Masculine dossier · first seen 1919

Rick

Endangered Down 99.3% from peak
Peak era
1958
Peak births
5,461
Current vitality
Rare
Peak generation
Boomer

Quick answers about Rick

How many people are named Rick?

An estimated 58,895 living Americans are named Rick.

How rare is Rick?

Rick is very rare among babies today, with 40 boys receiving the name in 2025, down 99.3% from its 1958 peak.

How old is the typical Rick?

The median age of a living American named Rick is approximately 65 years, with most bearers falling between 57 and 69 years old.

Is Rick still popular?

No. Rick is endangered as a baby name, down 99.3% from its 1958 peak with 40 births in 2025.

Where is Rick most common?

Rick has its strongest geographic signal in Washington, where it appears 4.7× more often than the national baseline.

1919Peak 19582025
peak 1958 2025 18801900192019401960198020002020
Peak year
1958
Decline from peak
99.3%
2025
40
All-time
81,829

Rick broke out in Arizona, California, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming (1946) and became over-represented in 27 states over 24 years.

Broke out: Arizona, California, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming, 1946 · over-represented in 27 states over 24 years

Alabama: never over-represented AL Alaska: broke out 1950 AK Arizona: broke out 1946 AZ Arkansas: never over-represented AR California: broke out 1946 CA Colorado: broke out 1947 CO Connecticut: never over-represented CT Delaware: never over-represented DE District of Columbia: never over-represented DC Florida: never over-represented FL Georgia: never over-represented GA Hawaii: broke out 1970 HI Idaho: broke out 1946 ID Illinois: broke out 1951 IL Indiana: broke out 1946 IN Iowa: broke out 1946 IA Kansas: broke out 1946 KS Kentucky: never over-represented KY Louisiana: never over-represented LA Maine: broke out 1968 ME Maryland: never over-represented MD Massachusetts: never over-represented MA Michigan: broke out 1946 MI Minnesota: broke out 1946 MN Mississippi: never over-represented MS Missouri: broke out 1949 MO Montana: broke out 1946 MT Nebraska: broke out 1946 NE Nevada: broke out 1949 NV New Hampshire: never over-represented NH New Jersey: never over-represented NJ New Mexico: broke out 1968 NM New York: never over-represented NY North Carolina: never over-represented NC North Dakota: broke out 1948 ND Ohio: broke out 1946 OH Oklahoma: broke out 1948 OK Oregon: broke out 1946 OR Pennsylvania: never over-represented PA Rhode Island: never over-represented RI South Carolina: never over-represented SC South Dakota: broke out 1946 SD Tennessee: never over-represented TN Texas: never over-represented TX Utah: broke out 1946 UT Vermont: never over-represented VT Virginia: never over-represented VA Washington: broke out 1946 WA West Virginia: never over-represented WV Wisconsin: broke out 1952 WI Wyoming: broke out 1946 WY