999, with the highest year being 2022. Year-by-year trend, decade aggregates, and state-level rankings drawn from federal birth data.

1990s52000s112010s342020s36
2020s
Peak decade

42% of everyone ever named Aitor was born in this single decade.

2022
Single peak year

15 babies were named Aitor in 2022 — its busiest year on record.

What the Data Says About Aitor

The Social Security Administration has registered 86 babies named Aitor between 1999 and 2023, spanning 25 consecutive years of U.S. birth records. As a boy's name, Aitor currently falls outside the top 1,000 boys' names for 2023. The name reached its historical peak in 2022, when 15 babies received it in a single year.

Decade-level aggregation shows that Aitor performed strongest in the 2020s, accumulating 36 births during that ten-year window. Across the 4 decades of recorded activity, Aitor shows a stable profile with only moderate drift from its peak decade. Geographically, the name is most concentrated in Florida, which accounts for 5 births — the largest state-level total in the dataset — followed by . In total, SSA state-level files list Aitor in 1 of the 51 U.S. reporting jurisdictions.

No etymological entry is currently available for Aitor in our reference dataset. These figures derive from SSA's annual national and state-level name files, which include any name appearing at least five times in a given year or state-year; names below that threshold are suppressed for privacy and therefore excluded from the totals shown here. The 86 total represents a lower bound — actual usage may be higher in years or states where the count fell below the disclosure floor. This page is provided for informational and research purposes only and does not constitute personal, legal, or naming advice.

Aitor at a glance

Last recorded 2023

Total births

86

Since 1999

25 years of records

Peak year

2022

15 births that year

Strongest decade: 2020s

Current rank

Unranked

Outside the modern top-1,000

As of 2023

Active since

1999

Recorded for 25 years

Last year on file: 2023

Aitor popularity over time

Annual U.S. births registered with the Social Security Administration · 2023–1999

Last recorded 2023
Peak year (2022)
15
Annual births at peak — across 25 years of records
05101520 20232022202020192018201720152013200520021999 5

Aitor by decade

Total births in each ten-year window — peak vs trough at a glance

Peak: 2020s
Peak decade
2020s
36 births that decade — 42% of Aitor's all-time total
1990s52000s112010s342020s36

Aitor by state

Where Aitor concentrates geographically — total births since 1999

Geographically diffuse
Top 1 states by recorded births for the name Aitor
Rank State Visual share Births Share of total
#1 Florida
5 5.8%
Florida share of Aitor's total US births 5.8%

5 of 86 births nationwide.

Frequently Asked Questions

How popular is the name Aitor?
86 babies have been named Aitor since 1999. It was last recorded in 2023. The peak year was 2022 with 15 births.
When was Aitor most popular?
Aitor was most popular in the 2020s decade with 36 total births. The single peak year was 2022.
Where is Aitor most popular?
The top states for the name Aitor are Florida (5 births).
How long has the name Aitor been used?
Aitor has been recorded in Social Security data since 1999, spanning 25 years of data through 2023.
What names are similar to Aitor?
Names with a similar sound or spelling include Aithan, Aitan, Aithen, Aito. These share a common prefix and are also used for boys.

Data Sources

Data as of 2024. Source: U.S. Social Security Administration (SSA).

Primary: Source: U.S. Social Security Administration, Baby Names from Social Security Card Applications — National Data, 1999–2023 (ssa.gov/oact/babynames). National-level data includes all names with 5 or more occurrences in a given year.

State-level: Source: U.S. Social Security Administration, Baby Names — State-Level Files (namesbystate.zip). Includes all names with 5 or more occurrences per state per year; rarer names are excluded for privacy.