Explore the Family Name Kamath

The meaning of Kamath

India (Goa and Karnataka): Brahmin name found among the Saraswat Brahmins of Goa, and particularly in coastal Karnataka. It is from Old Konkani kāmati, kāmatī ‘cultivator’, from kāmata ‘cultivation, cultivated land’ (a derivative of Sanskrit karma ‘work’) + the agent suffix -i, -ī. In Kannada, kamata denoted in particular cultivation which a landowner carried out using his own stock but the labor of others. Some characteristic forenames: Indian Ramesh, Laxman, Arvind, Satish, Vivek, Ashok, Deepak, Ganesh, Manjunath, Poornima, Prakash, Praveen.

Dictionary of American Family Names, 2nd edition, © Oxford University Press, 2022.

How common is the last name Kamath in the United States?

Based on the Decennial U.S. Census, the popularity of the surname Kamath has significantly increased from 2000 to 2010. In 2000, it was ranked 28,489th and by 2010 it had climbed to 20,449th, reflecting a noteworthy change of 28.22%. This surge in popularity is also evident in the count of people with the Kamath surname, which rose from 788 in 2000 to 1,299 in 2010, a substantial increase of 64.85%. The proportion of individuals with this surname per 100,000 people also rose from 0.29 to 0.44 during that decade, marking an increase of 51.72%.

20002010Change
Rank#28,489#20,44928.22%
Count7881,29964.85%
Proportion per 100k0.290.4451.72%

Race and Ethnicity of people with the last name Kamath

When it comes to ethnicity, the data from the Decennial U.S. Census reveals that the majority of people with the surname Kamath identify as Asian/Pacific Islander. This community accounted for 93.02% of the Kamaths in 2000 and slightly increased to 93.84% in 2010. Following the Asian/Pacific Islander community, those identifying with two or more ethnicities comprised 4.19% in 2000, though this decreased to 2.69% in 2010. The percentage of Kamaths identifying as White remained relatively stable from 2.41% in 2000 to 2.39% in 2010. There were no Kamaths who identified as Hispanic, Black, or American Indian and Alaskan Native in 2000, but by 2010, 0.54% identified as Hispanic.

20002010Change
Asian/Pacific Islander93.02%93.84%0.88%
Two or More Races4.19%2.69%-35.8%
White2.41%2.39%-0.83%
Hispanic0%0.54%0%
Black0%0%0%
American Indian and Alaskan Native0%0%0%