Stella — Meaning, Origin, Pronunciation & 2026 Popularity Guide
TL;DR: Stella (STEL-uh) is Latin and Italian for "star." It's one of the most enduring celestial girl names — first popularized by Sir Philip Sidney in 1591, reignited by Tennessee Williams in 1947 ("STELLA!"), and currently sitting at #43 in the US Top 50.
Quick facts
| Gender | Girl |
| Origin | Latin / Italian |
| Meaning | "Star" |
| Pronunciation | STEL-uh (2 syllables) |
| 2024 US Rank | #43 |
| Trend | ⬆ Steady rise since 2000 |
| Length | 6 letters, 2 syllables |
| Nicknames | Stell, Ella, Lela |
| Cultural anchors | Sir Philip Sidney's Astrophel and Stella (1591); Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire (1947) |
The story behind the name
Stella simply means "star" in both Latin and Italian. The name was effectively invented as a personal name in 1591 by Sir Philip Sidney, who used it for the heroine of his sonnet sequence Astrophel and Stella — "lover of the star and the star."
The name had quiet usage for centuries until Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire (1947 play, 1951 film with Marlon Brando) gave it iconic status. Brando's anguished "STELLA!" cry became one of the most-imitated lines in American theater.
In the 2000s and 2010s, Stella surged again — riding the celestial-name wave (along with Luna, Nova, Aurora, Estrella, Astrid, Vega) and the comeback of short, classical, ends-in-A girl names (Ava, Mia, Ella, Stella, Bella, Nora).
How popular is Stella in 2026?
Stella has been in the US Top 100 since 2008 and the Top 50 since 2020. It's one of the most popular "feels-classical-but-isn't-old-fashioned" names available.
Recent US rankings
| Year | Rank | Babies named Stella |
|---|---|---|
| 2008 | #105 | ~2,900 |
| 2014 | #67 | ~4,000 |
| 2018 | #51 | ~4,800 |
| 2020 | #44 | ~5,200 |
| 2024 | #43 | ~5,500 |
Where Stella is most popular
- Italian and Latin heritage families
- Celestial-name aesthetic parents — Stella, Luna, Aurora, Nova clusters
- Bicultural English-Italian families — Stella reads naturally in both
- Catholic families — Stella Maris ("Star of the Sea") is a Marian title
- Theater / literary parents — Streetcar association
How to pronounce Stella
Standard US: STEL-uh (2 syllables, equal weight)
Italian: STEL-lah (slightly fuller "lah" ending)
There's essentially no pronunciation variation worth worrying about — Stella is one of the easiest names to say correctly across English, Italian, Spanish, French, German, and most European languages.
What does Stella pair well with?
Best middle names
Stella is short (2 syllables), so longer middle names create good rhythm:
- Stella Rose
- Stella Marie
- Stella Catherine
- Stella Genevieve
- Stella Aurelia
- Stella Beatrice
- Stella Faye
Both short and long middle names work — Stella is flexible.
Best surname pairings
Stella's strong S-T-L-L-A consonant structure works with almost any surname. Mostly avoid:
- Surnames starting with St- or S- (Stella Stevens, Stella Smith — tongue twister)
- Surnames ending in -a (Stella Garcia — too much -a-ending)
Strong: Stella Bennett, Stella Park, Stella Chen, Stella Reyes, Stella Walsh, Stella Foster
Sibling names
Girl siblings: Aurora, Luna, Iris, Eloise, Nora, Hazel, Ivy, Penelope, Aurelia
Boy siblings: Felix, Theodore, Atlas, Sebastian, Lorenzo, August, Henry, Leo
Famous bearers
- Stella McCartney — British fashion designer, daughter of Paul McCartney
- Stella Maeve — American actress
- Stella Adler — American acting teacher (taught Marlon Brando)
- Stella Donnelly — Australian indie-folk singer
- Stella Maris — Marian title meaning "Star of the Sea"
- Stella Kowalski — Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire
Frequently asked questions
Is Stella too popular in 2026?
It's been in the US Top 50 for several years — popular enough that your daughter will likely share it with at least one other Stella in her school, but not so popular that it feels overused (it's never been Top 10).
What's the best nickname for Stella?
Most families use the full name. Stell is occasionally used as a tomboyish short form. Ella can work as a standalone if you want a 1-syllable option.
Is Stella a religious name?
It has Catholic associations through Stella Maris ("Star of the Sea") — a Marian title for the Virgin Mary used in hymns and prayers since the medieval period. But it's not exclusively a religious name and is widely used by non-religious families.
What's the difference between Stella, Estrella, and Astrid?
All mean "star" in different traditions: Stella (Latin/Italian), Estrella (Spanish), Astrid (Old Norse). Stella is by far the most popular in the US; Estrella is more common in Spanish-speaking countries; Astrid is rising in Scandinavian-aesthetic families.
Names similar to Stella
| Name | Origin | Why it's similar |
|---|---|---|
| Luna | Latin | Same celestial theme, similar 2-syllable shape |
| Aurora | Latin | Same celestial theme, longer |
| Estrella | Spanish | Same meaning ("star"), Spanish equivalent |
| Bella | Italian | Same 2-syllable Italian shape |
| Nora | Irish | Similar short, classic, ends-in-A energy |
| Iris | Greek | Same luminous-feminine vibe |
Considering Stella for your baby?
Stella is recommended by our AI naming engine for families with:
- Italian, Spanish, or Latin heritage
- Celestial-name aesthetic preferences
- A preference for "feels classic but isn't dated" names
- Catholic or Marian traditions
Our AI naming tool can suggest 10 personalized alternatives →.
Related names
- Aurora — meaning, origin, popularity
- Selene — meaning, origin, popularity
- Aurelia — meaning, origin, popularity
- Eliana — meaning, origin, popularity
Last updated: May 2026. Data sources: US Social Security Administration baby names database, Behind the Name etymology archives. Curated by Fablely.
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