Dreyson is a modern surname-style invention, modeled on names ending in -son meaning son of.
Dreyson is a modern elaboration rooted in the English surname tradition, most likely a creative variant of Grayson (meaning "son of the gray-haired one," from Old English grǣg) or a phonetic cousin of Drayton, an Old English place name meaning "settlement near a portage or drag-way." The substitution of "Drey" for "Gray" follows a clear pattern in contemporary American naming: taking an established surname-turned-given-name and refreshing its sound with a slight phonetic pivot that preserves recognizability while asserting originality.
The "-son" suffix has deep Germanic and Old Norse roots — it was once literally functional, marking patronymic lineage (Erikson, Johnson, Williamson) — but in modern given names it functions as a rhythmic and stylistic marker, lending a sense of solidity and heritage to names that might otherwise feel too brief. Names like Grayson, Greyson, Brayson, and Dreyson form a loose phonetic family that has been popular in the United States since the 2000s, driven by a broader fashion for surnames as first names and a preference for names ending in the sonorous "-son." While Dreyson does not yet appear on major popularity charts as a frequently recorded given name, it circulates in the manner of many modern invented names — found in communities, schools, and social media, gaining a quiet foothold. Its appeal lies in that balance of the familiar and the distinct: a parent choosing Dreyson wants their child to have a name that feels grounded and strong, but not one shared by half the classroom.