Name Meaning & Legal Status · Iceland
Pablo Name: Meaning, Origin & Iceland Legal Status
Showing legal status, local spelling and registration process for Iceland specifically. Each of the 7 country pages for Pablo contains different data — see the comparison table below.
🇮🇸 Pablo — Approved in Iceland
Pablo is accepted as a baby name in Iceland. Generally accepted under naming law, without special conditions.
How Pablo compares across 7 European countries
Each row is a different country page for Pablo. Your current page (🇮🇸 Iceland) is highlighted. Click any other row to switch countries.
What does the name Pablo mean?
The name Pablo means "Small, humble". It is of Latin (Spanish form of Paulus) origin and is most commonly given to boys across Europe.
Pronunciation in Icelandic: PAH-tl (Páll). Pronunciation varies slightly by region, but this is the form most commonly heard in Iceland.
Is Pablo approved in Iceland? Pablo is accepted as a baby name in Iceland. Read on for the full origin, Icelandic spelling variants, popularity ranking, and the registration process at the Mannanafnanefnd (Icelandic Naming Committee).
Origin
Latin (Spanish form of Paulus)
Meaning
Small, humble
Popularity in Iceland
Outside top 30
Icelandic spelling
Páll
Authority
Mannanafnanefnd
Deadline
6 months after birth
Is Pablo approved in Iceland?
Pablo is accepted as a baby name in Iceland. Generally accepted under naming law, without special conditions.
The name Pablo: origin and meaning
Pablo is a name of Latin (Spanish form of Paulus) origin, meaning "Small, humble". It has travelled across Europe for centuries — its earliest bearer in the Christian tradition is Saint Paul the Apostle (author of much of the New Testament), and in modern times it has become widely recognised through cultural figures such as Pablo Picasso (Spanish painter), Pablo Neruda (Chilean poet, Nobel laureate).
In Iceland, a name must also fit Icelandic grammar (it needs a genitive form) and the Icelandic alphabet. The cultural reference to Saint Paul the Apostle (author of much of the New Testament) is respected but not sufficient on its own.
Popularity of Pablo in Iceland
A familiar but less frequent choice in Iceland — not currently in the top 30, which can actually be an advantage for parents seeking a timeless name without over-exposure.
Our database covers approximately 4,400 names recorded in Iceland. You can cross-check Pablo against this full dataset — along with naming patterns in the 24 other European countries we track — using our free name checker.
Icelandic spelling and variants of Pablo
In Iceland, the name is most often written as Páll. This is the form recorded in the civil register.
Naming rules in Iceland
Iceland regulates baby names through the Mannanafnanefnd (Icelandic Naming Committee) under the Lög um mannanöfn (Personal Names Act, 1996). Iceland operates one of the stricter naming systems in Europe — officials check proposed names against an approved list or a statutory set of rules, and unusual names may need formal review before registration.
For the name Pablo specifically: Generally accepted under naming law, without special conditions.
Deadline
6 months after birth
Processing
4-12 weeks for new names
Fee
€25 application fee for new names
Appeal to
Ministry of Justice (Dómsmálaráðuneytið)
How to verify before registering
- Use our free checker — verify Pablo against our database of names actually registered in Iceland.
- Call your local Mannanafnanefnd (Icelandic Naming Committee) — Registrars can confirm whether Pablo has been accepted locally before you book the registration appointment. This is especially helpful when using a rare spelling.
- Bring supporting evidence — If the name is unusual, prepare documents: a parent's passport showing the same name, a prior birth certificate, or a reference to a historical/religious figure. This makes a difference if the case escalates.
- Read the full legal guide — See our complete article on baby name laws in Iceland for the full legal background.
Similar boy names approved in Iceland
If Pablo is not exactly what you are looking for, these boy names share a similar European tradition and are commonly accepted in Iceland:
Frequently asked questions about Pablo
What does the name Pablo mean?
Pablo means "Small, humble". It is of Latin (Spanish form of Paulus) origin and is traditionally a boy's name. The name has been used across Europe for centuries and is associated with Saint Paul the Apostle (author of much of the New Testament).
Is Pablo legal to register as a baby name in Iceland?
Yes. Pablo is a well-established name in Iceland and is accepted by the Mannanafnanefnd (Icelandic Naming Committee) under Lög um mannanöfn (Personal Names Act, 1996) without special requirements.
What is the Icelandic spelling of Pablo?
The most common Icelandic form is Páll. Accents and diacritics must be registered exactly as written on the birth certificate — they cannot be added later without a formal name change.
How long does it take to register Pablo in Iceland?
Standard registration at the Mannanafnanefnd (Icelandic Naming Committee) is normally processed in 4-12 weeks for new names. Parents must register the birth within 6 months after birth. The standard fee is €25 application fee for new names.
Check Pablo across all 25 European countries
See where Pablo is accepted — useful for multicultural families or anyone planning to live abroad.
Check Pablo →Compare Pablo with the other 6 European countries
The data for Pablo is different in each country — different authority, different deadline, different local spelling. Open any of the 6 sibling pages below:
✅ Approved
See Pablo in Spain →
✅ Approved
See Pablo in France →
✅ Approved
See Pablo in Germany →
✅ Approved
See Pablo in Italy →
⚠️ Check
See Pablo in Portugal →
✅ Approved
See Pablo in Sweden →
Related resources
All approved names in Iceland
Browse the full 4,400-name database
Top 30 names in Iceland
See current popularity rankings
Baby Name Laws in Iceland
Complete legal guide
How to register a baby name in Europe
Step-by-step cross-country guide
Last updated: May 2026. Information is provided for orientation only and does not constitute legal advice. Always confirm with the Mannanafnanefnd (Icelandic Naming Committee).