How Many People Are Named Rebekah Frasier?
There are approximately 2 people named Rebekah Frasier living in the United States today. That makes this name combination very rare, occurring at a rate of about 1 in 171,377,169 Americans.
This estimate combines SSA birth records for the first name Rebekah with Census Bureau frequency data for the surname Frasier. Below you will find a breakdown of both names, including popularity trends, gender data, and Census background data where it is available.
Estimated People with This Name
2
1 in 171,377,169 Americans
Combination Rarity
Very Rare
First Name
View full profileRebekah
Last Name
View full profileFrasier
Rebekah: Popularity Over Time
Year-by-year SSA birth registrations for the first name Rebekah. The peak year was 1996 with 2,222 births. The average person named Rebekah today is 34 years old.
Ancestry of the First Name Rebekah
In the 2020 Census, the first name Rebekah was most commonly recorded among people who identified as White (81.00%). The next largest recorded groups were Hispanic (8.29%) and Two or More Races (4.80%).
These percentages describe the people who had the first name Rebekah in the 2020 Census. They do not tell you the deeper origin or meaning of the name itself.
Read this as a snapshot of who already had the name in 2020, not as a trend line. The SSA chart above is still the better way to see how Rebekah rose or fell over time.
Ancestry of the Frasier Surname
The surname Frasier was most commonly recorded among people who identified as White in the 2020 Census.
This is a self-reported race and ethnicity breakdown for people who had the surname Frasier in the published Census surname tables. It gives useful context around who was recorded with the name, but it does not tell the full family history of every Boone line.
How we calculated this
The first name "Rebekah" has an estimated frequency of 0.0206% among living Americans, based on SSA birth records from 1880 to 2024 adjusted for mortality using CDC 2023 life tables.
The surname "Frasier" appears at a rate of 2.53 per 100,000 people in the 2020 U.S. Census.
We do not use the Census first-name snapshot for the main estimate because it is only published once every 10 years. The latest public first-name Census file is from 2020, which is already 6 years old. SSA birth records plus CDC survival data give a better current estimate of how many people with the first name Rebekah are likely to be alive now.
Multiplying these frequencies against the U.S. population of ~343 million gives 2 estimated people. This assumes first names and last names are statistically independent. Full methodology.
Other people named Rebekah
Other people with the surname Frasier
Rebekah Frasier: Questions and Answers
How many people are named Rebekah Frasier?
We estimate approximately 2 people named Rebekah Frasier are alive in the United States today. The first name Rebekah is shared by 70,742 Americans, and the surname Frasier is shared by 8,665.
How rare is the name Rebekah Frasier?
This name combination is classified as Very Rare, occurring at a rate of about 1 in 171,377,169 Americans. The first name Rebekah is uncommon and the surname Frasier is rare.
Is Rebekah a male or female name?
Rebekah is predominantly female, with 0.2% of bearers being male and 99.8% female. It peaked in popularity in 1996 and the average bearer today is 34 years old.
What does the Census say about the first name Rebekah?
In the 2020 Census, the first name Rebekah was most commonly recorded among people who identified as White (81.00%). The next largest recorded groups were Hispanic (8.29%) and Two or More Races (4.80%). These percentages describe the people who had the name in the 2020 Census, not the deeper origin of the name itself.
Where does this data come from?
First name data comes from the Social Security Administration (1880 to 2024), adjusted for survival using CDC 2023 life tables. When available, first-name Census background data comes from the 2020 U.S. Census Bureau first-name tables. Surname data comes from the 2020 U.S. Census Bureau. Full methodology.
Try another name