Chinese surname (百家姓) origin lookup. Top 50 surnames covering ~85% of Chinese-speaking populations. Clan history, famous figures, rank, diaspora romanisations.
Chinese Surname Origin (百家姓查询)
How to use
Enter surname
Use a Chinese character (王/李/陈) or any romanisation (Wang/Lee/Tan/Chan).
View origin
See the clan's origin, 百家姓 lineage, and historical context at a glance.
Meet famous figures
Representative figures from this surname — emperors, scholars, generals, modern celebrities.
Cross-reference diaspora forms
Hokkien/Cantonese/Vietnamese romanisations — helping overseas Chinese trace their ancestral home.
百家姓: The Thousand-Year Imprint of Chinese Identity
The 《百家姓》(Hundred Family Surnames) was compiled in the early Northern Song dynasty (~960 CE) and ranks alongside the 三字经 and 千字文 as one of the three classical Chinese primers. It catalogues 504 surnames (444 single-character + 60 two-character compound) and opens with "Zhao Qian Sun Li, Zhou Wu Zheng Wang" — Zhao first because it was the surname of the Song imperial house.
Modern surname distribution
As of the 2020 PRC census, mainland China has about 6,150 distinct surnames. The top 100 cover 85% of the population, and the top 10 (Wang, Li, Zhang, Liu, Chen, Yang, Huang, Zhao, Wu, Zhou) account for roughly 40%. This extreme concentration is the residue of historical clan expansion — imperial bestowals, hereditary office, mass migration. Compare this with Europe, where typical countries have tens of thousands of distinct surnames covering only a few percent each.
The diaspora story
Chinese surnames in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Thailand mostly trace back to two source regions: southern Fujian / Hokkien (Tan, Lim, Ng, Goh, Chua, Heng) and Guangdong / Cantonese (Chan, Lee, Wong, Leung, Ho, Lau). The varied romanisations are not spelling errors — they record dialect pronunciation. 陈 is "Tan" in Hokkien (Singapore/Malaysia), "Chan" in Cantonese (Hong Kong), and "Chen" in Mandarin (China/Taiwan). A modern Singaporean Tan and a Hong Kong Chan are often distant cousins via the same Fujianese clan that splintered across the South China Sea during the 19th-century Nanyang migration.
This tool uses public-domain data from the Hundred Family Surnames text and modern census records. It is for cultural and genealogical interest only — not a legal or registry document.
10 Facts about Chinese Surnames
The Hundred Family Surnames was compiled circa 960 CE with 504 entries. Zhao opens it not because it was numerous, but because it was the Song imperial surname — a political courtesy, not a census.
2020 PRC census: ~6,150 distinct surnames in mainland China. The top 100 cover 85% of the population; the top 10 account for ~40%.
Wang (7.25%), Li (7.19%), and Zhang (6.83%) are China's top three surnames — combined, they represent over 270 million people, more than the entire population of Indonesia.
Many top surnames mirror imperial dynasties: Li (Tang), Liu (Han), Zhu (Ming), Zhao (Song). Imperial bestowals and intermarriage with the royal house caused massive demographic expansion of these names.
Chen / Tan is the #1 surname in Fujian, Taiwan, Singapore, and Malaysia — reflecting the disproportionate role Fujianese migrants played in shaping ethnic-Chinese communities across Southeast Asia during the 19th-century "Nanyang" migration.
The same Chinese surname has multiple romanisations reflecting dialect pronunciation: 陈 → Tan (Hokkien/SG-MY), Chan (Cantonese/HK), Chen (Mandarin/CN-TW), Trần (Vietnamese).
Two-character "compound surnames" like Ouyang, Sima, Shangguan, Zhuge historically came from official titles or place names. Today they're rare — all compound surnames combined account for less than 0.3% of China's population.
The Ma surname has a disproportionately high presence among Hui Muslims in China — because many Hui chose 馬 (Ma) as a Chinese rendering of the "Mu-" syllable in Muhammad.
Taiwan retains a "husband-prefix" custom for married women (husband's surname + maiden surname, e.g. 陈林秀美 = née Lin, married into Chen). Rare today in HK/SG/MY; effectively abolished in mainland China after 1950.
Pairs with RT-CHN-018 (Name Strokes), RT-CHN-019 (Baby Name Suggester), and RT-CHN-020 (Business Name Analyzer) — the complete Chinese naming toolset.
Frequently Asked Questions
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The tool covers the top 50 most-common surnames (~85% population coverage) plus a few notable compound surnames. China has 6,000+ surnames in total, but 99% of lookups concentrate on the top 100. Rarer surnames aren't included.
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Yes. The tool accepts Mandarin pinyin (Wang/Li/Zhang), Hokkien (Tan/Lim/Ng — common in SG/MY), Cantonese (Chan/Wong/Lau — common in HK), and Vietnamese (Trần/Lý/Trương) romanisations.
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Yes. Both 张 / 張 and 陈 / 陳 are recognised. Results display both simplified and traditional forms when they differ.
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Rankings are from the 2020 PRC mainland census. Taiwan, HK, SG/MY, and overseas Chinese communities have somewhat different rankings — e.g. Chen ranks #5 in mainland China but #1 in Fujian, Taiwan, Singapore, and Malaysia.
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The tool provides the historical origin and cultural background of a surname — a useful starting point for genealogy research. It does not include individual family trees, member records, or specific lineage data. For ancestor tracing, consult local gazetteers, ancestral hall (宗祠) records, or specialised genealogy databases.
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Because romanisations record dialect pronunciation. A 19th-century Fujianese migrant to Singapore would register their surname as "Tan" using Hokkien pronunciation; a 1950s Cantonese migrant to Hong Kong would register the same character 陈 as "Chan". This is why Singaporean Tan and Hong Kong Chan are often the same surname in different dialects.
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The Hundred Family Surnames is a cultural text, not a modern census — the relative populations of its 504 entries have shifted dramatically over 1,000 years. As a primer and origin reference, however, it remains valuable. Modern research typically cross-references it with contemporary census data.
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No. Bin (son) / Binti (daughter) in Malay names are Arabic-influenced patronymics — not surnames. Malaysian Chinese retain Chinese surnames with romanised spelling (e.g. Tan Cheng Lock = 陈祯禄).
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Yes, but DNA results don't always match clan records. Y-chromosome DNA (paternal inheritance) can trace common ancestors among same-surname males, but imperial bestowals, adoption, and surname changes mean that surname and DNA lineage are not always identical. Requires a specialised genetic testing service.
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Data comes from the public-domain Hundred Family Surnames text (Song dynasty, ~960 CE), the 2020 PRC mainland census, and open dialect research. This tool is for cultural and genealogical interest only — not a legal or registry document.
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