The surname McLaughlin is the anglicised form of the Irish Mac Lochlainn — meaning “son of Lochlann — a name meaning ‘land of the lakes’ or ‘Viking’”. McLaughlin is the most common anglicised form of Mac Lochlainn, ‘son of Lochlann’.[1]
Quick Facts
| Irish form | Mac Lochlainn |
| Modern Irish | Mac Lochlainn |
| Meaning | Son of lochlann — a name meaning ‘land of the lakes’ or ‘viking’ |
| Origin | Patronymic — royal Ulster sept |
| Historical regions | Donegal, Derry (Ulster) |
| Modern rank | Top 30 most common surnames in Ireland |
| Pronunciation | muh-KLOCK-lin (English) · MOK LOKH-lan (Irish) |
Meaning & Etymology
McLaughlin is the most common anglicised form of Mac Lochlainn, ‘son of Lochlann’.[1]
Lochlann (from loch, ‘lake’, and lann, ‘land’) was the Irish name for Scandinavia — the ‘land of the lakes’ or the Viking homeland. A personal name Lochlann, therefore, originally meant ‘Viking’ or ‘Scandinavian’, and was given to children of Norse descent.[2]
The surname is shared by several unrelated septs, most prominently the Mac Lochlainn of Inishowen who were kings of the Northern Uí Néill in the 11th and 12th centuries.
Historical McLaughlin Septs
There is rarely a single family behind a major Irish surname. Edward MacLysaght — the gold-standard source for Irish surname history — identifies distinct historical septs that all anglicised to McLaughlin, often with no kinship to one another.[2]
The Mac Lochlainn of the Northern Uí Néill
The Mac Lochlainn were a senior branch of the Northern Uí Néill — the same royal line that produced the O’Neills of Tyrone. For a brief period in the 11th-12th centuries, the Mac Lochlainn actually held the High Kingship of Ireland in competition with the O’Connors of Connacht. Their dominance ended when the Norman invasion reshaped the northern political map.[1][2]
The Mac Lochlainn of Meath
A smaller but documented Mac Lochlainn line existed in Meath, unconnected to the Ulster royal branch. MacLysaght records this sept as distinct.[1][2]
Famous Bearers
- John McLaughlin — English jazz-fusion guitarist of Irish descent, founder of the Mahavishnu Orchestra.
- Phyllis McLaughlin — Irish historian and genealogist.
- Michael McLaughlin — numerous American cardinals and bishops of Irish descent bear the name.
- Mignon McLaughlin — American journalist and author.
Spelling Variants & Anglicisations
Over centuries of anglicisation, translation, and emigration, the McLaughlin name has taken many forms in English and Irish:
- McLaughlin · MacLaughlin · Mclaughlin · M’Laughlin
- McLoughlin · McGlachlin · McLochlin
- Mac Lochlainn (Irish)
Where to Visit if Your Name is McLaughlin
If you carry the McLaughlin name and want to walk the ground your ancestors once held, here are the regions of Ireland that are your strongest historical anchors:
- Inishowen Peninsula (Donegal) — the ancestral home of the royal Mac Lochlainn branch. Visit the Grianán of Aileach — the ancient stone fort that served as their inauguration site and capital for several centuries.
- County Derry — the broader Mac Lochlainn territory. Walk the Walls of Derry and the Bann Valley, the landscape the family ruled before the Norman reshaping of Ulster.
Plan your Irish trip: browse our live community-voted Top Places to Visit in Ireland leaderboard, pick the perfect pub in our Best Pubs in Ireland 2026 poll, or vote for the Greatest Irish Movie Ever Made.
Love your Irish heritage? ☘️
Join 64,000+ readers getting one Irish story every morning — free.
Subscribe Free →Sources
- Wikipedia: Wikipedia (en) — consolidated etymology and modern rank [link]
- Maclysaght: MacLysaght, Edward. Irish Families: Their Names, Arms and Origins. 1957, Hodges Figgis. The standard scholarly reference on the origin and distribution of Irish surnames.
All facts above are sourced from the named references listed above. Page last verified April 2026.
