UK boy's name
Alvin
Derived from the Old English name Ælfwine, meaning "elf friend".
For 2026, the newest official UK baby-name figures on this page are from 2024. That release is the current official benchmark rather than a forecast.
Alvin is a boy's name in the UK records. People looking for Alvin popularity in 2026 should use the latest official release, which is 2024 in this profile. In that release it ranked #1132, with 25 babies registered with the name. Its strongest year in the published records was 2012, with 47 births.
This profile covers 868 England and Wales registrations across 29 recorded years from 1996 to 2024. The figures come from ONS England and Wales, NRS Scotland and NISRA Northern Ireland, so the page is a view of published baby-name registrations rather than a forecast or a live count of people using the name today.
The latest count is about 53% of the recorded peak, which gives a quick read on how the name has moved since its high point.
We estimate that about 883 living people in the UK are called Alvin. This uses published birth registrations from England and Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, then applies ONS national life tables to estimate how many are likely still alive. It does not forecast extra births for 2025 or 2026.
Key insights
- • Alvin ranked #1132 for boys in England and Wales in 2024, with 25 registrations.
- • The name peaked in 2012, when 47 boys were registered as Alvin.
- • Alvin ranks best in Northern Ireland in the latest published regional snapshot for that area, where it placed #387 in 2010.
- • About 883 living people in the UK are estimated to have Alvin as a first name, after adjusting past birth registrations with ONS life tables.
Latest rank (E&W)
#1132
2024
Births in 2024
25
Latest year
Peak year
2012
47 births
Estimated living
883
2026
Meaning
What does Alvin mean?
The name Alvin is derived from the Old English and Old Germanic names Aelfwine and Alvwin. These names are composed of the elements "alf" meaning "elf" and "wine" meaning "friend". The Old English and Old Germanic forms gradually evolved into the modern name Alvin over the centuries.
Alvin can be traced back to the early Middle Ages in parts of what is now England and Germany. It became a relatively common given name among Anglo-Saxons and Germanic peoples during this era. The name carried associations with mythological elves and sprites from Germanic folklore.
One of the earliest known records of the name Alvin appears in the Domesday Book, a comprehensive survey of England commissioned by William the Conqueror in 1086. An entry lists an individual named "Aluuinus" as a landowner in Hertfordshire.
In the 12th century, a monk named Alwin authored the Vita Sancti Birini, an important early biography of Saint Birinus, an apostolic missionary who helped establish Christianity in Wessex. This Alwin has sometimes been confused with the chronicler Alwin of Tewkesbury from around the same time period.
The legendary English outlaw and folk hero Robin Hood had a son named Alwin in some medieval ballads and stories from the 13th and 14th centuries. In the 15th century, the name appeared as "Alwyne" in records associated with the English county of Somerset.
A prominent figure named Alvin Tortor served as the Mayor of London in 1349 during the outbreak of the Black Death pandemic in England. He played a key role in managing the city's response to the crisis.
In the 17th century, the Puritan minister Alvyn Talmadge was born in Suffolk, England in 1607. He later emigrated to the Massachusetts Bay Colony and became an influential figure among early settlers in New England.
Sourced from namecensus.com.
Popularity
Alvin over time
The chart below shows babies named Alvin registered in England and Wales in the years where the name appears in the published records, from 1996 to 2024. Empty years are left out so rare names are not stretched across long periods where the published files do not show any registrations.
For Alvin, the clearest high point is 2012. The latest England and Wales figure is 25 births in 2024, compared with 47 at the peak.
Babies born per year
Decades
Alvin by decade
Decade totals smooth out the yearly jumps and make it easier to see whether Alvin was a short-lived spike or a name that stayed in regular use. Average rank is calculated only from years where a published rank exists.
| Decade | Average rank | Total births | Years covered |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2020s | #1008 | 146 | 5 |
| 2010s | #836 | 380 | 10 |
| 2000s | #836 | 291 | 10 |
| 1990s | #1128 | 51 | 4 |
Geography
Where Alvin is most common
The bars show the latest published local birth counts for Alvin. They are useful for spotting where the name is showing up in real numbers, while the rank beside each bar shows how strongly it performs inside that region.
Alvin ranks best in Northern Ireland in the latest published regional snapshot for that area, where it placed #387 in 2010.
Across the UK
Alvin in Scotland and Northern Ireland
Scotland (NRS)
#680 in 2014
5 years of NRS records, 15 total registered
Northern Ireland (NISRA)
#387 in 2010
2 years of NISRA records, 6 total registered
Related
Names similar to Alvin
- Alfie 86,546
- Alexander 85,525
- Adam 71,855
- Archie 59,965
- Arthur 43,586
- Aaron 36,366
- Alex 32,729
- Andrew 20,169
- Arlo 19,061
- Aidan 16,776
- Albie 16,017
- Albert 15,809
FAQ
Alvin: questions and answers
How popular is the name Alvin in the UK right now?
In 2024, Alvin was ranked #1132 for boys in England and Wales, with 25 births registered.
When was Alvin most popular?
The peak year on record was 2012, with 47 babies registered as Alvin in England and Wales.
What is the meaning and origin of Alvin?
Derived from the Old English name Ælfwine, meaning "elf friend".
How many people are called Alvin in the UK?
A total of 868 babies have been registered as Alvin across the 29 years of ONS England & Wales records shown here, plus 15 more in Scotland and 6 in Northern Ireland.
Where is Alvin most common?
In the latest published local rankings, Alvin ranks best in Northern Ireland, where it placed #387 in 2010. The regional bars on this page use birth counts, so they also reflect the size of each region.
Which records is this page based on?
The England and Wales timeline uses ONS baby-name records. Scotland figures come from NRS and Northern Ireland figures come from NISRA. Counts are registrations in published baby-name files. The living estimate uses those birth registrations with ONS national life tables.