How Many People Are Named Dino?

An estimated 7,377 people in the United States have the first name Dino. It is almost exclusively a male name. The average bearer is 50 years old, and Dino peaked in popularity in 1960 with 386 births that year.

Below you will find a full statistical profile of Dino as a first name in the United States, including gender data, a year-by-year popularity timeline going back to 1880, a decade breakdown, state-by-state birth registrations, and, when available, a 2020 Census snapshot showing who had the name at that point in time. You can also check how many people share the full name Dino paired with any surname.

Estimated Living Americans

7,377

About 1 in 46,463 people in the U.S.

Rarity

Rare

Very Rare Very Common

Predicted Gender

Male

100.0% confidence

Average Age

50

years old

Peak Year

1960

386 births

Total Registered

9,173

since 1880

Gender Distribution for Dino

Dino is almost exclusively a male name. Out of 9,173 total births registered, 100.0% were male.

Male 9,173 (100.0%)
Female 0 (0.0%)

Dino as a male name

Ranked #2,712 in 2024

48 male births in 2024

Peak: 1960 (386 births)

Dino in the 2020 Census

The 2020 Census recorded 8,358 people with the first name Dino, which placed it at #2,784 in the published first-name tables. This is a snapshot of people who already had the name in 2020. The estimated living count elsewhere on this page is different: it is a current estimate built from SSA birth records and age-based survival rates, so the two figures are not expected to match exactly.

Read this section as a snapshot of people who already had the name in 2020. The SSA charts elsewhere on this page are still the better way to see how the name rose, fell, or shifted across generations.

Gender in the 2020 Census

In the 2020 Census, Dino was recorded as predominantly male. Out of 8,358 people with this name in that snapshot, 99.4% were male and 0.6% were female. That is very close to the long-run birth pattern in SSA records, where the name is male 100.0% of the time.

Census Count

8,358

people with this name

Census Rank

#2,784

among Census first names

Frequency Rate

2.77

per 100,000 people

Male 8,311 (99.4%)
Female 47 (0.6%)

Recorded Race and Hispanic Origin in the 2020 Census

In the 2020 Census, the first name Dino was most commonly recorded among people who identified as White (67.66%). The next largest recorded groups were Hispanic (16.38%) and Black (6.68%).

These percentages describe the people who had the first name Dino in the 2020 Census. They do not tell you the deeper meaning or origin of the name itself.

White
67.66%
Black
6.68%
Hispanic
16.38%
Asian/Pacific Islander
5.98%
American Indian/Alaska Native
1.08%
Two or More Races
2.23%

2020 Census demographic breakdown

Each row shows a recorded Census category for people with the first name Dino.

Group Share Count
White 67.66% 5,656
Hispanic 16.38% 1,369
Black 6.68% 558
Asian and Pacific Islander 5.98% 500
Two or More Races 2.23% 186
American Indian and Alaska Native 1.08% 90

The Census published separate sex and race/origin tables for first names, so their total counts can differ slightly for the same name. That is why the race section focuses on the demographic mix rather than repeating a second headline count.

Dino: Popularity Over Time

SSA records for Dino span from the 1910s to the 2020s, covering 12 decades of naming data. The most popular decade for this name was the 1960s, when 2,794 babies were registered. Dino has declined significantly from its peak in the 1960s. Recent registrations are a fraction of what they were at the name's height.

0 77 154 232 309 386 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000 2020

Dino by Decade

How has Dino tracked across different eras? The table below groups all SSA birth registrations into 10-year periods, with separate male and female counts. The colored bar shows each decade's share relative to the peak.

Decade Total Male Female
1910s 142 142 0
1920s 321 321 0
1930s 438 438 0
1940s 213 213 0
1950s 1,441 1,441 0
1960s 2,794 2,794 0
1970s 1,301 1,301 0
1980s 700 700 0
1990s 605 605 0
2000s 604 604 0
2010s 393 393 0
2020s 221 221 0

Dino by State

Birth registrations for Dino span all 27 states and territories in the SSA database. The highest counts are in California, New York, Illinois. The lowest are in South Carolina, Nevada, Georgia. On average, about 218 Dinos were registered per state.

Dino + Last Name Combinations

How many people share a full name with Dino as the first name? Click a combination below to see the estimate, or search any pairing.

Dino: Questions and Answers

How many people in the U.S. are named Dino?

We estimate approximately 7,377 people named Dino are alive in the United States today. This is based on SSA birth records from 1880 to 2024, adjusted for mortality using CDC life tables. About 1 in 46,463 Americans share this first name.

Is Dino a common name?

Dino is classified as "Rare" and is more popular than 97.2% of all first names in the SSA database. A total of 9,173 births have been registered with this name since 1880.

When was Dino most popular?

Dino reached peak popularity in 1960, when 386 babies were given this name. The average age of a living person named Dino is approximately 50 years old, reflecting when the name was most commonly given.

How common was Dino in the 2020 Census?

The 2020 Census recorded 8,358 people with the first name Dino. That placed it at #2,784 in the published Census first-name tables, or 2.77 people per 100,000.

Why is the Census count different from the living estimate?

Because they measure different things. The Census number is a count of people with the name in 2020. The living estimate is a current model based on SSA birth records and survival rates, so it aims to estimate how many people with the name are alive now.

What does the SSA popularity chart show?

The popularity chart tracks birth registrations, not people currently alive. It shows how often Dino was given to babies from 1880 through 2024, which is why it is the best tool on the page for seeing long-run naming trends.

What does the Census say about the gender split for Dino?

In the 2020 Census snapshot, Dino was recorded as predominantly male. The published split was 99.4% male and 0.6% female.

What does the Census say about the background of people named Dino?

In the 2020 Census, the first name Dino was most commonly recorded among people who identified as White (67.66%). The next largest recorded groups were Hispanic (16.38%) and Black (6.68%). These percentages describe the people who had the name in the 2020 Census, not the deeper meaning or origin of the name itself.

Why can the Census sex total and race total differ slightly?

The Census published separate first-name tables for sex and for race and Hispanic origin. Those totals can differ slightly for the same name, so the page uses them as two related snapshots rather than treating them as perfectly interchangeable counts.

Does every first name have Census demographic data?

No. The public Census first-name tables only include names that met the Bureau's publication rules. That means some names on this site will have SSA history but no published Census demographic snapshot.

Is Dino a male name?

Dino is predominantly male. 100.0% of people with this name are male. See the gender breakdown above for full details.

Why can Dino have a lot of living bearers even if it is not trendy now?

Because a name can build up a large population over many decades. Dino peaked in 1960, and the average living bearer is about 50 years old, so a name can still have millions of living bearers even after it stops feeling current for newborns.

How many Dino Smiths are there?

To find how many people share a specific full name, we combine first name and surname frequencies. Try: Dino Smith, Dino Johnson, Dino Williams. You can also search any combination on our homepage.

Where does this data come from?

Our estimates use Social Security Administration birth records (1880 to 2024), adjusted for survival using CDC 2023 life tables broken down by sex. The U.S. population figure (342,754,338) is from the Census Bureau's July 2025 estimate. Full methodology.

Search for a full name combination