Modern English surname-style name, likely a variant of Jason (Greek, 'healer') or a coined patronymic.
Hayson blends two strong naming traditions into one distinctive compound. The "Hay-" opening connects to Hayes, an Old English surname derived from hæg, meaning "enclosure" or "hedged land," which also produced the given name and the presidential surname Hayes. The "-son" suffix is the straightforward Anglo-Saxon patronymic, meaning "son of" — used in surnames like Harrison, Jackson, and Mason, all of which have made the reverse journey back into first names over the past century.
As a given name construction, Hayson follows a pattern that has proven durable in American naming: combining a familiar surname root with the -son ending to create a first name that sounds grounded and ancestral without being borrowed directly from a specific famous bearer. It sits comfortably alongside Grayson, Bryson, Brayson, and Jameson as part of a family of names that feel both traditional in structure and modern in application, with the H opening giving it a slightly softer, more approachable quality than its harder-consonant cousins. Hayson carries no single dominant cultural association, which gives it flexibility.
In some readings it sounds like a variant of Jason — the Greek hero Iason, whose name meant "healer" — and absorbs some of that mythological energy. In others it reads as pure English countryside, hay fields and hedgerows. For parents who want a name that is familiar enough to be easy but uncommon enough to feel chosen, Hayson occupies exactly that productive middle ground: immediately legible, genuinely rare, and built to age well.