Magical Cat Names Bring Good Fortune
No mammal on our planet is as associated with magic as the domestic cat. Cats naturally see in the dark, slink silently through the shadows and leap tall refrigerators in a single bound. With these supernatural skills, it’s no wonder cats are considered talismans of magic. If you have found yourself with a new feline familiar, consider bestowing on him or her a mystical name.
Cats, especially black cats, have long been associated with magic and witchcraft. Their ability to walk silently, along with their tendency to remain wild and yet gentle with their humans, has bestowed upon them a magical mystique.
Historically, cats have played important roles in society as well as man’s home life. Cats were sacred in Ancient Egypt, especially prized for protecting grain supplies from rodents. In addition, they are considered lucky household spirits in Japanese lore. During the 1600s, in Great Britain, it was tradition for visitors to kiss the family cat upon their arrival, to ensure a pleasant visit. To this day, in many cultures, to do ill to a cat can only bring bad luck, loss of love, or worse, death.
If you have a new cat, finding the appropriate mysterious name is the first rite to cat ownership. To celebrate your new lucky talisman, consider these magical cat names from witchcraft, history, literature, and the magician’s closet.

12 Categories of Magical Cat Names
- Cat Names That Mean “Magic” and “Magical”
- Cat Names From Wicca, Voodoo, and Sorcery
- Magical Black Cat Names
- Witchy Cat Names from Film, TV, and Literature
- Mystical and Occult Cat Names
- Magician’s Cat Names
- Spirit and Spiritual Cat Names
- Cat Names from Famous Magicians
- Witch, Wizard, and Sorcerer Cat Names
- Magical Realism Cat Names
- Mysterious Cat Names from Prophets and Seers
- Cat Names That Mean “Lucky” or “Fortunate”
Cat Names That Mean “Magic” and “Magical”
| Abracadabra | Hoax | Orphic |
| Alakazam | Hex | Orenda |
| Beguile | Hijinx | Quixotic |
| Bewitched | Hoodoo | Rapture |
| Cant | Makutu | Runic |
| Chant | Mojo | Sorceress |
| Charm | Mummery | Spooky |
| Chicanery | Mystic | Trance |
| Conjure | Mystique | Tricksy (or Trixie) |
| Craft | Myth | Voodoo |
| Eerie | Numinous | Whammy |
| Flimflam | Occult | Witchery |
| Glamour | Oracle | Wizard |
2. Cat Names From Wicca, Voodoo, and Sorcery
Learn more about magical cat properties when you find out What Are Cats Whiskers For?
Athames: Ritual daggers.
Bane: Curse, Scourge, or poison that typically causes death e.g. wolfbane.
Bokor: Sorcerers of Voodoo for hire. Bokors can be either male or female.
Canon: Rules or methods.
Chant: Rhythmic psalm or incantation sung in unison by a crowd.
Coven: A gathering of witches.
Cult: A system of veneration directed toward a specific object or individual.
Grimalkin or Greymalkin: An especially evil-looking female cat associated with witchcraft. In the middle ages, possession of a Grimalkin could be enough proof of an individual practicing witchcraft to get one burned at the stake.
Grimoire: Pronounced “grim-war,” a book of magic spells. These spell books typically teach the magician how to create magical objects, summon spiritual beings of both positive and negative forces, and how to place charms and curses on individuals. A famous Grimoire is the Book of Shadows.
Harpy: Bird of prey with a woman’s face.
Heka: The Egyptian magical system (the deification of magic and medicine) in ancient Egypt, and the phonetic spelling of the German word for witch (hexe).

Stavkoo
Hex: A Magick spell or curse. Also, hex means to spellbind, beguile, or tickle to death!
Imp: From German folklore, imps are small goblins with mischievous natures that like to play pranks and practical jokes on their human friends. Typically, they are perceived as lonely creatures in search of a friend. In order to get the attention they crave, they pester the human who either takes them in or drives them away in annoyance.
Jade: Jade is a stone used in Magick for healing and protection. Green jade is used for calming and soothing, while red jade promotes friendships and prosperity. Name your kitty Jade if you want a lucky talisman to aid you in gaining friendships and amassing great wealth.
Jinx: A Magick spell or enchantment that brings calamity. Name your kitty Jinx if you have a vermin population that needs to be eradicated.
Juju: A lucky talisman, fetish, or charm (West African).
Kikimora: A Russian house spirit. When the home is in order, a kikimora will assist in care of the household; however, if the home is not in order, she will break dishes and engage in destructive behavior throughout the night. The kikimora living in an inharmonious home spins flax at night with evil intentions for the world.
Lamen: Magical breast plate worn over the heart, to keep one’s intentions pure.
Litha: Celebration of the summer solstice, new beginnings and fertility.
Loas: Laws in voodoo, the loas are identified with Catholic saints.
Mabon: The celebration of the autumnal equinox, it signals letting go of that which no longer serves you.
Magus: Magical textbook.
Malachite: Malachite is an opaque green stone that is used in Magick to promote visionary powers and wealth by bringing hope to its possessor. Malachite aids in courage by bringing an understanding of the source of one’s fears. Additionally, malachite promotes prosperity.
Mambo: Female Bokor and priestess of Voodoo; she may practice both white and black magic to create talismans, fetishes, house spirits, or zombies.
Ostara: The celebration of the vernal equinox, symbolizing rebirth. Ostara makes a cute name for a rescue kitty, getting a new lease on life.
Picatrix: A famous Arabic grimoire (book of spells) based on Astral magic. You can call your kitty Trixie for short.
Potion
Praxis: Ritual or rite.
Prophet: One gifted with foresight.
Revel: Noisey celebration.
Rivet: To capture someone’s full attention.
Rune: Small bones or stones bearing symbols of magical significance.
Sabbat: The eight pagan festivals that celebrate the changes of the seasons of the year.
Sage: The act of cleansing an area or residence of evil spirits with an herb such as sage. One who is wise.
Samhain: The Sabbat that celebrates the end of the harvest, as the days get darker. This is the period when the veil between our world and the spirit realm is at its thinnest.
Santeria: A mix of Voodoo and Catholicism, meaning “the way of the saints.” Primarily practiced in Cuba and Mexico.
Scepter
Shaman: Person with access to and influence over good and evil spirits.
Sigil: A personalized symbol used to aid in creating a spell or ritual.
Smudge: To burn incense or herbs to cleanse and area or object.
Sodalite: This is a bright blue stone with crisscrossing white lines and flecks, used in Magick to promote calmness and good digestion. It is thought to aid in sleep, lower blood pressure, and bring clarity of thought to the mind. This bright stone represents the spiritual light of a balanced spirit and mind. Name your kitty Sodalite, then call it Soda for short.
Sorginak: The Basque name for both male and female witches. The Sorginak (pronounced “shor-in-yak”) are said to have the ability to transform themselves at will into animals, most commonly cats.
Superstition: A belief in the supernatural, sorcery and the occult involving avoidance of ill portending events, such as seeing a black cat cross your path or your finance before your wedding, on that day.
Tarot: The tarot deck is a pack of playing cards from the 15th century used for fortunetelling and divination.
Vamp: One who bewitches, beguiles, or charms.
Virge: Wand or rod.
Voodoo: African, specifically Nigerian, word for “moral fiber.”
Wand or Wanda
Wicca: A modern Pagan religion revolving around ancient paganism and witchcraft. There is no central religious authority and Wicca has many denominations with their own hierarchical structures. Wiccans worship both a masculine horned god and a feminine moon goddess.
Zemi: Considered a good luck piece, amulet, or charm by the Taíno people of the Caribbean.
Magical Black Cat Names
Bruja or Brujo: Feminine and masculine nouns for witch respectively. English with a Spanish origin.
Burtai: Lithuanian, for “black magic.”
Chanceux: “Lucky” in French (pronounced shan-soo).
Crow: Because crows are also black and because both crows and black cats have a history of being witches’ familiars.
Czary: Polish, meaning “black magic.”
Daeva: Zoroastrian demons.
Galla: Seven demons of Mesopotamia whose duty is to drag mortals back to Kur, or the underworld.
Goety: Noun meaning black magic.
Goth: One who finds beauty in things which other people consider dark; a genre of literature that focuses on macabre or dark themes.
Gramarye: Pronounced “gramary,” book of sorcery.
Karma: The Hindu or Buddhist belief that the repercussions for your actions in this life will carry over into your next life.
Kismet: Destiny or fate.
Lamia: Female demon or vampire.
Lefty: Black magic is sometimes referred to as the “left-hand path.”
Moshu: Japanese, meaning “black magic.”
Mystery: “Myster” for short.
Omen: An event or sign that is a portent or prophecy of the future.
Pagan: One whose religious beliefs predate those of the main world religions; pantheistic, polytheistic, or animistic.
Raven: (See “Crow.”)
Rook: (See “Crow.”)
Sihir: Indonesian, meaning “black magic.”
Sphynx: In ancient Greece, a creature with a woman’s head, a lion’s body, and wings. If you can’t answer the sphynx’s riddle, you die.
Spook: Ghost.
Suerte: “Lucky” in Spanish.
Trolldom: Swedish and Norwegian for “black magic.”
Witchy Cat Names from Film, TV, and Literature
Aether: Spirit which unites air, fire water and earth.
Ariel: The mischievous and magical spirit that is enslaved by Prospero in Shakespeare’s The Tempest.
Aslan: A male name of Turkish origin meaning “lion,” Aslan was the lion in C. S. Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia series.
Binx: In the film Hocus Pocus, a teenager named Binx is transformed by three witches into an immortal talking cat.
Bruja: Spanish, witch or hag.
Circe: Goddess of magic from Homer’s The Iliad, after turning his men into pigs, she bewitch Odysseus into staying with her on her island, Aiaia, for one year.
Cleo: In the film The Mummy, a cat named Cleo is able to ward off evil doers because cats are guardians of the underworld. In one scene, O’Connell holds up Cleo, whose hiss drives off the villain.
Dinah: Alice’s pet cat in Alice in Wonderland. Alice mentions Dinah frequently on her adventures, and her boasts of Dinah’s hunting prowess causes much consternation amongst the Wonderland residents (who happen to be the kind of creatures Dinah likes to hunt).
Endora: Overbearing mother and witch on the TV series Bewitched.
Freya: Norse goddess who rides a chariot pulled by two cats. Freya reigns over all things feminine as well as sex, fertility, beauty, magic, witchcraft, warcraft and is associated with death and gold.
Glinda: Good witch of the North in the Wizard of Oz.
Hecate: Greek goddess of magic who assisted Demeter in her search for Persephone.
Isis: Egyptian goddess who invoked healing spells to benefit mortals.
Jiniri: The female jinn or genie, also spelled jinni. It is a mighty jinni that helps Aladdin in One Thousand and One Nights, also known as the Arabian Nights.
Jinn: The male form of genie. They are said to have been made by Allah of smokeless fire, unlike man who was made of clay. Additionally, unlike angels, jinn have free will to do good or evil. Jinn exist in another dimension unseen to man.
Kyra: Lead character with magical powers in Bureau of Magical Things.
Ling-Ling: In the Bewitched TV series, Samantha the witch tries to help her husband Darrin, an advertising executive, find and exotic woman for a new ad campaign. Samantha transforms a stray Siamese cat into the exotic and seductive Ling-Ling. Ling-Ling is an advertising success, while the usual antics that follow teach us that magic is never the best solution.
Lucinda: Black cat and witches’ familiar in Bewitched.
Merlin: The wizard of Arthurian legend, Merlin advises King Arthur and is known to be a shapeshifter that disguises himself in a variety of human forms.
Minerva: In the Harry Potter series, Minerva McGonagall, the transfiguration teacher, often transforms herself into a cat.
Moriah: A large black cat in The Forgotten Beasts of Eld, by Patricia A. McKillip. Moriah is renowned for her knowledge of secret charms and spells.
Nimue: Enchantress from the Arthurian legends, also known as the Lady of the Lake.
Prospero: A powerful sorcerer and the main character of Shakespeare’s The Tempest. Prospero conjures a great storm which sets the action of the play in motion.
Pyewacket: The name of the cat and witches’ familiar in Bell, Book and Candle. Pyewacket has been both a black cat and Siamese cat in film and stage revivals.
Sabrina: The teenage witch.
Salem: Black cat and familiar in Sabrina the Teenage Witch; also the name of the town where the infamous witch trials took place in Salem, Massachusetts.
Samantha: Lead role and leading good witch on Bewitched.
Sybil: Seer or prophet.
Tabitha: Mischievous daughter and baby witch of Samantha and Darren on Bewitched.
Tattoo: A rhythmic drumming or tapping.

Mystical and Occult Cat Names
Mystics believe in the existence of an extrasensory dimension of reality. Bestowing a mystical or occult name on your cat will no doubt enable your kitty to use her supernatural powers, to intuit your needs, and endow you with good fortune.
Aleister: Aleister Crowley was a mystic famous for his controversial writings who referred to himself as “the beast.”
Astral: The substance of a second body that accompanies a human throughout life. The astral body may leave the physical body at times and travel through the universe, in astral projections. The astral body survives the body at death. Name your cat Astral if you are seeking a constant companion.
Aura: Similar to a halo, an aura is a luminous field of radiation that surrounds all living things. Colors emitted from auras are said to be indicative of an individual’s mental, spiritual, and physical wellbeing.
Chakra: Chakras are meeting points or nodes in one’s energy field or “subtle body.” Chakras are the loci of life energy that keep the mental, physical, and spiritual energies in balance. Some psychics read clients’ chakras to determine their current state of mind and spirit, in order to advise them as to where they should focus their energies to improve their future outcomes. Name your cat Chakra if she is at the center of your sense of peace and well-being.
Chiffer: Cipher.
Cipher: Secret code or mystical writing.
Glyph: Hieroglyphic.
Halo: A ring of light surrounding the head of a holy individual or deity. Halos have been used in the iconography of most world religions.
Ikon: Representative image, rune.
Myth: Tradition, story, or legend, especially regarding supernatural beings.
Nostradamus: This famous mystic who wrote predictions about what would happen in the future has been dead for 500 years, but his book is still in print.
Orenda: Iroquois, An extraordinary and invisible power that inhabits all creatures and inanimate objects.
Raven: In Greek mythology, the raven is associated with Apollo and prophesy. The raven was the worldy messenger of the gods and a seen as a symbol of bad luck.
Rumi: Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi, born in the early 1200s in Afghanistan, was a famous mystic and poet.
Thelema: Occult and spiritual philosophy created by Aleister Crowley, meaning “to will, wish, want or purpose.”
Totem: Object with spiritual significance. Name your cat Totem and you can call him toto.
Magician’s Cat Names
Abracadabra: Term used by magicians to effect a magical turn of events. Name your kitty Abracadabra and you can call her Abra for short.
Bibiddi Bobbidi Boo: Incantation of the Fairy Godmother in Disney’s Cinderella.
Cardini: Famous magician that invented card-manipulation techniques.
Charm: A delight, trick, or deception.
Conjure: To bring forth.
Dazzle: To enthrall or captivate.
Fakir: One who performs remarkable feats, such as walking on fire and snake charming.
Hoax: A trick or a charm.
Hocus Pocus: Similar to abracadabra, the magician waves his magic wand and effects a change in the material world when he states “hocus pocus.”
Hoodoo: A charm or spell.
Houdini: Harry Houdini was a magician who became quite famous for his escape acts.
Jinx: To bring bad luck.
Mage: Magician or learned one.
Makutu: To bewitch or the spell cast to bewitch.
Marvel
Mojo: Magic spell.
Obi: Magical enchantment or sorcery.
Presto: Indicates a quick change in the material objects, such as pulling a rabbit from a previously empty hat.
Rune: A mysterious or magical mark or letter; a small talisman used in divination.
Shazam!
Sim Sala Bim: Magician Dante’s magic words, taken from a Danish fairy tale, similar to hocus pocus.
Spell: Incantation.
Taboo: A thing or subject that is forbidden.
Tapu: Polynesian, Something sacred or spiritual with prohibitions and rules surrounding it.
Voila: French for “here it is.”
Spirit and Spiritual Cat Names
Banshee: From Irish mythology, the banshee is a member of the fairies, and she heralds death of a family member by wailing or shrieking in the dead of night.
Cherub: One of the second order of angels, an innocent being.
Chimera: A fire breathing mythical being with the body of a goat, head of a lion, and serpent’s tail. A terrifying creature.
Kelpie: Scottish mythology holds that the kelpie, a water spirit in the form of a horse, foretells or warns of impending drownings.
Pagan: Lower case “pagan” is synonomous with “heathen,” however, with an upper case “P,” Paganism refers to a religion which honours the Earth.
Pixie: A mischievous Irish fairy.
Psyche: The human soul, mind, or spirit.
Revenant: Human that returns as a spirit following their death.
Seraph: One of the celestial beings of God’s throne; one of the highest order of beings.
Shade: Ghost or shadow.
Shaman: The intermediary between the natural world and the supernatural. They foretell the future and produces cures via magic.
Sooth: Prophet.
Specter: Ghost or apparition of a terrifying nature.
Spook: Ghost, specter, or spy.
Sprite: An elf, fairy, or goblin.
Sibyl: Seer or prophet.
Wraith: The apparition of a living being which portends their death.
Cat Names from Famous Magicians
These illusionist’s names are synonymous with magic and make delightful names for sly cats. From escapology to close up magic and stage to shock magic, these magicians rank among the most well known of the twentieth century.
Anderson
Blackstone
Cardini
Chung Ling Soo
Copperfield
Dynamo
Henning
Houdini
Maskelyne
Max Maven
Max Malini
Penn or Teller
Siegfried or Roy
Silvan
Slydini
Thurston
9. Witch, Wizard, and Sorcerer Cat Names
Akuba: “Witch” in Japanese.
Alohomora: In Harry Potter, “alohomora” is the spell for unlocking things (locks, doors, etc.).
Charisma: A quality of personal magic that inspires devotion; a special, magnetic charm or appeal.
Circe: (Pronounced sir-see) the sorceress in Homer’s Odyssey.
Enchant: To cast a spell.
Laveau: Marie Catherine Laveau was a voodoo priestess in the late 1800s in New Orleans.
Lumos: In Harry Potter, “lumos” is the spell for making light.
Mantra: A sacred word or sound believed to have psychological or spiritual powers when repeated.
Shazam: A word used to introduce an amazing or magical act or transformation.
Ursula: Ursula Southeil lived in the 1500s and was considered England’s greatest clairvoyant of her time.

Source: Photo by Sami Aksu on Pexels/Photoscape
Magical Realism Cat Names
Magical realism is a genre of drama and literature that imbues its heavily detailed, realistic characters and environments with elements of fantasy or the supernatural. In these tales the lines occasionally blur from the mundane to the fantastic. Authors are reticent to give explanations for the sudden supernatural elements; such events are intended to highlight some peculiarity of normal life.
These names from authors and their novels, celebrate the combination of reality and fantasy we experience living with these magical creatures. While they generally seem to be bound by the physics of Earth, they may suddenly defy gravity and run up a wall or over a fence 20 times their height. And let’s not forget the cat’s ability to parachute to Earth from a third or fourth story balcony, simply by twisting and arching their long backs.
Magical Cat Name Ideas
Allende: Isabel Allende, iconic magical realism author and writer of The House of Spirits.
Gabriel: Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Nobel prize wining author of 100 Years of Solitude and Love in the Time of Cholera among other magical realism novels.
Naylor: Gloria Naylor, heavily influenced by Toni Morrison, wrote The Women of Brewster Place, Linden Hills and Mama Day. Naylor makes a cute magical name for a kitty with sharp nails.
Rushdie: Salman Rushdie’s 1988 novel, The Satanic Versus, so insulted the Islamic community, a fatwah was placed upon his life. Like any good cat, he has survived to write many other tales, though not without injury. In 2022, he survived a stabbing shortly before he was to deliver a lecture in New York.
Saramago: Jose De Sousa Saramago is widely consider the finest Portuguese writer of his generation. His works can be considered allegories, where in historical events are viewed from a subversive perspective. His works are considered experimental in style, with sparing use of periods, sentences that go on for over a page, and sometimes abandoning the use of proper nouns.
A Nobel laureate, his works include The Gospel According to Jesus Christ and Death with Interruptions, wherein the townsfolk suddenly stop dying.
Toni:Toni Morrison, African American author, Nobel Prize winner, and writer of landmark novels as Sula (1973), Song of Solomon (1977), Beloved (1987), Paradise (1998), and Home (2012).
Final Thoughts on Mystical Magical Cat Names
Welcoming a cat into your home is a little like inviting in a pocket-sized enigma—quiet feet, watchful eyes, and a talent for appearing exactly where you least expect them. So, if any animal deserves a magical name, it’s the one that already moves like a spell! Whether you’re drawn to witchy classics, lucky talismans, occult symbols, or famous sorcerers from film and folklore, the right name can feel like a spell you speak out loud every day.
As you choose, let your cat lead the decision. Try a few favorites in the tone you’ll actually use—soft for cuddles, bright for play, firm for “get off the counter.” The best magical cat names are the ones that roll easily off your tongue and match your cat’s unique kind of enchantment: mischievous, protective, serene, or gloriously chaotic. In the end, the perfect name won’t just sound mystical—it will feel like it belongs to your lucky familiar, as if you discovered it rather than invented it.
