Kayliah is a modern spelling related to Kayla and Aliyah, carrying Hebrew-linked senses of beloved and rising.
Kayliah is a modern elaboration of the name Kayla, which itself traces back to multiple converging streams. The most widely accepted etymology connects it to the Hebrew *Kelila*, meaning "crown" or "laurel wreath," with cognates appearing in Aramaic poetry and the Talmudic tradition. A second thread links it to the Irish Gaelic *Cadhla*, meaning "graceful" or "beautiful," a name found in old Irish annals.
The -iah suffix, well attested in Hebrew as a divine reference (as in Jeremiah or Moriah, meaning "Yah is exalted"), transforms Kayliah into something that reads as a given name with quiet spiritual resonance. Kayla rose to popular consciousness in the English-speaking world largely through pop culture — the name appeared prominently on the long-running American soap opera *Days of Our Lives* in the 1980s — but Kayliah's extended form elevates it beyond the era of its parent name, giving it a longer, more melodic arc that parents seeking something both familiar and distinctive tend to find appealing. The three-syllable rhythm — Kay-lee-ah — gives it a flowing, almost song-like quality reminiscent of names from multiple world traditions.
Names with the -liah ending have flourished in American naming culture since the late 1990s, fitting into a broader pattern of feminizing familiar names with liquid, vowel-rich suffixes. Kayliah sits comfortably in that creative tradition while remaining personal and uncommon. Its blend of Hebraic weight, Irish grace, and contemporary invention makes it a name that feels both warmly approachable and quietly unusual.