Your name
Olivia
in Japanese
The default way to write Olivia in Japanese is オリビア — a phonetic katakana spelling that captures the sound and signals, instantly to a Japanese reader, that the name comes from elsewhere. But katakana is only one of three answers Japanese gives to a foreign name.
Below, we show all three. First the official katakana. Then a set of meaning kanji chosen to express what Olivia actually means at the root — Derived from Latin 'oliva' meaning 'olive' or 'olive tree', a symbol of peace, wisdom, and victory in classical traditions. Finally a set of ateji, the playful tradition where the kanji match the sound and tell their own small story underneath.
Katakana — Phonetic
How Olivia is most commonly written in Japanese — used on official documents, business cards, and signage.
Meaning Kanji — Etymology
"Olivia" means: Derived from Latin 'oliva' meaning 'olive' or 'olive tree', a symbol of peace, wisdom, and victory in classical traditions.
和 (wa/nagomu) = peace, harmony — echoing the olive branch as a symbol of peace; 実 (mi) = fruit, truth — representing the olive fruit and the bearing of meaningful results.
聖 (sei) = sacred, holy — reflecting the olive tree's sacred status in classical and biblical traditions; 樹 (ju) = tree — directly invoking the olive tree itself.
智 (chi) = wisdom — drawing from the olive's association with Athena, goddess of wisdom; 穂 (ho) = grain ear, harvest — representing fruitfulness and the gifts of the olive tree.
Ateji — Sound + Meaning
Where the sound matches and the kanji tell their own small story. The Edo scholars and modern manga authors both played this game.
Mystical: a name woven from threads of jeweled light.
Cute: a beloved cherry-blossom village, soft and romantic.
Cool: a graceful soul at the center, blooming with jasmine and taking flight.
Not sure which form to use?
Katakana, meaning kanji, and ateji each belong to a different part of Japanese life — official paperwork, calligraphy and gifts, signatures and wordplay. Our full guide walks through when to reach for each one.
Read the guide: the three ways to write your name in Japanese →
Seven, drawn