Occupational surname from Latin 'maior' (mayor) or German 'Meier' (steward).
Myers as a given name represents the increasingly fashionable category of surname-as-first-name, but the surname itself carries rich and layered origins. It derives primarily from the Middle English 'mire' or Anglo-French 'mire,' meaning a physician or healer — a medical practitioner in the medieval sense. In some regional traditions it also developed from 'mayor' (from Latin 'major,' meaning greater), used for a village headman or overseer, while in other lineages it served as an occupational or locational marker.
By the 17th and 18th centuries, Myers had become a well-established English and Jewish-American surname, carried by families across Britain and the Atlantic diaspora. H. Myers who co-founded the Society for Psychical Research in Victorian England.
As a given name, Myers is rare enough that its associations remain predominantly through the surname tradition — which includes, inevitably, Michael Myers, the silent antagonist of John Carpenter's Halloween franchise, though parents choosing it today are more likely reaching for its crisp, professional quality. In modern given-name use, Myers sits alongside surnames like Sullivan, Bennett, and Harrison as names that carry institutional weight and a certain no-nonsense directness. Its single syllable punches clean and clear, and it reads as strong without aggression — a name that wears well on a child growing into adulthood.