Japanese Last Names

Surnames ranked by popularity, with kanji, meanings, and origins. If you searched "last name generator Japanese" or "Japanese surnames," this page is your complete reference.

The Origins of Japanese Surnames

Japanese family names (苗字, myōji, or 氏, uji) have a rich and complex history that spans over a thousand years. Unlike given names, which could be changed throughout life, surnames became hereditary markers of family lineage, regional origin, and, in some cases, clan membership.

Many visitors specifically search for male Japanese last names. In practice, Japanese surnames are generally not gendered, so the same family name can be used by men and women depending on household lineage.

For most of Japanese history, only the aristocracy and samurai class were permitted to bear surnames. The Meiji Restoration of 1868 changed this fundamentally: the government required all citizens to register a family name for the new census and military draft records. Most commoners adopted surnames describing their environment, the field where they farmed (田中, Tanaka, middle of the rice field), the mountain nearby (山本, Yamamoto, base of the mountain), or the village landmark (橋本, Hashimoto, base of the bridge).

Today, Japan has approximately 100,000 distinct surnames, far fewer than many countries, leading to notable concentration at the top. The single most common name, Sato (佐藤), is shared by roughly 1.9 million households, about 1.5% of the entire Japanese population. The top 10 surnames alone account for nearly 10% of all Japanese families.

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Video: Japanese Names & Surnames Explained

Learn how Japanese surnames were created after the Meiji era and how kanji characters build their meanings.

Top 10 Most Common Japanese Surnames

#1
佐藤

Sato

さとう

Help Wisteria

Households

1,900,000+

#2
鈴木

Suzuki

すずき

Bell Tree

Households

1,700,000+

#3
高橋

Takahashi

たかはし

High Bridge

Households

1,400,000+

#4
田中

Tanaka

たなか

Middle of the Rice Field

Households

1,300,000+

#5
渡辺

Watanabe

わたなべ

Crossing the Edge

Households

1,050,000+

#6
伊藤

Ito

いとう

That Wisteria

Households

970,000+

#7
山本

Yamamoto

やまもと

Base of the Mountain

Households

930,000+

#8
中村

Nakamura

なかむら

Middle Village

Households

1,000,000+

#9
小林

Kobayashi

こばやし

Small Forest

Households

900,000+

#10
加藤

Kato

かとう

Increasing Wisteria

Households

860,000+

Mountain Surnames (山)

Mountain surnames reflect how villages formed around foothills, passes, and upland farming routes.

山本

Yamamoto

やまもと

Base of the Mountain

山田

Yamada

やまだ

Mountain Rice Field

山下

Yamashita

やました

Below the Mountain

山崎

Yamazaki

やまざき

Mountain Cape

山口

Yamaguchi

やまぐち

Mountain Mouth

岡本

Okamoto

おかもと

Base of the Hill

Water Surnames (水・川)

Water-based surnames often point to springs, rivers, and irrigation channels central to local life.

清水

Shimizu

しみず

Clear Water

小川

Ogawa

おがわ

Small River

池田

Ikeda

いけだ

Pond Rice Field

井上

Inoue

いのうえ

Above the Well

渡辺

Watanabe

わたなべ

Crossing the Edge

橋本

Hashimoto

はしもと

Base of the Bridge

Forest & Tree Surnames (木・林・森)

Tree and forest names preserve the memory of shrines, groves, and wooded settlements.

小林

Kobayashi

こばやし

Small Forest

Hayashi

はやし

Forest, Grove

Mori

もり

Forest

木村

Kimura

きむら

Tree Village

松本

Matsumoto

まつもと

Base of the Pine

松田

Matsuda

まつだ

Pine Rice Field

Wisteria Clan Surnames (藤)

藤-marked surnames often signal historical ties to Fujiwara lineage branches and their provinces.

佐藤

Sato

さとう

Help Wisteria

伊藤

Ito

いとう

That Wisteria

加藤

Kato

かとう

Increasing Wisteria

藤田

Fujita

ふじた

Wisteria Rice Field

Complete Japanese Surnames List

Sort:RankRomaji
RankKanjiRomajiMeaning
#4田中
Tanaka
Middle of the Rice Field
#8中村
Nakamura
Middle Village
#11吉田
Yoshida
Lucky Rice Field
#26前田
Maeda
Front Rice Field
#30松田
Matsuda
Pine Rice Field
Cultural Deep-Dive

The History Behind Japanese Surnames

The kanji 藤 (wisteria) appears in many surnames because the powerful Fujiwara court lineage used it as a prestige marker. Branch families later combined 藤 with province or location markers, creating names like Sato, Ito, and Kato that remain common today.

The Meiji government's surname registration mandate in the 1870s required all households to register hereditary family names. This transformed local nicknames, occupational labels, and place-based identifiers into the modern surname system still used nationwide.

Historically, myōji (苗字) often referred to practical, place-based family surnames, while uji (氏) signaled older clan identities and bloodline groupings. Together they reveal both social function and lineage.

Rare & Beautiful Surnames

月見

Tsukimi

つきみ

Moon Viewing

桜井

Sakurai

さくらい

Cherry Blossom Well

星野

Hoshino

ほしの

Starry Field

白鳥

Shiratori

しらとり

White Bird

夏目

Natsume

なつめ

Summer's Eye

春日

Kasuga

かすが

Spring Day