From Sanskrit, meaning son, beloved child, or one who brings joy.
Nandan descends from the Sanskrit nandana (नन्दन), meaning "one who delights" or "the joyous one," rooted in the verb nand — to rejoice, to be happy. The name appears across classical Sanskrit literature with remarkable frequency and warmth. In the Mahabharata and various Puranas, Nandana refers to Indra's paradise garden, a celestial grove of eternal bliss where the gods rest and the air is perpetually sweet.
To carry the name Nandan is, etymologically, to carry a garden of joy. Historically, Nandan has been used across Hindu communities in India, particularly in Maharashtra, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu, where Sanskrit-root names have remained in continuous use for millennia. The name shares its root with the beloved name Nanda — the foster-father of Krishna in the Bhagavata Purana — and with Ananda, meaning "bliss," one of Buddhism's most celebrated concepts.
This family of "joy" names forms a constellation of related meaning: Nandan sits among them as the active, transitive form — not just "joy" but "the one who brings joy to others." In contemporary India and the global Indian diaspora, Nandan has found renewed interest partly through high-profile bearers: Nandan Nilekani, the co-founder of Infosys and architect of India's Aadhaar digital identity system, gave the name a modern association with visionary leadership. The name's clean two-syllable sound — NAN-dan — and its uncomplicated, universal meaning have made it a steady choice for parents who want classical roots without elaborate complexity.