Inigo is a distinctive choice, ranked #1322 in 2024. Your child is likely to be the only Inigo in their class.
💎
UK Rank 2024
#1322
About the Name Inigo
Inigo is climbing rapidly up the charts, having climbed 109 places in just five years. Its best recorded rank was #984 in 2006 — and current momentum suggests it could challenge that mark again. The name has been a consistent presence in UK records since 1996.
Inigo is distinctive enough that your child will likely be the only one in both their class and their school — standing out on every register.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about the name Inigo
Unlikely. With around 20 UK babies named Inigo per year, your child will almost certainly be the only Inigo in his class, and possibly the only one in the whole school.
Inigo is currently rising in popularity in the UK, up 109 places over the last five years to #1322 in 2024. If this trend continues, it will become more common in classrooms over the next decade.
Inigo is a distinctive choice sitting outside the mainstream UK top names. Parents choosing less common names often find their children appreciate the individuality as they grow up, rarely needing to add an initial to distinguish themselves.
Inigo does not appear in the US top 1,000 baby names, making it a distinctively British choice — your child is unlikely to encounter American Inigos in the wild.
20
UK babies named Inigo (2024)
< 1
Expected classmates with this name (class of 28)
~0.0
In a school of 600
↑ 109 places
Rank change (last 5 years)
🏫 Who else is in the room?
In a typical UK class of 28, highlighted children share the name Inigo
Likely around 1 other Inigo in the class
UK Popularity (1996–2024)
Rank and birth count · ONS official data
No US data available for this name
✨ Similar names to Inigo
Names with a similar style — each with their own classroom story
Inigo Brassey Freeman-Thomas, 2nd Marquess of Willingdon, was a British Liberal Party politician and the second son of Freeman Freeman-Thomas, 1st Marquess of Willingdon, a former Viceroy of India. From 1931 to 1941 he was styled Viscount Ratendone.