Variant of Reeve, an English occupational surname meaning 'steward' or 'bailiff of a manor.'
Reaves is a surname of Old English origin, derived from the word "reeve" — a local administrative official who collected rents and managed estates on behalf of a lord in medieval England. The role was one of quiet authority, someone who kept order in the margins of power, and over centuries the occupational title hardened into a family name. Variant spellings include Reeve, Reeves, and Reaves, each carrying the same ancestral echo of civic stewardship.
As a given name, Reaves belongs to the modern tradition of repurposing strong Anglo-American surnames into first names, a practice that gathered momentum in the twentieth century and has only deepened since. It shares company with names like Hayes, Brooks, and Grant — monosyllabic or near-monosyllabic surnames that feel grounded and self-assured. Actor Keanu Reeves brought the root spelling into global consciousness, lending the name a certain cool mystique that has migrated to the Reaves spelling as well.
Today Reaves functions as a quietly distinctive first name, popular among parents seeking something that feels rooted in history without being overtly traditional. It carries a sense of reliability and understatement — someone who gets things done without demanding the spotlight, much like the medieval reeves from whom it descends.