Scandinavian patronymic meaning 'son of Hans,' from Johannes meaning 'God is gracious.'
Hanson is a patronymic surname-turned-given-name with deep Scandinavian and Northern European roots. It derives from Hans, itself a Low German and Dutch contraction of Johannes — the Latin form of the Hebrew Yohanan, meaning "God is gracious." So Hanson, at its etymological core, means "son of the gracious one of God," a lineage name that carries centuries of Lutheran and Lutheran-adjacent culture from Sweden, Denmark, and Germany through to the immigrant communities of Minnesota and Wisconsin.
The name was long a fixture of Scandinavian-American family trees, passed as a first name to honor a grandfather or maternal line when the surname couldn't be carried forward. In the 1990s it gained enormous cultural currency through the pop trio Hanson — brothers Isaac, Taylor, and Zac — whose breakout hit "MMMBop" made the name suddenly warm and youthful in the public imagination. That association has faded enough to leave the name available again without heavy pop-culture baggage.
As a first name today, Hanson occupies an interesting space: it reads as surname-style (on trend with names like Hudson, Harrison, and Beckett) while retaining genuine historical depth. It suits a child who will carry both old-world heritage and modern adaptability.