girls' name 2007–2017

Amelie

Amelie is losing ground — from #94 in 2007 to #151 in 2017.

+ sibling names →
#151 last ranked in 2017
11 registrations that year
1,207 total 2007–2017

Note: Amelie hasn't appeared in any Australian state's published top-100 list since 2017. State BDM registries publish only the top 100 names per year — names below that threshold no longer show in the data even if babies are still being given them. Read more about coverage limits.

Popularity over the years

Registrations dropped from 94 to 11 (-88%).

Peak popularity was in 2009 (179 registrations).

0408012016020020072010201220152017peak
Peak 2009 · 179
Low 2017 · 11
Years tracked 11

Neighbours in the 2017 ranking

Names with similar popularity. If you're considering Amelie, you might also like these:

By state & territory — 2017

How often Amelie was registered in each of the 8 Australian states and territories.

Amelie popularity by state — 2017Australian Capital Territory: no data for this yearNew South Wales: no data for this yearNorthern Territory: no data for this yearQueensland: no data for this yearSouth Australia: 11 (rank #135)Tasmania: no data for this yearVictoria: no data for this yearWestern Australia: no data for this yearACTNSWNTQLDSATASVICWA
Amelie — popularity by state & territory in 2017. Hover a state for details, click to view the full Top 50 for that state.
Show full data table

Most popular in South Australia (11 babies)

South Australia
11 #135
Australian Capital Territory
New South Wales
Northern Territory
Queensland
Tasmania
Victoria
Western Australia

In 2017: 11 babies named Amelie across 1 of 8 states and territories.

Frequently asked questions

How many babies in Australia have been named Amelie?
Between 2007 and 2017, Amelie was registered for 1,207 babies in the available state datasets.
Is Amelie a popular name in Australia?
Amelie has fallen out of every Australian state's published top-100 list since 2017, when it last ranked #151 with 11 registrations. Each state's Births, Deaths & Marriages registry only publishes the top 100 names per year — names below that threshold disappear from the data even if babies are still being given them.