Meanings of minor planet names: 218001–219000

218001–218100

 * -id=069
 * 218069 Lisaturner || || Lisa S. Turner (b. 1975) served as an Administrative Assistant for the New Horizons spacecraft flyby of the Kuiper Belt object Arrokoth. She later served as a Program Manager Assistant for the mission. || ·
 * -id=087
 * 218087 Kaniansky || || Stanislav Kaniansky (b. 1968), a Slovak astronomer and passionate astrophotographer. || ·
 * -id=097
 * 218097 Maoxianxin || || Xianxin Mao (born 1980) of Suzhou, Jiangsu, was a classmate of T. Chen, who located this object in images from NEAT, at Suzhou Pingjiang Experimental Primary School. || ·
 * }

218101–218200

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

218201–218300

 * -id=268
 * 218268 Pierremariepelé || || Pierre-Marie Pelé (b. 1970), a French meteorite hunter. || ·
 * -id=274
 * 218274 Albertferenc || || Ferenc Albert (1811–1883), a Hungarian astronomer. || ·
 * }

218301–218400

 * -id=400
 * 218400 Marquardt || || Daniel Marquardt (born 1983), a writer and educator. || ·
 * }

218401–218500

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

218501–218600

 * -id=570
 * 218570 Jonvandegriff || || Jon D. Vandegriff (b. 1969), an American senior software engineer at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory. || ·
 * }

218601–218700

 * -id=636
 * 218636 Calabria || || Calabria is a southern Italian region. The region is at the tip of the Italian peninsula and is predominantly hilly. Between the 8th and 4th centuries BCE, Calabria was a thriving Greek colony. || ·
 * -id=679
 * 218679 Sagamorehill || || Sagamore Hill (also known as the "Summer White House", located in Cove Neck, New York) was the home of former US President Theodore Roosevelt. Now a National Historic Site, Sagamore Hill was the location of the first negotiations in 1905 to end the Russo-Japanese War. || ·
 * -id=692
 * 218692 Leesnyder || || LeRoy F. Snyder (born 1928) is an accomplished variable-star researcher, having published numerous papers in AAVSO and IAPPP journals. He was a cofounder of the IAPPP-Western Wing, now the Society for Astronomical Sciences, and has served as its president for many years. || ·
 * }

218701–218800

 * -id=752
 * 218752 Tentlingen || || The Swiss municipality of Tentlingen (Tinterin) in the canton of Fribourg, no far from the discovering Observatory Naef Épendes || ·
 * }

218801–218900

 * -id=866
 * 218866 Alexantioch || || Alexandros of Antioch was a Greek sculptor of the 1st century BCE, known today for the Venus de Milo (Aphrodite of Milos), which is on display at the Louvre Museum in Paris, France. || ·
 * -id=900
 * 218900 Gabybuchholz || || Gabriele Buchholz (née Schöpf, b. 1952), who provides medical care, from classical therapy to acupuncture, for the people of Nagold, in southern Germany. || ·
 * }

218901–219000

 * 218901 Gerdbuchholz || || Gerhard Buchholz (born 1950) provides medical care, from classical therapy to acupuncture, for the people of Nagold, in southern Germany. || ·
 * -id=914
 * 218914 Tangauchin || || Tang Aoqing (1915–2008),  was a Chinese theoretical chemist, widely known as "The Father of Quantum Chemistry in China". He was an academician of Chinese Academy of Sciences and a member of the International Academy of Quantum Molecular Science. (Alternative spellings of his name include Au-Chin Tang and Tang Au-chin.) || ·
 * -id=987
 * 218987 Heidenhain || || Johannes Heidenhain (1898–1980), a German entrepreneur and amateur astronomer. || ·
 * -id=998
 * 218998 Navi || || Navi Kocher (born 2009), grandchild of Swiss discoverer Peter Kocher || ·
 * }
 * }