Feminine dossier · first seen 1933

Mia

Stable Cross-generational persistence
Peak era
2015
Peak births
14,943
Current vitality
Strong
Peak generation
Gen Alpha

Quick answers about Mia

How many people are named Mia?

An estimated 305,385 living Americans are named Mia.

How rare is Mia?

Mia is still widely used among babies today, with 11,078 girls receiving the name in 2025, down 25.9% from its 2015 peak.

How old is the typical Mia?

The median age of a living American named Mia is approximately 13 years, with most bearers falling between 7 and 20 years old.

Is Mia still popular?

Yes. Mia is holding steady, with 11,078 births in 2025 and a consistent recent baseline.

Where is Mia most common?

Mia has its strongest geographic signal in District of Columbia, where it appears 5.9× more often than the national baseline.

1933Peak 20152025
peak 2015 2025 18801900192019401960198020002020
Peak year
2015
Decline from peak
25.9%
2025
11,078
All-time
310,219

Mia took 55 years to reach 30 states. A slow burn from Alabama, California, Delaware, District of Columbia, Georgia, Maryland, and Oklahoma outward.

Broke out: Alabama, California, Delaware, District of Columbia, Georgia, Maryland, and Oklahoma, 1965 · over-represented in 30 states over 55 years

Alabama: broke out 1965 AL Alaska: broke out 1997 AK Arizona: broke out 1981 AZ Arkansas: never over-represented AR California: broke out 1965 CA Colorado: never over-represented CO Connecticut: broke out 1991 CT Delaware: broke out 1965 DE District of Columbia: broke out 1965 DC Florida: broke out 1967 FL Georgia: broke out 1965 GA Hawaii: broke out 1967 HI Idaho: never over-represented ID Illinois: broke out 1966 IL Indiana: never over-represented IN Iowa: never over-represented IA Kansas: never over-represented KS Kentucky: never over-represented KY Louisiana: broke out 1980 LA Maine: broke out 1981 ME Maryland: broke out 1965 MD Massachusetts: broke out 1991 MA Michigan: never over-represented MI Minnesota: never over-represented MN Mississippi: broke out 1990 MS Missouri: never over-represented MO Montana: never over-represented MT Nebraska: broke out 1994 NE Nevada: broke out 1991 NV New Hampshire: broke out 1992 NH New Jersey: broke out 1992 NJ New Mexico: broke out 1990 NM New York: never over-represented NY North Carolina: broke out 1967 NC North Dakota: never over-represented ND Ohio: never over-represented OH Oklahoma: broke out 1965 OK Oregon: never over-represented OR Pennsylvania: broke out 1991 PA Rhode Island: broke out 1966 RI South Carolina: broke out 1981 SC South Dakota: never over-represented SD Tennessee: never over-represented TN Texas: never over-represented TX Utah: never over-represented UT Vermont: broke out 1997 VT Virginia: broke out 1993 VA Washington: broke out 1991 WA West Virginia: never over-represented WV Wisconsin: never over-represented WI Wyoming: broke out 2020 WY