150 Horror Movie Name Ideas
Finding the right horror movie name can feel like half the fun and half the pressure. You want something that sounds eerie, memorable, and just a little dangerous, whether you’re naming a film, a short project, or a spooky creative idea.
The best horror titles usually do more than sound scary—they hint at a mood, a secret, or a threat you can’t quite see yet. If you’ve been searching for something that feels chilling without sounding generic, you’re in the right place.
These name ideas lean into different corners of horror, from haunted and gothic to twisted, psychological, and downright brutal. Pick one that fits your story’s heartbeat, and let the title do some of the haunting for you.
Haunted House
These names work well for stories centered on old homes, hidden rooms, and family curses. They feel classic, eerie, and instantly recognizable.
The Hollow Manor
Whispers in the Walls
Blackwood House
The Last Tenant
Rooms That Remember
The House on Briar Lane
Creaking Shadows
The Widow’s Hall
No One Lives Here
The Attic Door
Haunted house titles work best when they suggest both place and mystery. A strong location name can make the story feel grounded, while a subtle phrase adds the unsettling edge that horror fans love.
Say the title aloud and choose the one that feels the most unsettling in plain conversation.
Dark Woods
This section is for titles inspired by forests, trails, and isolated wilderness. They fit stories where getting lost is only the beginning.
Into the Pines
The Deadwood Path
Where the Trees Watch
Beneath the Black Branches
The Forest Knows
Hollow Trail
The Last Grove
Night in the Woods
The Briar Line
Deepwood Silence
Forest-themed horror names often feel strongest when they hint at being followed, watched, or trapped. That sense of distance from safety gives the title immediate tension without needing extra explanation.
Look for a title that suggests distance from help, not just darkness alone.
Blood and Gore
These names are sharper, more aggressive, and better suited to slashers or body-horror projects. They carry a raw, visceral energy.
Crimson End
Red Harvest
The Bleeding Hour
Split Open
Sanguine Night
The Cut Below
Bone Deep
Razor Psalm
Bloodline Break
The Final Wound
Gory horror titles often land best when they sound purposeful rather than messy. A clean, striking phrase can feel more disturbing than something overly graphic because it leaves room for the imagination to work.
Keep the wording tight so the title feels dangerous, not cluttered.
Psychological Fear
This set suits horror that gets under the skin through paranoia, identity loss, and mental unraveling. The names are tense, intimate, and unsettling in a quieter way.
The Quiet Mind
Borrowed Thoughts
Inside the Silence
The Second Self
Unseen Pressure
A Fractured Place
The Wrong Memory
Mindbreak
The Familiar Stranger
Thoughts After Midnight
Psychological horror titles work well when they feel slightly intellectual but still emotionally charged. The best ones suggest that the danger is already inside the character’s world, not waiting far away.
Choose words that hint at doubt, memory, or identity for a stronger psychological pull.
Supernatural Terror
These titles lean into ghosts, curses, possessions, and things that refuse to stay buried. They feel broad enough for many supernatural storylines while staying vividly spooky.
The Unburied
Echoes of the Dead
Possessed Light
The Cursed Veil
After the Séance
The Spirit Below
Fallen Omen
Gravebound
The Veil Remains
Dread Apparition
Supernatural horror names often benefit from a sense of the unseen crossing into the living world. A title that implies a boundary being broken can feel more haunting than one that simply names a ghost.
Use words like veil, echo, or curse to suggest something crossing over.
Ghost Stories
This group is ideal for classic ghostly tales, lingering spirits, and unresolved sorrow. The names feel elegant, eerie, and a little mournful.
The Pale Guest
Lanterns for the Lost
A House of Echoes
The Ghost Room
Still Here
The Quiet Dead
Shadows of Mercy
The Lingering
Murmurs at Midnight
The Spirit’s Return
Ghost story titles can be especially effective when they feel sad as well as scary. That emotional mix gives the title more depth and can make the story feel more memorable before anyone sees a scene.
A softer title can feel stronger when it carries a hidden ache.
Monsters Unleashed
These names fit creature features, beast attacks, and stories about something inhuman breaking loose. They sound bold, dramatic, and ready for chaos.
The Hollow Beast
Claws in the Dark
The Hunger Below
Nightfang
Beastfall
The Bone Hunter
Raven Maw
Predator’s Wake
The Last Creature
Savage Hollow
Monster movie titles often benefit from a sense of motion or attack. A strong creature name or a phrase that implies pursuit can make the title feel immediate and cinematic.
Use a title that sounds like danger is already moving toward the viewer.
Witchy Night
These titles are perfect for witchcraft, rituals, spells, and old magic with a sinister edge. They feel mysterious, feminine, and steeped in folklore.
Hexwood
The Witching Bloom
Salt and Ash
Moonspell
The Coven Below
Black Herb
Her Name Was Hex
Witchblood
The Ritual Garden
Cauldron Veil
Witch-themed horror titles often feel strongest when they blend beauty with menace. That contrast makes the title feel richer and gives it a more memorable, storybook kind of dread.
Mix one natural image with one dark word for a balanced witchy title.
Ancient Curses
This section suits stories about relics, tombs, forbidden objects, and old punishments that never truly ended. The names feel timeless and ominous.
The Broken Seal
Curse of the Ashen King
The Ninth Tomb
Buried Oath
The Relic’s Price
Sand and Shadows
The Ancient Mark
Temples of Dread
The Unsealed Grave
Oath of the Dead
Ancient curse titles work best when they suggest history with consequences. A strong relic, seal, or tomb reference can make the horror feel older and harder to escape.
Let the title imply that the danger started long before the movie begins.
Midnight Slashers
These names are built for fast, dangerous, late-night horror with a killer on the loose. They feel sleek, punchy, and easy to remember.
Midnight Cut
The Last Scream
Knife Hour
Dead by Dawn
The Silent Blade
After Dark
Kill Switch
Bloodline Street
The Final Slash
Night Shift Killer
Slasher titles often work because they are direct and sharp. A title that feels like a warning can be more effective than one that tries too hard to be clever.
Keep the title short enough that it feels like a threat on a poster.
Small Town Dread
These names fit horror set in quiet towns where everyone knows too much and nothing stays buried. They carry a slow-burn, close-to-home unease.
Main Street Graves
The Town That Waits
Welcome to Hollow Creek
Dead End County
The Last House on Elm
Beneath the Bell Tower
Hometown Haunting
The Quiet Borough
Where Everyone Knows
The County Line
Small-town horror titles often feel chilling because they suggest secrecy inside familiarity. That contrast makes the horror feel personal, which can be more effective than a bigger, louder threat.
Choose a title that makes ordinary places feel slightly too familiar.
Abandoned Places
This set is for empty schools, hospitals, factories, and forgotten buildings. The titles feel lonely, decayed, and loaded with history.
The Empty Ward
Rust and Rot
The Forgotten Wing
Vacant Ground
The Closed Door
No Lights Inside
The Derelict Place
Echoes in the Ruins
The Locked Floor
After the Closure
Abandoned-place horror titles can instantly create atmosphere by suggesting what used to be there. That sense of absence leaves room for the viewer’s imagination to fill in the worst possibilities.
A title that hints at what was lost can feel stronger than one that only names the ruin.
Cult and Ritual
These names are best for stories about secret groups, ceremonies, and devotion gone wrong. They feel intimate, unsettling, and quietly severe.
The Gathered Few
Ritual of Ash
The Hidden Circle
Blood Oath Society
Chant of the Veil
The Last Ceremony
Marked for the Rite
The Quiet Covenant
Devotion Below
The Unholy Meeting
Cult horror titles often feel most effective when they sound orderly on the surface but rotten underneath. A title that implies structure, vows, or ceremony can create a deeply unnerving contrast.
Use formal words to make the danger feel more controlled and more disturbing.
Found Footage
These titles suit shaky-camera horror, recovered recordings, and stories that feel discovered rather than staged. They give a raw, immediate sense of realism.
Recovered Tape
The Final Recording
Camera 13
Archive of Fear
What the Lens Saw
Lost Signal
The Unedited File
Playback Error
Footage from Below
File: Nightwatch
Found-footage titles work well when they sound like evidence. A file name, tape label, or recording reference can make the horror feel more believable right away.
Make the title sound like something someone should not have opened.
Dream and Nightmare
These names are meant for surreal horror, sleep paralysis, and stories where reality keeps slipping. They feel strange, soft, and deeply unsettling.
Dreams Don’t End
The Sleeping Room
Nightmare Bloom
Lucid Dread
The Dream That Stayed
Sleepwalker
The Hour of Waking
A Bad Place to Dream
The Unfinished Dream
When Sleep Turns
Dream-based horror titles can feel especially effective because they blur safety and threat. A title that sounds calm at first but turns wrong by the end creates a strong emotional hook.
Let the title shift from gentle to eerie in just a few words.
Final Frights
These names are broad, flexible, and dramatic enough to fit many kinds of horror projects. They work well when you want something versatile but still memorable.
The Last Fear
Night of Ruin
Darkness Returns
The End Is Near
Fear Lives Here
The Broken Night
No Safe Place
The Final House
Grim Return
The Dread Within
These titles work as strong all-purpose options when you want something intense but not too specific. They can suit trailers, posters, scripts, or even early working titles before the story is fully locked in.
If you need flexibility, choose the title that leaves room for the story to grow.
Final Thoughts
Choosing a horror movie name is a lot like choosing the first shadow your audience sees. The right title can whisper danger, suggest a hidden truth, or make someone curious enough to keep reading before they’ve seen a single frame.
What matters most is finding the one that feels true to the kind of fear you want to create. Some titles hit hard and fast, while others creep in slowly and stay with you.
Trust the one that gives you that immediate chill. That’s usually the name that knows where your story wants to go.