Meanings of minor planet names: 125001–126000

125001–125100

 * -id=071
 * 125071 Lugosi || || Béla Lugosi (1883–1956), Hungarian actor known for his portrayal of Bram Stoker's classic vampire story Count Dracula in the 1927 Broadway production and subsequent 1931 theatrical version. || ·
 * -id=076
 * 125076 Michelmayor || || Michel Mayor (born 1942) is a Swiss astrophysicist at Geneva University. || ·
 * }

125101–125200

 * -bgcolor=#f2f2f2
 * colspan=4 align=center | There are no named minor planets in this number range
 * }

125201–125300

 * -bgcolor=#f2f2f2
 * colspan=4 align=center | There are no named minor planets in this number range
 * }

125301–125400

 * -id=371
 * 125371 Vojáček || || Vlastimil Vojáček (b. 1984), a Czech astronomer. || ·
 * }

125401–125500

 * -id=473
 * 125473 Keisaku || || Keisaku Ninomiya (1804–1862), a Japanese medical doctor who studied Western medicine and pharmaceutics under the German doctor Philipp Franz von Siebold in Nagasaki || ·
 * -id=476
 * 125476 Frangarcia || || Francisco Garcia (born 1959), Spanish amateur astronomer || ·
 * }

125501–125600

 * -id=592
 * 125592 Buthiers || || Buthiers Observatory, where this minor planet was discovered by French astronomer Jean-Claude Merlin || ·
 * }

125601–125700

 * -bgcolor=#f2f2f2
 * colspan=4 align=center | There are no named minor planets in this number range
 * }

125701–125800

 * -id=718
 * 125718 Jemasalomon || || Jean-Marc Salomon (1955–1981), French amateur astronomer; the 0.6-m telescope with which this minor planet was discovered is also named in his honour || ·
 * }

125801–125900

 * -bgcolor=#f2f2f2
 * colspan=4 align=center | There are no named minor planets in this number range
 * }

125901–126000

 * -bgcolor=#f2f2f2
 * colspan=4 align=center | There are no named minor planets in this number range
 * }