No Pauly or Francesca on this list.
Jersey Shore, Wawa and Tony Soprano – in 2025, there are specific children’s names known in New Jersey, and the first place for boys and girls may not be what you would think.
Neither are grandmother or grandfather who sounds in any way, despite an increase in popularity in old -fashioned names.
The sad news for Bruce Springsteen or Bon Jovi – parents in Garden State love the names Liam and Noah for their young sons – as they both came to the first and second place, according to the Social Security Administration.

Liam being the most popular should not come as a total shock, given that the number 1 country has been held for the boys’ names for eight years.
The adorable Lucas name came to third place, and to nobody’s surprise, for those from the three-state area, Joseph and Michael received the fourth and fifth points.
For girls for children – Mia was the number 1 choice for New Jerseyans. Sophia came to second place. And Emma came to third place as Olivia fell into fourth place.
Similar to how popular Liam is for boys – the name Olivia has topped the list of girls’ names for six years.
Charlotte rounded the list coming to the fifth place.
Some other visible mention of the names of boys and girls include Anthony, James, Oliver – and Amelia, Isabella and Ava.
It looks like the condition of the pork roll against the debut of Taylor Ham may not be the biggest fan of old -fashioned names, like the rest of the country.
According to Jennifer Moss, founder and CEO of Babynaments.com and children’s consultant Taylor A. Humphrey, names similar to grandmother as Eleanor, Eloise, Elodie, Alma, Margaret, Nora and Bennett are known for 2025, originally reported by Yahoo! Life.
“On the guys’ side, we are seeing the” name of trade “, or old-fashioned names, Stick-like Theodore, Oliver, Owen, Sila and Jasper,” said Colleen Slagen, the author of the next book “Naming Bebe” also told The Outlet.
“… I’m listening to Hayes, Lachlan, Palmer, Soren, Sterling and Theodore,” Humphrey added.
While some parents are giving their babies mature names – others are choosing the simplest path.
“More families in the JBA come from mixed cultural backgrounds, and I hear that parents usually require them to want their child to travel and have a relatively easy name to understand,” said Sophie Kihm, editor -in -chief of Numeriberry, a children’s appointment website.
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Image Source : nypost.com