Resources

Dog Naming Tips

Stumped on What to Name Your New Dog? No Problem! Get Dog Name Ideas and Tips from The Seeing Eye

As the oldest guide dog training school in the world, we name around 500 puppies every year — that’s about 42 dog names per month! What a lot of name-storming! So we’ve developed a method to make our naming process a little easier and more uniform.

yellow and black lab pups in a bed at the breeding center.

Scroll down for a list of our most popular puppy names!

Dog Naming Tips

  • KEEP the name to one or two syllables. Occasionally, The Seeing Eye does select three syllable names. Shorter names are easier to say and when paired with a command, make for faster communication with your dog.
  • MAKE sure the name does not sound too close to any commands that you plan to use because this will confuse the dog. For example, “Mo” can sound like “No” and “Kit” sounds like “Sit.”
  • AVOID names that have negative connotations. Think of what it would feel like to run through a public space shouting your dog’s name. If you would be embarrassed, you shouldn’t choose that name.
    Our Greatest Hits
    Whether it’s a guide dog, another type of service dog, or a beloved family pet, a pup’s name gets a lot of use! Here are some of our favorites…

Our Greatest Hits

Whether it’s a guide dog, another type of service dog, or a beloved family pet, a pup’s name gets a lot of use! Here are some of our favorites…

  • Anne
  • Archie
  • Bailey
  • Charlie
  • George
  • Grace
  • Happy
  • Jack
  • Mac
  • Maggie
  • Mary
  • Max
  • Mickey
  • Molly
  • Penny
  • Richard
  • Rosie
  • Sandy
  • Scout
  • Star
  • Ace
  • Beacon
  • Champ
  • Domino
  • Enya
  • Flower
  • Gilly
  • Hagrid
  • Indy
  • Jackson
  • Kayla
  • Logan
  • Monet
  • Nitro
  • Olive
  • Primrose
  • Quinn
  • Ripley
  • Sage
  • Theo
  • Uma
  • Vincent
  • Wallace
  • Xena
  • Yvette
  • Zen

How do we come up with so many puppy names?

The Seeing Eye Puppy Development Manager has the honor of generating and bestowing the names on our puppies when they’re two weeks old. All the puppies in a litter are given a name that starts with the same letter. The litters are named alphabetically. We start with A on October 1st, the beginning of our fiscal year. Then each puppy in the next litter gets a name that begins with B, and all the way through to the “Z” litter, when we start over again.

“Our dogs have between 65 and 70 litters each year. So we go through the entire alphabet a couple of times a year. Sometimes with the tough letters like X or Z, I really have to get creative. Many of our names are selected by Seeing Eye donors.”

— Christine Higham, Puppy Development Manager at The Seeing Eye

Retired Names: Buddy & Juno

Black and white archival photo of young Morris Frank with his arm around Buddy 1.

Buddy

The first Seeing Eye dog was a German shepherd named Kiss. When Morris Frank, a 19-year-old college student, was matched with her, he changed her name to Buddy. Morris Frank would title his memoir The First Lady of The Seeing Eye in tribute to Buddy, and he would name every Seeing Eye dog he subsequently worked with after her. After Morris Frank’s death in 1980, The Seeing Eye retired the name Buddy in her honor.

A student and instructor participate in a juno walk to gauge the student's natural pace and desired pull.

Juno

If you’ve been reading up on Seeing Eye dogs you may already know that instructors take applicants and students on a Juno walk. There is no dog involved in a Juno walk. Instead, the instructor holds onto one end of a harness handle and guides the person in place of the dog so they can get a feel for the student’s preferred pace and pull. The name Juno is thought to be borrowed from the Roman goddess of matchmaking. 

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