Gaige is a variant of Gage, from an Old French surname meaning "pledge" or "measure."
Gaige is a phonetic variant of Gage, an English surname-turned-given-name with roots in medieval Anglo-Norman culture. The name derives from the Old French *gage*, meaning 'pledge,' 'token,' or 'security' — a word used in the context of formal agreements, where a gage was an object deposited as a guarantee of good faith or payment. As an occupational or descriptive surname, it could also connect to a *gauger*, an official who measured the contents of casks and barrels, a practical role in medieval commerce.
The name thus carries associations with trustworthiness, measurement, and the weight of promises kept. Gage entered the American given-name vocabulary in the twentieth century as part of the broader trend of using surnames as first names, a distinctly Anglo-American naming fashion that accelerated dramatically in the latter decades of the century. It gained cultural traction partly through fictional associations — the character Gage Creed in Stephen King's 1983 novel *Pet Sematary* gave the name a memorable if haunting literary moment.
Despite that association, or perhaps partly because of the name's bold sound, Gage grew steadily in American popularity through the 1990s and 2000s. Gaige — with its 'ai' vowel substitution — is the spelling variant favored by parents who want the same strong, single-syllable energy of Gage but with a slightly more personalized or modern orthographic signature. The variant reflects the same creative spelling impulse seen across American naming culture, individualizing a shared name without changing its sound or meaning. Gaige projects confidence and directness, a compact name with an old-world meaning that wears well on the modern playground and the adult boardroom alike.