Click "Generate Names" to get started.

About Wizard Names

In most fantasy traditions, a wizard's name is not merely given — it is accumulated. A young apprentice might carry a simple birth name for decades before earning the title and reputation that transforms it into legend. Archmages, High Wizards, and Masters of their school often adopt or are granted names that reflect their power and specialisation, sometimes discarding the name of their common origins entirely in favour of something that resonates with the arcane forces they command.

Male Wizard Names

Male wizard names in the fantasy tradition often draw from Latin, Greek, and invented pseudo-classical roots. Names like Aldric, Zephyron, Malachar, Eryndel, Vortigan, and Caelum carry the hallmarks of the arcane: unusual syllable combinations, a hint of antiquity, and a certain gravity that suggests years of study. Compound names — those blending a meaningful root with a magical suffix like -ander, -inus, or -ael — are especially popular.

For D&D characters, a male wizard name that sounds slightly foreign to the campaign setting can reinforce the idea that wizards are apart from ordinary society, marked by their obsessive pursuit of knowledge.

Female Wizard Names

Female wizard names blend elegance with power, often drawing on softer consonants while retaining the arcane quality that makes wizard names distinctive. Names like Sylvara, Thessaly, Mirindel, Arcana, Lysara, and Velowyn convey intelligence and mystery in equal measure. In many fantasy settings, female wizards hold positions of tremendous authority — archmages, court mages, and founders of magical academies.

A well-chosen female wizard name should feel like it belongs to someone who has spent a lifetime in libraries and magical laboratories, emerging with power that no amount of swordplay could match.

Frequently Asked Questions

Good wizard names tend to have a mix of hard consonants, long vowels, and an air of antiquity. Names like Aldric, Zephyron, Malachar, Sylvanus, or Eryndel feel inherently arcane. Drawing from Latin, Greek, or invented pseudo-medieval roots gives wizard names their sense of deep, scholarly power.

In D&D lore, wizards acquire their magic through study and discipline while sorcerers are born with innate power. Wizard names often reflect this scholarly identity — they may sound bookish, classical, or even a little stuffy. Sorcerer names tend to feel more instinctive, exotic, or tied to a supernatural bloodline like dragon or divine ancestry.

The best wizard school depends on your playstyle. Evocation is best for pure damage dealers. Abjuration suits a more defensive support wizard. Illusion and Enchantment offer creative, non-combat solutions. Necromancy is popular for dark-themed characters. Divination gives remarkable utility with the Portent ability, making it a favourite for experienced players.

The most iconic wizards in fiction include Gandalf the Grey from The Lord of the Rings, Merlin from Arthurian legend, Albus Dumbledore from Harry Potter, Raistlin Majere from Dragonlance, Elminster from the Forgotten Realms, and Ged from the Earthsea series by Ursula K. Le Guin. Each represents a distinct archetype of the fantasy wizard.

Wizard names feel arcane when they combine unusual consonant clusters (like zr, gn, or xl), long flowing vowel sounds, and roots that hint at ancient languages. Titles and honorifics help too — "Archmage", "the Wise", or "of the Silver Tower" appended to even a simple name instantly elevates it to wizard status.