A modern English-style name, likely built from Tay with a popular -ley ending.
Tayley is a modern compound name woven from two threads: the occupational surname Taylor, derived from the Old French tailleur (one who cuts cloth), and the meadow-suffix -ley, from Old English leah. Taylor as a given name made the leap from surname to first name during the twentieth century, accelerating sharply in the 1990s partly due to country and pop music associations — Taylor Dayne in the late 1980s, and later Taylor Swift's enormous cultural footprint — making the name synonymous with a certain confident, American-inflected femininity. The -ley ending transforms Taylor from a brisk, two-syllable surname-name into something with more lyrical flow — closer to the meadow-names (Ashley, Hadley, Paisley) that have dominated feminine naming charts for decades.
It sits in good company: Hailey, Kayley, and Baylee all follow the same template of a solid consonant root softened into three syllables by the -ley close. This structural formula is deeply embedded in American naming culture as a way of making names feel both energetic and graceful. Tayley remains uncommon enough to give its bearer a name that is genuinely distinctive while being phonetically transparent — no one will mishear or stumble over it.
It carries the artisanal echo of the tailor's craft, the open-air feeling of a meadow, and the contemporary pop-cultural confidence of the Taylor lineage. For parents who love the sound of Taylor but want something less well-trodden, Tayley offers a small, inventive step sideways into originality.