Short form of Kristopher or Kristin, from Greek Christos meaning 'anointed one.'
Kris is a name of elegant compression, distilling centuries of Christian heritage into four letters. It functions as a stand-alone given name across Scandinavia — particularly in Denmark and Norway — as a contracted form of Kristian or Kristoffer, themselves rooted in the Greek Christophoros: one who bears Christ. In that etymology lives an entire medieval tradition of pilgrimage and devotion, the legendary giant who carried the Christ child across a river becoming Saint Christopher, patron of travelers.
The name gained particular cultural currency in the latter half of the twentieth century through a series of celebrated bearers. Kris Kristofferson, the Rhodes Scholar turned outlaw country songwriter, gave the name a rugged, intellectual mystique — here was a man who traded Oxford for Nashville and wrote 'Me and Bobby McGee.' Kris Jenner, the matriarch who built an entertainment empire, demonstrated the name's viability as a sharp, businesslike identity for women.
The spelling with a 'K' rather than 'Ch' or 'C' signals informality and directness. Today Kris occupies a pleasantly ambiguous space. It reads as effortlessly unisex before gender-neutral naming became a trend, suggesting someone with an easy confidence about their identity. In Nordic countries it remains a straightforward given name with no particular gender coding; in the English-speaking world it carries a slight retro-cool quality, evoking the 1970s and 80s while remaining entirely wearable today.