Starr appears 64 times at rank 1619 on female pets, the double-r spelling distinguishing it from the more common Star. The extra letter is a styling choice that signals intentionality — owners who write Starr on the registration form made a small but deliberate decision, which is worth noting.
The Double-R Effect
Starr is the stylized version of a name that's been in use across multiple registers: celebrity surnames (Ringo Starr), character names, and straightforward descriptive pet names for white, spotted, or star-patterned animals. The double-r adds visual weight and makes the name feel more permanent. It's the same logic behind Belle versus Bell — one reads as a name, the other reads as a word. The human-name comparison is at /names/starr.
Who Chooses Starr
Female dogs and cats with white coats, star-shaped markings, or simply bright, attention-commanding personalities are the primary recipients. Dalmatians and white American Eskimo Dogs carry the visual pun well. Owners who want something aspirational without tipping into grandiosity find Starr hits the right note.
The Counter-Reading
The double-r styling will occasionally cause a pause at the vet's front desk — "Is that one r or two?" That's genuinely the full extent of the friction. Starr reads clearly, calls easily, and carries no baggage beyond mild celebrity association. For a name at rank 1619, that's a solid profile.
