HomeBaby Names DirectoryGerardo

Gerardo

♂ Boy

Pronounced heh-RAR-doh /hɛˈrɑːr.doʊ/High

Meaning: Spanish form of Gerard, from Old High German Gerhard, composed of ger meaning spear and hard meaning brave, strong, or hardy; meaning spear brave or strong with the spearHigh

In 30 seconds: The Spanish form of Gerard meaning spear brave, Gerardo has been a warm classic across Latin America for generations, combining Germanic warrior roots with Spanish melodic elegance.
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Origin HighSpanish, Germanic
MeaningSpanish form of Gerard, from Old High German Gerhard, composed of ger meaning spear and hard meaning brave, strong, or hardy; meaning spear brave or strong with the spear
U.S. rank (2025)#678 ↘ Falling
2025 U.S. births401 boys (0.02% of U.S. boys)
Peak year2000
Total births (all-time)≈ 55,013

Popularity in the U.S. · SSA data

peak 200019062025

U.S. births per year (Social Security Administration, 1880–present). Pink marker = peak year.

History & Origin

Gerardo is the Spanish form of Gerard, from Old High German Gerhard, a compound of ger (spear) and hard (brave, strong). The name was widespread in medieval Germanic Europe and traveled to the Iberian Peninsula through Frankish influence. Saint Gerard Majella's 18th-century popularity in Catholic tradition made it a devotional name.

Gerardo has been a standard given name across Spanish-speaking Latin America for centuries. In the United States it is used primarily within Latino communities and has charted consistently in the top 300–400 boys' names. The name carries dignified, traditional weight while also fitting comfortably in the contemporary Latin American landscape. Its three-syllable sound gives it a solid, grounded presence.

Did you know? Saint Gerard Majella (1726–1755) — patron saint of expectant mothers — was an Italian Redemptorist lay brother whose life of mystical experiences and miracles made him one of the most popular saints in Catholic tradition, spreading Gerard and Gerardo across Catholic communities worldwide.
Overall data confidence 94%
Behind the Name — Gerardo — etymologyU.S. Social Security Administration — popularity data

Variations

GerardGérardGerhard

Nicknames

GeraJerry

Famous Bearers

  • Saint Gerard Majella (1726–1755)
    Italian Catholic saint, patron of expectant mothers.

If you like Gerardo…

Rodrigo— shares the three-syllable Spanish classic tradition and the same Germanic warrior heritage
Gustavo— fellow Germanic-rooted Spanish classic with the same strong, traditional Latin American standing
Ricardo— another three-syllable Spanish classic from Germanic roots with the same solid dignity
Ernesto— shares the same Spanish Latinate elegance and the same traditional Latin American warmth

Frequently Asked

What does the name Gerardo mean?

Gerardo means spear brave or strong with the spear, from Old High German Gerhard (ger = spear, hard = brave/strong).

How do you pronounce Gerardo?

In Spanish it is said heh-RAR-doh /hɛˈrɑːr.doʊ/ — three syllables with stress on the second.

Is Gerardo a popular name?

Gerardo is a well-established classic in Spanish-speaking Latin America and among Latino communities in the United States.

Is Gerardo the same as Gerard?

Gerardo is the Spanish form of Gerard; both derive from the same Old High German root.